Panther in the Den wrote:I have been imagining this scenario...
Customer: "I want to talk to the owner."
Owner arrives
Customer: "I think the crust is too dense and there aren't enough toppings"
I'm sure he will jump on it right away.
Chances are they made these changes on purpose and were an executive decision (thinking about the big changes to all aspects of the Coalfire pizza).
Maybe he has different tastes than you?
Maybe a part of a cost cutting measure?
I have to disagree. Yes it could be the reason but half the time it could easily go the other way with the owner saying something like: "The crust should NOT be too dense and/or we are always generous with the toppings. Thank you for letting me know. We have a new cook/I will talk to my staff/etc." When I let a manager or owner know my displeasure about something, I fully understand that sometimes what I don't like about the pizza is actually how they want it served as you said Panther. But sometimes the kitchen screwed up and they want to know so they can address it. Therefore, I will usually say something if it's a place I like the food at.
Since Cathy asked here's what happened with Coalfire. Ever since they opened I loved getting a sausage pizza there. Low moisture, whole milk mozzarella with fennel sausage from Bari, and that great sauce on top. It was really one of my favorite pizzas anywhere, and for years I would eat it up.
I know they tweaked the default sausage pizza on the menu in 2013 or so and added other toppings, but they still would give me the old sausage pizza that I loved. When I was there in 2016, this wasn't the case at all. What I ended up with was a virtually sauceless, bland pizza with crumbled Berkshire sausage (like Quad Cities style) and fresh mozzarella. It was such a letdown I couldn't believe I was sitting in Coalfire. The server had no idea they used to have both whole milk mozzarella and fresh mozzarella on the various pizzas (and you could choose which one you wanted if you built your own). Apparently it's now all (or mostly) fresh mozzarella. I wanted to talk to one of the owners, but he wasn't around. It was at that moment I was coming to the realization that one of my favorite pizzas was forever changed. Whole milk mozzarella has a lot of fat and that equals flavor to me. Fresh mozzarella is fine, but not by comparison. And what happened to the sausage? It was like birdseed. And barely any sauce at all. I decided to call the owner when they weren't busy and he was very nice during my interrogation of him

. He said they did pretty much get rid of the whole milk mozzarella and were using fresh for all the pizzas. Not a deal breaker, but a disappointment for me. He said they stopped using Bari because they were not dependable. Fine. But what happened to the delicious sauce? He said he changed it as well. He doesn't like oregano and pretty much took it out among other things plus the previous partner who left to open Armitage Pizza wanted to save money on ingredients and now they were using higher quality ingredients. I told him that wasn't an issue for me if the end result was better in the past. He then said something amazing. Knowing I would drive from Highland Park just to eat there he said if I called ahead he would make the old pizza for me. He would use the whole milk mozzarella and would get the sausage from Bari. I was blown away by his generosity. "But how are you going to bring back the old sauce?" "I can't." That was what I figured he would say; sauce is a lot of work. I never took him up on that offer (and I don't want to make him go to all that trouble), but it was a great conversation with an owner (one I had not met before) that was open to feedback (good or bad).