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cybermud wrote:I went here in November, Jayz, and I agree with you. It really seemed like mid-range hotel room service food choices. More steak choices than most room service menus I have seen--but that is besides the point when the quality is also typical of mid-range hotel room service food.
Kennyz wrote:cybermud wrote:I went here in November, Jayz, and I agree with you. It really seemed like mid-range hotel room service food choices. More steak choices than most room service menus I have seen--but that is besides the point when the quality is also typical of mid-range hotel room service food.
I have not been to Powerhouse, but based on a perusal of the current menu, I'd tend to agree with this sentiment. Anyplace that puts this on the menu - Miso Glazed Chilean Sea Bass served with wild rice, carrots, and baby bok choy - has, imo, pretty much mailed it in. Out of season ingredients abound, and there's not much to inspire on this menu. Reminds me very much of room service menus that make me cringe when I travel. Maybe they execute WAY better than anyone else; otherwise, it's hard to imagine how a menu this boring can draw people in.
HungryZ wrote:Roasted butternut squash soup warms your soul with its velvety texture and sweet undertones.
Miso Glazed salmon served with wild rice, carrots, and baby bok choy
whiskeybent wrote:I could be wrong, but if you add rice noodles to this dish, isn't it what got that culinary school kid kicked off of Top Chef for being too one-note and pedestrian?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Really a shame to see what happened here. It started out -- certainly not perfect -- but with so much promise. Seems like once chef Peters and Scott Noorman left, the place descended rapidly.
=R=
Olde School wrote:Weird situation tonight. Tried to go for dinner, only to find the restaurant closed, door locked, but the bar space on the south side of the building was open. Normally, I might chalk something like this up to frigid weather, people wanting to stay home, but after reading the earlier posts about the "fluid" situation at Powerhouse, it makes you wonder.
Jessewolfe1 wrote:The wife and I ate Powerhouse yesterday after some late meetings we both had downtown. We previously dined at Powerhouse thrice, all three times relatively soon after they opened (or at least before the staff changes discussed on earlier posts.) This place never was a superstar, but a solid place and its proximity to the Metra made it a great place for the one off spontaneous dinner. I have to say, we were absolutely shocked at the difference.
First, the restaurant menu was completely changed and I have to agree that it was really just equivalent to a standard hotel room service menu. The bar menu was really basic as well -Tuna Tartar, fish and chips, chicken sandwich, burger. The menu that was printed was a lot smaller than what was on the website, and I remember the food being much more adventurous than this on previous trips.
However, being in a mood for something simple anyway, we split the burger. It was overcooked and on par with TGI Fridays. The side salad that they have always served with the burger was missing the bacon and tasted like mayonnaise on lettuce. The crab cake appetizer was literally like a hockey puck, and dubiously symmetrical as if it was formed in a factory in a far off land.
Worse, were the changes to the wine list. When this place opened, we met the wine director and he was really top notch and there were a slew of interesting wines by the glass and a great list - he would occasionally have a burgundy by the glass or something special (great if you are grabbing a glass before a commute.) We recently saw him working at GEB, although not sure if he was the WD or another position.
Now, the local dive bar by my house has a better wine selection. Fetzer and Mirassou were the two that made me do a double take. I have no problem with Fetzer or Mirassou, they are fine everyday wines but, you can buy them at JEWEL for $16 per bottle for crying out loud, it is criminal to pour at $8 - $10 per glass
Top it off with a bartender that didn't know his Pinot Grigio from his Pinot Noir and we really witnessed a 180 degree turn from a solid restaurant to so much chaff. All I can say about Powerhouse now is 'last one out turn out the lights.'
Davooda wrote:Mrs. Davooda and I will be in the city for the Boat Show in mid-January and we're always looking for new dining options, especially in this niche.
(It will also be the tenth anniversary of the night I asked Mrs. Davooda for her hand in marriage at Chef Jean Louis - a very nice french restaurant which was located in the Arcola, IL bowling alley - romantic that I am!)
Ronnie - just so I am prepared for it, do you have a ballpark idea of the the price of this princely meal? I know you dined with a friend, but I thought I would ask just in case...
Thanks,
Davooda
sundevilpeg wrote:Interesting info, Ronnie. I'd read - in Dish? UrbanDaddy? Thrillist? Can't recall, unfortunately - that the space was being divided, and that separate bar and resto entities had already signed on! Wonder what the real story is/was?
From what I understand, you are correct. The entrance to the building is actually a vestibule with doors that lead north and south. What used to be Powerhouse's bar -- the smaller, self-contained space located south of the entrance vestibule -- will be a separately-owned entity but I'm not exactly sure what it will be (a bar, I think). The larger section to the north of the entrance -- which includes several dining rooms and a large kitchen -- will be home to Prairie Fire.