Teresa wrote:The rocky road dessert was the perfect example of this ingredient hodgepodge. It consisted of brownies, “smoked” cherries (I didn’t taste smoke), almonds, ice cream, weird marshmallow goo, caramel, and some heavily basil-flavored bread pudding-ish textured stuff – all topped off with white cotton candy that literally looked like an unappetizing piece of cotton placed on top of our food. It reminded me of the crazy concoctions I would come up with at ice cream sundae bars as a kid. That's why, despite how weird it was, I dug in happily.
milz50 wrote:Teresa wrote:The rocky road dessert was the perfect example of this ingredient hodgepodge. It consisted of brownies, “smoked” cherries (I didn’t taste smoke), almonds, ice cream, weird marshmallow goo, caramel, and some heavily basil-flavored bread pudding-ish textured stuff – all topped off with white cotton candy that literally looked like an unappetizing piece of cotton placed on top of our food. It reminded me of the crazy concoctions I would come up with at ice cream sundae bars as a kid. That's why, despite how weird it was, I dug in happily.
I typically don't like desserts (or anything) with too many components, but I really felt that everything worked harmoniously. Our table of four actually ordered a second one of the Rocky Road because everyone liked it so much.
milz50 wrote:milz50 wrote:Teresa wrote:The rocky road dessert was the perfect example of this ingredient hodgepodge. It consisted of brownies, “smoked” cherries (I didn’t taste smoke), almonds, ice cream, weird marshmallow goo, caramel, and some heavily basil-flavored bread pudding-ish textured stuff – all topped off with white cotton candy that literally looked like an unappetizing piece of cotton placed on top of our food. It reminded me of the crazy concoctions I would come up with at ice cream sundae bars as a kid. That's why, despite how weird it was, I dug in happily.
I typically don't like desserts (or anything) with too many components, but I really felt that everything worked harmoniously. Our table of four actually ordered a second one of the Rocky Road because everyone liked it so much.
You and Matt have such good palates, I second guessed myself...so I referenced the menu we had a few weeks ago. Sure enough, our version was different. We had:
ROCKY ROAD - Brownies, smoked cherries, brown butter ice cream, almonds, marshmallow fluff, cotton candy and creme fraiche caramel.
I think the version I received sounds a bit more cohesive despite the large list of components.
John Danza wrote:I had eaten at Ruxbin about a year ago and really liked it, finding it much better than the last time I had been there a couple of years ago. So my wife and I went again on Saturday night, and I'm sorry to say I was really disappointed again. The problem wasn't with the cooking, which was done very well. The problem was the format.
The restaurant is now doing a fixed priced, shared plates format where two people must choose five dishes to share between themselves, for $65++ per person. However, there are only 11 dishes total on the menu, including the two desserts. So finding five dishes that two people are both excited about is very difficult, or at least was for us. Maybe it's advantageous to the kitchen to do prep this way, but for the customers it assures a mutual lowering of expectation and standards for what they want to eat. So we both left underwhelmed at what we ate, and had the honor of paying $180 all-in for the privilege.
I'm sorry to say that Ruxbin is back off my list unless the format changes.
BR wrote:John Danza wrote:I had eaten at Ruxbin about a year ago and really liked it, finding it much better than the last time I had been there a couple of years ago. So my wife and I went again on Saturday night, and I'm sorry to say I was really disappointed again. The problem wasn't with the cooking, which was done very well. The problem was the format.
The restaurant is now doing a fixed priced, shared plates format where two people must choose five dishes to share between themselves, for $65++ per person. However, there are only 11 dishes total on the menu, including the two desserts. So finding five dishes that two people are both excited about is very difficult, or at least was for us. Maybe it's advantageous to the kitchen to do prep this way, but for the customers it assures a mutual lowering of expectation and standards for what they want to eat. So we both left underwhelmed at what we ate, and had the honor of paying $180 all-in for the privilege.
I'm sorry to say that Ruxbin is back off my list unless the format changes.
Interesting to hear. I do find it odd that their are no additional charges for certain items, like the foie gras. Perhaps they simply accomplish any price adjustment in the portions, but it seems like some of the dishes should be priced far lower than others, particularly if a couple were to order two desserts. That being said, couldn't you avoid the issue by simply going with two separate dishes each and sharing a dessert, or three courses each (supplementing the five courses)? That might eliminate having to negotiate.
In any event, how was the food?
John Danza wrote:Your suggestion about the two and two, plus a shared dessert, would be a good one except for a couple of things:
1. The waitress said the dishes come when they come, so there's no attempt by the kitchen to time the delivery of the food. We received one of our dishes while barely half way through the previous one.
Jasubar wrote:Am considering Ruxbin for my husband's birthday - but I see on their website the BYOB policy is "You are welcome to bring one 750 ml bottle of wine, beer, or sake per 2 people."
Really? If we bring beer, we can only have the equivalent of about one beer per person for the duration of our dinner? By the same token, what if we want to have both red and white wines on hand? Or one of us wants beer and the other wine?
I've never encountered stringent quantity limits like this on BYOB before and am wondering how strict this is. Could be a deal killer.