Do you remember college orientation when the dean had you look at the guy next to you and said "one of you won't be here next year"?
Agami won't be here next year. They are trying to import LP, downtown, Bucktown or Randolph Street pricing in Uptown, which is just starting to turn...I hope it keeps going, but from what I saw of Agami and now heard, they won't be around long.
I first became aware of Agami because they are close to my house and, strangely there was several "reviews" of the place before the place was even open. I understand thats how things are done in Hollywood, but you would think restaurant reviews would be based on anonymous visits to an actual working restaurant. If this place needs that much buzz, I doubt they can stand on their food alone.
...so, back to our regularly scheduled topic.
Bravo, hurray, congratulations, vote with your dollar, unchain your lunch money and good for you. There are way too many restaurants in Chicago vying for your business...give it to them.
I'm not sure where Gleam was going with his first post, but he comes back to the point I will agree with in his second post. THERE SHOULD BE A GRACE PERIOD.
LAZ is, of course, correct. A restaurant does not have to conform to what is printed about them. She also makes a great case for the mistakes that happen. However, it is also the case that newly opened restaurants are trying to capitalize on the liquor license delay, by opening without a license and letting folks know they can try their place BYO rather than dining at a place that has a liquor license...sort of a grand opening special.
I agree with LAZ, call, call, call. When dining with a smaller group you can take risks. I applaud your efforts to move 7 people to a new destination.
BTW, if it is not clear from the previous posts...there are two catagories of BYO restaurants: (i) BYO-limited, that open with a license pending and (ii) BYO-always. The BYO-L's just opened without greasing the right palms, they are usually larger, mid-level or upscale places. The BYO-always are near schools (Tango Sur) or other prohibited zones or simply do not have the traffic to afford a liquor license like many smaller restaurants or places where booze is served.
Now, for the personal story, to this day I won't step in Cafe Salmarie in Lincoln Square. At the time, my friend and I would look for BYOs on a regular basis. Once in a while we would run across those that finally got a liquor license. The Dellwood Pickle is the one I remember. They said, we got our liquor license last week, so at the end of the month you will no longer be able to bring in your own. Sadly, the BYO policy at Dellwood and Tomboy were what these places had going for them that made them so popular (Andersonville still has block by block prohibitions on Liquor Licenses), the Dellwood closed a year or two after it got its license. I have not been back to the re-concepted Tomboy, which now sports a liquor license.
At Cafe Salmonella we were met at the door by one of the owners who said the Cafe just got their liquor license the day before...they only had a few items even stocked. We asked if they couldn't let it slide, a snippy retort about being cheapskates was returned. This, after the huge sign in the window was still up. I said "best of luck, plenty of competition in Lincoln Square" and we walked out.
No doubt someday they will realize the chain of economic harm they let loose that day....I just may have to wait another seven year for it to take effect
I guess the question is where does a restaurant's responsibility to provide hospitality begin or end. If they are over-booked should they try call another place for you, should they let you know the wait is going to be 45 minutes, should they have provided an amuse, comped something? Just about any small gesture would have cured what ailed about 75% of the folks, maybe not made them happy, but at least shown an effort.
Sometimes a restaurant will get an A for effort, sometimes a return visit.
In the end, we all have to have some degree of trust for the people who prepare our food. I think a grace period of two or three weeks is reasonable.
p.s., I'll leave whether you should let Metromix know about the change policy for your own discretion, but do you think if they had the restaurant's phone number wrong, metromix would not have been informed?
Unchain your lunch money!