The reason we were initially denied dinner at Trotter’s, we later learned, was that it didn’t suit the cooks to have us start late. They were making all the courses for all the tables at exactly the same time, and didn’t want to break their lockstep pace to accommodate the inconvenient exigencies of customers.
toria wrote:Something to think about. I have wanted to go to Alinea but what is holding me back is the length of time and not being able to pick out what I want to eat. I do not want to sit anywhere for four hours no matter how good. I do not want to eat organ meats or raw stuff, or any of the few other things I find unpalatable. I am sure these restaurants will be around for a good long time but maybe there will be a trend change here. I would rather spend half that time in a restaurant and have a menu to order off of rather than having things I do not want. Also seems like too much food...even if small plates, so many of them.
toria wrote: I am sure these restaurants will be around for a good long time but maybe there will be a trend change here.
mgmcewen wrote:But it's interesting, one time I needed to meet an older relative after going to a tasting menu and I said I'd meet her at 11 PM. She said "Isn't your dinner starting at 6 PM? What are you doing during all that time????" It's hard for her to imagine eating that long. But if you think about it being also a social time with your friends with intermittent snacks, it doesn't seem so nonsensical.
How ridiculous - though I can only assume the author hoped to achieve Pete Wells notoriety or something.
sundevilpeg wrote:Corby Kummer has been a food writer and restaurant critic since 1981. He's the recipient of FIVE James Beard awards. Of him Julia Child said: "I think he's a very good food writer. He really does his homework. As a reporter and a writer he takes his work very seriously." I hardly think he aspires to be Pete Wells.
Ha ha ha, I like that.Independent George wrote:... it's just plain stupid to call this 'Tyranny'. His entire argument here is something straight out of a freshman humanities class where everybody gripes about how oppressive it is that the free market forces you to work for a living in jobs don't want to do. Like, if you want a fine dining experience, you're just forced to pay for this massive tasting menu.
When I went to Elizabeth Restaurant, the eight people at my communal table were at the mercy of chef Iliana Regan for 24 courses, and I for one never felt tyrannized. I felt joy and excitement—even as I was told what, when, and how to eat. The only tyranny originated from us diners. We couldn’t let go of our iPhones and cameras, and we spent almost five hours on foodie one-upmanship and name-dropping—not even stopping when the soft-spoken Regan came out to explain what was on our plates. We were a bunch of starfuckers who couldn’t name one song by the person performing but still wanted to get backstage.
Vitesse98 wrote: Fine dining should not always necessarily be an endeavor that requires months of planning, like a vacation (though it can be!), and as much as I've enjoyed many meals that stemmed from so-called tyrannical chefs or adhered to their rigid systems, it can be exhausting to run the gauntlet of no reservations, tickets, 4 hour commitments, etc. Cool for those who can cope, of course, but for a lot of folks what the author calls tyranny is really just further levels of exclusivity applied to already exclusive places, which makes them seem, I suppose, undemocratic or ... tyrannical.