Royal Lichter wrote:Looks like the recent move to tickets is now irrelevant.
Perhaps. Do you think going to that system was a last-ditch effort to keep the place alive? Was the writing already on the wall? It doesn't seem like enough time had passed for the ticketing system to have been causal but it doesn't seem to have saved the place, either.
I wonder if touting themselves as gluten-free narrowed the number of people interested in dining there. Maybe some people pigeon-holed the place and never came to understand how good it was. The gluten-free aspect, while important to some, seemed like an afterthought in that the food was so good in its own right. I wonder if those menus, served without any mention of their being gluten-free, would/could have been successful.
In any case, I feel bad when people who take on risk and work their asses off to accomplish something distinctive don't get to keep doing it. I'm honestly surprised Senza didn't have a stronger following but otoh, at that price point, in that neighborhood, how often could even the most dedicated fans dine there? It certainly wasn't intended to be an everyday place. Was that part of the problem? At the higher end of dining, many places are well-versed in accomodating folks with a variety of dietary restrictions. Did they overestimate the demand for what they were doing?
I'm saddened over their demise and because of their relatively distinctive goals, I'm left with a lot of questions.

=R=
By protecting others, you save yourself. If you only think of yourself, you'll only destroy yourself. --Kambei Shimada
Every human interaction is an opportunity for disappointment --RS
There's a horse loose in a hospital --JM
That don't impress me much --Shania Twain