Habibi wrote:How big are those pizzas? Are we talking Spacca Napoli size, or a little bigger like Coalfire? Just like to know before spending 24 bones.
Mike G wrote:Though I will say, we usually order 3 pizzas for the 4 of us at Spacca Napoli (a piece or two comes home), and have always been fine with 2 at Great Lake (and sometimes bring some home as well). So I don't think the price is a huge difference there, you seem to spend $47 either way.
Mike G wrote:I can certainly see going to Great Lake and deciding it's not worth the money, but I'm always surprised by the argument that because they've spent $15 for mediocre pizza and felt cheated, they wouldn't spend $20 for greatness. I guess I think the exact opposite way-- a really great $50 pizza would be a better deal to me than a lousy $5 one, by definition, though it might be a rare indulgence.
stevez wrote:Yes. She was made to stand
Mike G wrote:Though I will say, we usually order 3 pizzas for the 4 of us at Spacca Napoli (a piece or two comes home), and have always been fine with 2 at Great Lake (and sometimes bring some home as well). So I don't think the price is a huge difference there, you seem to spend $47 either way.
I can certainly see going to Great Lake and deciding it's not worth the money, but I'm always surprised by the argument that because they've spent $15 for mediocre pizza and felt cheated, they wouldn't spend $20 for greatness. I guess I think the exact opposite way-- a really great $50 pizza would be a better deal to me than a lousy $5 one, by definition, though it might be a rare indulgence.
stevez wrote:Yes. She was made to stand, though by the time I left, she had snuck a seat from somewhere else and had not yet been chastened.
Kennyz wrote:just noticed that one - $3 for garlic?!??!!!? That might be even worse than the $9 cailiflower. Insanity.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Why do people feel they can move furniture around in a restaurant as if it were their own home? I wonder if the outcome would have been different if they'd simply asked to move the chair before actually doing so.
riddlemay wrote:One detail I'm not clear on, which maybe Steve can clear up. Was that the last empty seat in the place? I.e., by presumptuously moving the chair, did the presumptuous customer make it so that someone arriving at another table would have to stand, and no chair at any other table could be moved to accommodate this new customer? Short of that (and I'm not even sure this excuses the owner's conduct), it just resembles punishment for the sadistic fun of it.
That's true. But I've never felt cheated by inexpensive fresh garlic, and don't believe that there is any level of greatness that garlic could achieve to justify a $3 sprinkling on a pie. Ditto for $10 celery root and carrots.
Mike G wrote:I'm always surprised by the argument that because they've spent $15 for mediocre pizza and felt cheated, they wouldn't spend $20 for greatness.
ronnie_suburban wrote:riddlemay wrote:One detail I'm not clear on, which maybe Steve can clear up. Was that the last empty seat in the place? I.e., by presumptuously moving the chair, did the presumptuous customer make it so that someone arriving at another table would have to stand, and no chair at any other table could be moved to accommodate this new customer? Short of that (and I'm not even sure this excuses the owner's conduct), it just resembles punishment for the sadistic fun of it.
To me this is irrelevant. Having been to Great Lake, I know how small the space is and completely appreciate any effort made to maintain order there. The bottom line is that it's their dining room and if they want the chairs in certain places, that's where they should be. They don't need to explain it, although they probably would have, if asked.
=R=
stevez wrote:The fact that the woman didn't walk out of the restaurant after being scolded like a 5 year old, but instead chose to stand there and share her pizza with her friends while everyone in the entire place stared at her is testament to the quality of the food. FWIW, it wasn't the last chair in the place and it was an orphan (a lone chair at the corner of the otherwise occupied communal table). All she did was turn it around to sit at the small table next to where the chair already was.
PlayItGeorge wrote:stevez wrote:The fact that the woman didn't walk out of the restaurant after being scolded like a 5 year old, but instead chose to stand there and share her pizza with her friends while everyone in the entire place stared at her is testament to the quality of the food. FWIW, it wasn't the last chair in the place and it was an orphan (a lone chair at the corner of the otherwise occupied communal table). All she did was turn it around to sit at the small table next to where the chair already was.
It's a testament to something, alright, especially in light of your last two sentences there. Not sure if it's the food
My first reaction is that no matter how good the pizza is (and I'm willing to stipulate that it is the greatest pizza in the history of mankind), the woman's choosing to stand and remain there is a symptom of scarily low self-esteem.
Mike G wrote:My first reaction is that no matter how good the pizza is (and I'm willing to stipulate that it is the greatest pizza in the history of mankind), the woman's choosing to stand and remain there is a symptom of scarily low self-esteem.
So do you think I should get the one with the cremini mushrooms and the mona, or should I stick to the basics, tomato and mozz?
teatpuller wrote:submitted without comment:
Main Entry: hos·pi·ta·ble
1 a : given to generous and cordial reception of guests b : promising or suggesting generous and cordial welcome c : offering a pleasant or sustaining environment
Just think, you could walk around the corner to to the takeout counter at Homemade Pizza Company and get a spinach salad for only $7.75. Such a deal!Kennyz wrote:thaiobsessed wrote:stevez,
...the salads at Great Lake are outstanding and I think the quality of the produce justifies the price they charge.
The quality-of-produce argument doesn't fly when the prices are this out of whack. It's so rare for me to complain about restaurant prices, but the Great Lake menu nauseates me. Celery root and carrots are among the cheapest things at the farmers markets, and I buy them from the same vendors that Great Lake uses. $10 for a celery root and carrot salad makes me want to say F-You to the people who think to charge it, expecially when those people are serving it from what is essentially a fast food takeout counter.
dansch wrote:Just think, you could walk around the corner to to the takeout counter at Homemade Pizza Company and get a spinach salad for only $7.75. Such a deal!Kennyz wrote:thaiobsessed wrote:stevez,
...the salads at Great Lake are outstanding and I think the quality of the produce justifies the price they charge.
The quality-of-produce argument doesn't fly when the prices are this out of whack. It's so rare for me to complain about restaurant prices, but the Great Lake menu nauseates me. Celery root and carrots are among the cheapest things at the farmers markets, and I buy them from the same vendors that Great Lake uses. $10 for a celery root and carrot salad makes me want to say F-You to the people who think to charge it, expecially when those people are serving it from what is essentially a fast food takeout counter.