Sorry I missed you and that your experience was so negative, BP. Having previously tried and not liked Maijean (I probably should go back since it could just have been a bad night for that kitchen) and since I was planning to go to ZaZa's to take pictures and post on that place, as I was catching up on LTH yesterday I noted this thread and figured what the heck, let's try it. The family had their taste buds set on Italian, so I had to do some selling, but off we went. I would really like to support fine dining in Clarendon Hills.
Where do I start? My experience was not at all like yours, BP. Service started out a little strange, as we were here and there with the drink order, seeming to confuse our waiter (we brought a bottle of wine and wanted to know what the corkage policy was, but wanted to look at the wine list, then two of us ordered drinks, but at separate times, then the son wanted to order crab cakes while the rest of us were still thinking about drinks...). Corkage is $15, and if I had been the waiter, I would have been confused by that dance, too. Things then settled down and went pretty smoothly though there was some confusion about which dish to give to who, and they tried to serve me the wrong entree. Overall, service was a little confused, but fine.
The decor begs discussion. It seems a big place, though I did not check it all out. Maybe 4 rooms total? Each had about 10 or so tables, making it a bit more intimate than a single big room and a lot less noisy. This is good. The best room is to your left as you enter and the back of it is an open kitchen. We were seated in the back row, right in front of the kitchen with a great view - a very good thing. Our side was full and I thought they were doing a good business until we left and I saw the other two rooms were empty at 830 on a Friday - not such a good sign.
The main decorations in that room were these - a painting that is a bright green sort of Roger Brown meets American Gothic. Two buff 30-40 somethings in, and half out, of their overalls in front of a farm scene holding what appeared to be cell phones (green cell phones). A bold visual statement, and it would have been even better if they left out the people who were strangely disturbing to this party. The light fixtures above our tables were big, red upside down buckets. I looked for some sort of fried chicken logo on the buckets, but they were without other decoration so maybe the chicken bucket effect was inadvertent since the decor did not otherwise whisper subtle. I love the buckets.
In the middle of the room was a large hoop with two rows of red lights on it. I could not figure out what that was about, maybe it was someone's idea of edgy, but not too edgy. I want the lights to be chasers.
Lots of staff and attention, runners, waiter, bus boys, miscellaneous managers (dressed very casually and not easily recognizable as managers, so there was one exchange when a manager asked about my food and I thought it was a diner asking for information until he asked if I wanted a spoon). The whole place felt packaged, trying a little too hard to be hip. This type of spectacle is not a bad thing for me.
Oh, and the food. Have I made it clear that this place smacks of marketing concept, as opposed to a chef's vision, or a lifelong love of a particular cuisine? This does not have to be a bad thing, and it is not here, but it does help to explain certain inconsistencies.
First, unlike many places, the more complex and interesting the dish, the less successful it was. Maybe some of these dishes were conceived on paper and not in the kitchen, but to be fair, there also seemed to be some execution issues. Appetizers were the absolute low point, and the meal improved with every course.
We started with the crab cakes. As my son said, the crisp, outside cornbread breading was the best part. I am not sure whether it was intentional and something in the seasoning or that they used some fish with the crab, or something else, but they had a fishy taste and not a rich, fresh crabmeat taste. The son thought they might have been better with a bit more sauce (but he is a sauce fiend) and that they worked best when eating them along with the salad. Not great, and I would not order them again.

Mixed green and caesar salads were good, and if you wish to have an appetizer they seem like good choices.
The mixed beet salad with blue cheese, mache, endives, pistachios and what seemed like a citrus mayonnaise was a mess with a couple of interesting touches. Beets were quite nice with the mild blue cheeses, but underdressed. The Mayonnaise would have addressed that, but was way too sweet resulting in something akin to a mayonnaise with seven up flavoring, so I mostly tried to avoid that once I tasted how it totally overwhelmed the beets and blue cheese. The pistachios, mache and endives actually combined to wonderful effect, earthy, rich, complex, and maybe if it had just been the beets and that, without the mayo, this would have been very good. But it was not because I could not totally avoid that sweet mayo.

The bean and smoked turkey soup was a jumble of ingredients and textures, underseasoned and with nothing to pull it together. The nice point was that everything, beans included, was cooked very lightly giving it lots of texture and subtle flavor, but it just did not come together. Maybe the thinking was that the creamy cheese on top would melt into the broth adding flavoring and texture, but it did not happen for us.

Pretty rough start, but everything worked well after that. Simpler dishes were executed well and came together fine.
Pan roasted salmon was tasty and cooked just right.

Blackened Walleye was good (the son complained that it needed more sauce again). Note the roasted broccoli with Nueske Bacon to the side - very good flavor and the roasted broccoli delivered a good, concentrated flavor. Chewy texture was a bit different, but it worked. We also had the cornbread texas toast - really a couple of large slabs of warm, slightly fried (?) cornbread with some fresh cherry preserves and a lot of melted butter. What could be bad with that?

One member of our party wanted to go vegetarian and there was some confusion as she asked if they could prepare a vegetarian entree and was directed to the Tagliatelle with mushroom "bolognese" sauce and cheese. I will let the Italian purists rage about a vegetarian, mushroom sauce being called bolognese. As it happened, this was very good. A bite began with a burst of fresh herbs on the palate, then evolved into a complex tomato sauce. There was a lot going on here but it worked perfectly.

The short rib pot pie seemed like a good match for the SB Cab Franc I had brought, so I went with that despite Cioppino being the special of the day, and the seafood entrees looking generally very promising. It was rich, chunks of rib in a wine reduction, and savory. It will be a fine, warming dish on a cold winter day.

Desserts were a strong cap to the meal. Fresh Beignets with what was like a chocolate, coffee milk shake with fresh marshmallows was the best for me, though the chocolate, coffee was too rich to finish. The beignets are worth a trip. I only had a small bite of the triple berry crisp as it disappeared before I could get more (you can see it in the background of the photo), so it was a big hit, even if I am not qualified to comment.
The small salads on the side of pretty much every dish are a great touch. Cress featured in a number of them, but there was variety to them and the greens were perfect.

Good meal, reasonably priced for the quality of ingredients and preparation, just keep it simple. It seems possible that they will work out the kinks and the more ambitious dishes will evolve into something that works, but that is not the case now.
d
Feeling (south) loopy