Rich Melman is taking a page out of Nick Kokonas' book.
The dean of Chicago restaurateurs and chairman of the sprawling Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises empire plans to open his most ambitious restaurant concept yet, a rotating-menu, rotating-chef experiment called Intro that is expected to open in the space vacated by L2O as soon as early February.
Gonzo70 wrote:I am excited and intrigued by this concept; definitely plan to experience some dinners provided that I find the price point to represent at least a decent value.
riddlemay wrote:The place may succeed, but I'd think one strike against it is that when people go to a restaurant for the first time, one reason they're hoping it's good is that they hope to add it to their rotation.
BR wrote:And you have to consider that each chef will only be in the restaurant for 2-3 months. Isn't that about the time it takes for a kitchen staff to gel as a team, learn the nuances of the restaurant and its equipment?
stevez wrote:Maybe Melman is creating his own Top Chef competition where the purpose of Intro is to audition chefs for other projects. Hey, as long as we're speculating, I might as well throw that theory out there.
stevez wrote:Maybe Melman is creating his own Top Chef competition where the purpose of Intro is to audition chefs for other projects. Hey, as long as we're speculating, I might as well throw that theory out there.
nsxtasy wrote:I like the opportunity that the concept represents for the chefs involved; I would assume that, when any particular chef and concept is well received, Lettuce Entertain You would then consider having the chef open it at another location as a permanent restaurant within their empire.
Gonzo70 wrote:Tickets are now available for Intro; they are starting early February and they are indeed from $65 to $95 depending on weekday vs. weeknight and peak vs. off peak hours.
http://www.introchicago.com/
Smassey wrote:There sure are a lot of tickets still available. I know it has only been a few hours, but given the early chaos of Next (remember how the difference between logging in and getting first season tix or not was reportedly 18 seconds?), my perspective is distorted and this already feels like a flop!
pairs4life wrote:"Chef CJ Jacobson is introducing a five-course menu that is rustic-refined. His cuisine combines flavors foraged from the local terroir of Chicago combined with hyper-seasonal, local California ingredients he highlights in his West Coast kitchen." .
DutchMuse wrote:This could be an example where, in 99.9% of cases, the ticket system isn't the best idea. It's not good for potential customers to see a sea of inventory available....kind of like going into a restaurant that's nearly empty. Who wants to go there? I picked a random day (Friday, 2/20) and there's anything and everything available.
Not good.
Then, if people do buy tickets and someone cancels or gets sick, you'll see the tickets at below market value on Facebook or
here....I just think this might prove the ticket idea is a bad idea except for the top 0.1% of places like Alinea.
Darren72 wrote:DutchMuse wrote:This could be an example where, in 99.9% of cases, the ticket system isn't the best idea. It's not good for potential customers to see a sea of inventory available....kind of like going into a restaurant that's nearly empty. Who wants to go there? I picked a random day (Friday, 2/20) and there's anything and everything available.
Not good.
Then, if people do buy tickets and someone cancels or gets sick, you'll see the tickets at below market value on Facebook or
here....I just think this might prove the ticket idea is a bad idea except for the top 0.1% of places like Alinea.
Didn't they just go on sale today? Would you suggest they hold back inventory so it looks full when people first go to the site today?
Darren72 wrote:DutchMuse wrote:This could be an example where, in 99.9% of cases, the ticket system isn't the best idea. It's not good for potential customers to see a sea of inventory available....kind of like going into a restaurant that's nearly empty. Who wants to go there? I picked a random day (Friday, 2/20) and there's anything and everything available.
Not good.
Then, if people do buy tickets and someone cancels or gets sick, you'll see the tickets at below market value on Facebook or
here....I just think this might prove the ticket idea is a bad idea except for the top 0.1% of places like Alinea.
Didn't they just go on sale today? Would you suggest they hold back inventory so it looks full when people first go to the site today?