boudreaulicious wrote:I gave up on Next a long time ago but I do think folks leaping to the defense of the almighty Kokonos crew are missing the point. I think most know that Achatz isn't in the kitchen at Next--it's Beran's restaurant to run. HOWEVER, when Beran is off in Scandinavia the first week of service in a restaurant whose entire concept changes 3x/year AND that has experienced some apparent challenges in rolling out those new menus, particularly this year, AND that has jacked prices to a level that has many staying on the sidelines where once there were fervent pleas for tickets and sellouts for most of the run--well, that seems like another situation. And a fair one to call attention to. For this and other reasons pointed out in detail here and elsewhere, Next seems to be in need of some refocusing and to do that, the head chef usually needs to be around. Beran takes that trip a month or two later when reviews are good and tickets are selling and no one says a word.
bnowell724 wrote:Understandable to attribute the quality of your experience to whether or not Achatz is present, but myopic and misinformed in my opinion.
bluepig wrote:I had not previously been offered a "wine by the glass" option, but it was an option this time. Instead of being presented a wine-by-the-glass menu, whenever my table mate was served a glass of wine from her pairing, we could request a glass if it sounded good to us. I found this to be a perfect option, as the pairing is inevitably too much alcohol for me, over 21 courses, even if I had split it.
chgoeditor wrote:I've done the by-the-glass option twice now and have never seen a wine menu. In both instances, our waiter (same one each time) described the by-the-glass options that would be a good match with upcoming courses and I picked from those recommendations. The only downside: I was a bit surprised to discover last time that one of my selections was a ~$30 glass of wine. Next time I'll be more careful about asking which is the standard pairing wine and which is the reserve pairing wine.
chgoeditor wrote:bluepig wrote:I had not previously been offered a "wine by the glass" option, but it was an option this time. Instead of being presented a wine-by-the-glass menu, whenever my table mate was served a glass of wine from her pairing, we could request a glass if it sounded good to us. I found this to be a perfect option, as the pairing is inevitably too much alcohol for me, over 21 courses, even if I had split it.
I've done the by-the-glass option twice now and have never seen a wine menu. In both instances, our waiter (same one each time) described the by-the-glass options that would be a good match with upcoming courses and I picked from those recommendations. The only downside: I was a bit surprised to discover last time that one of my selections was a ~$30 glass of wine. Next time I'll be more careful about asking which is the standard pairing wine and which is the reserve pairing wine.
rjque wrote:One somewhat off experience: at about the 3/4 mark, they offered us a supplementary course - risotto with shaved white truffle. It was being offered for $125 per guest, and the whole table had to participate, so that would have added another $500 for our party (and, I assume, additional tax plus 20% tip). We were already quite full and still had several dishes to go, so it was easy to decline, but something just felt odd about the whole experience. The cost of these meals is already much higher than I ever expected they would be when I signed up for our season tickets, and I don't like the idea that in the future certain (and perhaps the best) parts of the experience will not be included in those tickets. I certainly hope this doesn't catch on.