New member here (although I've been lurking for quite some time)..
With the wife's birthday coming up, I wanted to try something new, and it had also been
a looong time since we'd been to a restaurant of this caliber (last time was Tru in December
of 2006! Yikes!)
We narrowed the choices down to Avenues (to some extent due to Gypsy Boy's excellent review
of Feb 8 - thanks and a tip of the hat to you, sir)...and Henri (Chef Flanigan is a close neighbor).
We settled on Avenues. In summary, a nearly perfect dining experience. The staff are highly
polished pros, and it was a pleasure to see them work. Four hours of great enjoyment.
Quite similar to Gypsy Boy's review, the meal began with the champagne cart. Three choices:
1. French, Loire, 2. Alsace, Rose 3. Italian. We chose the Italian - bold and intense .
We also chose a lovely Mersault half bottle for the first few courses, and a half bottle of
a Cote Rotie for the latter course.
Next, an amuse of sea urchin, nitrogen treated baby peas, et al. First time I've actually had
sea urchin that tasted 'right'.
The Alaskan King Crab course with the sheet of sugar separating the two parts of the
dish was exquisite. I echo wholeheartedly the previous descriptions of this preparation.
Departing from the earlier menu, next was Nantucket Bay Scallops, romaine marmalade,
white poppy, nasturtium with a coconut milk broth poured table side. The flavors were
so evocative. Slightly sweet & nutty. Fabulous.
Next the Grains, Seeds and Nuts. I loved it. Evoked memories of time spent many years
ago in a cabin in an isolated forest watching the sun come up.
The Hamachi course (lardo, yuzu, purslane) was very good, but something was missing.
Loved the carrot 'froth', the lardo.. Enjoyable, and perhaps relative to everything else, just
ever so slightly off.
Like Gypsy Boy's description of the short ribs course, the next course was pretty much
the same, but substituting ribeye for short ribs. Beautiful.
The Sudachi course can best be described as "startling". Absolutely wonderful.
We were brought an off-the-menu birthday desert; I remember the raspberry sorbet
part of it, but, honestly, that's all I remember. (I wasn't taking notes..heh..) The next
desert was very similar to the "Strawberry Tube" described by Shyne (Sept. 2010) except
that banana was the star. Finally, the last course, Sambirano Valley Chocalate, brown
butter, mandarin, and stevia. (BTW, stevia has an interesting history: )
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stevia Accompanying the desert courses was a glass of the Yalumba Botrytis Viognier - which
matched perfectly. Not too sweet.
A truly enjoyable and memorable evening. Overall, I came away with impressions of
refinement, elegance, clean, clear flavors with a reliance on the use of herbs with
precision. I was not "conscious" of the use of salt, at all, at any time. But the
seasoning was spot on - for nearly everything.
Oh....one other thing. We admit to a bit of a distraction - Rod Stewart, his wife
(Penny?) and (I assume) one of his daughters were at the next table the entire evening.
Rod flashed my wife a smile and said "Hi - happy birthday". Cool.

Cheers...
-mm
"Ash, that transmission - Mother's deciphered part of it.
It doesn't look like an S.O.S....it looks like a warning."
-- Ellen Ripley