ucjames wrote:DutchMuse wrote:But I did not "announce" bloggers to the restaurant. I emailed the sommelier to ask if we could bring wines and told her who I would be dining with. One purpose was to let her know we would be bringing appropriate wines rather than wines not suited to the occasion.
If I had wanted to "announce" our visit to the restaurant (your characterization) I would have emailed the GM and my contacts at LEYE.
It boggles my mind that you don't see it as such, but the email you actually pasted for us before very much announced your companions, Dutch. It may not have been your intention to do so, though that is frankly hard to believe, but that is effectively what you did.
Really? You seriously don't think that the sommelier communicates with the GM?DutchMuse wrote:ucjames wrote:DutchMuse wrote:But I did not "announce" bloggers to the restaurant. I emailed the sommelier to ask if we could bring wines and told her who I would be dining with. One purpose was to let her know we would be bringing appropriate wines rather than wines not suited to the occasion.
If I had wanted to "announce" our visit to the restaurant (your characterization) I would have emailed the GM and my contacts at LEYE.
It boggles my mind that you don't see it as such, but the email you actually pasted for us before very much announced your companions, Dutch. It may not have been your intention to do so, though that is frankly hard to believe, but that is effectively what you did.
To the sommelier. The sommelier! Do you know how much power the sommelier usually has? You seem to think emailing the sommelier will accomplish something more than wine service.
I'm sorry but if my goal were to announce our visit it wouldn't be via the sommelier. It would be to the GM or LEYE. The sommelier doesn't control much beyond the wine list and wine service.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:ucjames wrote:What I was saying is that in my experience working with the best restaurants, a large percentage of their customers on any given night believe they are VIP customers.
VIP customers who gain their status from their celebrity or stature in the community are not the same as VIP customers whose status derives from being a passionate hobbyist who is well known in the fine dining community.
jpschust wrote:Really? You seriously don't think that the sommelier communicates with the GM?DutchMuse wrote:ucjames wrote:It boggles my mind that you don't see it as such, but the email you actually pasted for us before very much announced your companions, Dutch. It may not have been your intention to do so, though that is frankly hard to believe, but that is effectively what you did.
To the sommelier. The sommelier! Do you know how much power the sommelier usually has? You seem to think emailing the sommelier will accomplish something more than wine service.
I'm sorry but if my goal were to announce our visit it wouldn't be via the sommelier. It would be to the GM or LEYE. The sommelier doesn't control much beyond the wine list and wine service.
Whether I think of myself that way or not is irrelevant to the question I asked.
To the sommelier. The sommelier! Do you know how much power the sommelier usually has? You seem to think emailing the sommelier will accomplish something more than wine service.
DutchMuse wrote:You guys might want to take a quick look in the mirror. Sheesh.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Sure there is because it increases the odds that a restaurant does something special for you including giving them the opportunity to source special ingredients.jpschust wrote:By the sheer virtue of announcing yourself or a guest as being a national blog writer/restaurant ranker, whether your intentions were there or not it does cast the message that you expect to be treated differently than others. There's absolutely no good reason to include it.
ronnie_suburban wrote:It leads to reviews and accounts that spend more time discussing what a given restaurant didn't do than what it actually did do.