deepdish wrote:@boudreaulicious: What kind of batter are they using for the fish and chips? Beer batter or some other dry batter?
Evil Ronnie wrote:Lobster roll was tasty. Nicely cooked meat, plenty of butter, but served on an ice cold roll with grill marks on the outside.
Evil Ronnie wrote:Evil Ronnie wrote:Lobster roll was tasty. Nicely cooked meat, plenty of butter, but served on an ice cold roll with grill marks on the outside.
BR,
So they ship in the rolls from New England. Then the rolls are stored either frozen or refrigerated. On my one dining experience at NECC the chilled lobster on a chilled bun was unpleasant to me. I fully get the concept of sweet, cool lobster salad on a warm toasty bun, but they seem to have a glitch in execution. (Taking two seconds to put grill marks on a chilled bun isn't the same as buttering both sides and toasting on a griddle until warm and slightly crisp.)
Evil Ronnie wrote:Evil Ronnie wrote:(Taking two seconds to put grill marks on a chilled bun isn't the same as buttering both sides and toasting on a griddle until warm and slightly crisp.)
BR wrote:Evil Ronnie wrote:Evil Ronnie wrote:Lobster roll was tasty. Nicely cooked meat, plenty of butter, but served on an ice cold roll with grill marks on the outside.
BR,
So they ship in the rolls from New England. Then the rolls are stored either frozen or refrigerated. On my one dining experience at NECC the chilled lobster on a chilled bun was unpleasant to me. I fully get the concept of sweet, cool lobster salad on a warm toasty bun, but they seem to have a glitch in execution. (Taking two seconds to put grill marks on a chilled bun isn't the same as buttering both sides and toasting on a griddle until warm and slightly crisp.)
I had a similar issue with the bun itself, but I'm really only commenting on the chilled lobster.
boudreaulicious wrote:They will warm the roll on the grill for you if you ask. At that, I'm sure they'd warm the lobster for you as well though I've never requested it and don't know if that might affect the texture at all (it's cooked perfectly as served so I'd be a bit worried about overcooking if they warmed it up...)
PopcornMegaphone wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:They will warm the roll on the grill for you if you ask. At that, I'm sure they'd warm the lobster for you as well though I've never requested it and don't know if that might affect the texture at all (it's cooked perfectly as served so I'd be a bit worried about overcooking if they warmed it up...)
I'll have them only heat the roll if order the lobster roll again. My dilemma is there are so many other interesting items on the menu I'm doubt I'll order another.
Yep, these are my soul crushing 1st world problems.
milz50 wrote:NESC will have their liquor license soon and will not longer be BYOB
John Danza wrote:milz50 wrote:NESC will have their liquor license soon and will not longer be BYOB
Have they confirmed that they will no longer allow BYOB, or is that the assumption since they'll have a liquor license?
edc wrote:John Danza wrote:milz50 wrote:NESC will have their liquor license soon and will not longer be BYOB
Have they confirmed that they will no longer allow BYOB, or is that the assumption since they'll have a liquor license?
They confirmed it.
--
edc
riddlemay wrote:I know I'm going to start an argument--but what the heck.
How is bringing one's own liquor to a place that serves liquor any different from bringing one's own food to a place that serves food?
John Danza wrote:riddlemay wrote:I know I'm going to start an argument--but what the heck.
How is bringing one's own liquor to a place that serves liquor any different from bringing one's own food to a place that serves food?
Nope, no argument. It's a discussion topic that's come up before elsewhere.
The difference is that the restaurant specializes in the creation of the food, the dishes themselves. That's their core competency, assuming they are competent and do it well, like NESC does.
Wine on the other hand is a pass through, to some extent to ramp up revenues/profits. I'm a capitalist, so have no problem with profit. It's just that restaurants are typically lousy at offering decent wine, and they're universally extremely expensive when doing it. They usually mark up to 2.5-3 times retail, when they're actually paying far less than retail.
In the end, I would like to experience their core competency (the cuisine) with good wine that I can bring for myself. That's the heart of all BYOB.
riddlemay wrote:Nope. I think we both expressed our point of view clearly.


