robyn
legacy participant-
Posts
3,574 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Store
Help Articles
Everything posted by robyn
-
Funny you mention that. When I was taking photos of the food at 140 Park Lane - one of the staff members was taking photos of the same food with a cell phone! First time I'd ever seen that. Even though I'm an old fart (relatively speaking) - I'm willing to learn . Robyn
-
Is Kansas in the south ? So did people just talk at the function which is the subject of this thread - or did they eat ? For what it's worth - at my local BBQ place where I lunch at least once a week - the owner is from Texas - but he's kind of ecumenical when it comes to BBQ. Which is why he offers no fewer than 10 different sauces. He'd rather sell a lot of good BBQ than argue about the origins of the stuff and the PC way to prepare it. Robyn P.S. We all know that chicken isn't really proper BBQ - but it's served at all except the most hard core of places because it tastes good and because some of us like to keep our girlish figures . P.P.S. I don't think that anyone has mentioned pit cooking yet. It's a popular way to prepare things like whole pigs here in Florida (particularly when you have a lot of free time on your hands). Deep south whites cook pigs in pits. So do Cubans. Probably other people too (although not many Jewish people I know ).
-
Where will you be staying - what kind of food does he like - and how adventurous is he (is he 50 and open to new things - or 80 and kind of set in his ways)? When you say he's never been to a "fancy" restaurant - how "unfancy" are we talking about? Robyn
-
I have seen uncouth uneducated (about food) people dining in Atlanta - but I have also seen similarly uncouth uneducated people dining in cities that are supposed to be "frontwaters" (as opposed to "backwaters" ). I think you give people in other parts of the world credit for more sophistication than they have (in general). Robyn
-
And they have reservations at the other three restaurants as well. I can't recall ever making multiple restaurant reservations. Either I want to go to a particular place on a particular night - or I don't. I of course have had to cancel reservations before. Who hasn't (Tommy's point)? Heck - I've had to cancel entire trips because of family illness. SH** happens (especially when all your parents are in their 80's). But that's stuff you can't control. You can control the number of reservations you make. Robyn
-
Have you ever walked out of a restaurant that kept you waiting? My husband and I will usually give it 20 minutes max - unless the bar is awful - and then we'll give it maybe 10 minutes. I find that I enjoy a meal more when I'm not pissed by the time I get seated. For what it's worth - at most really big deal restaurants these days - I have to give credit card info - and reconfirm 24 hours in advance. Robyn
-
It's done - and I've done it when people who came to visit wanted to dine in specific busy restaurants that: 1) didn't take/honor reservations; and 2) I knew the grease would work - and how much was necessary. On my own - I make a point of avoiding those restaurants. Robyn
-
Of course I knew that . You think I'm getting anywhere near gators eating little kids ? I take all my animal shots in places like the zoo - and my backyard. Photoshop works wonders - you can crop out everything that reminds you you aren't in the wild. Robyn
-
I agree 100%. I live in a relatively hick part of the US - but even I can get superb raspberries this time of year. And my husband makes great whipped cream. So why would I want to pay money to eat this at a restaurant? I can also do the "pasta" thing - with stuff like fresh homemade pesto (all you need is fresh basil - a few common ingredients - and a food processor). Or tomatoes and fresh mozzarella. When I go to a high end restaurant and spend big money - I want something I would never in a million years think of making myself - something that would take me forever to make - even if I dared to try - something that looks beautiful - and tastes delicious. Something I can look at and eat and say - this person is 1000 times more talented than I am. Otherwise - what's the point of eating out (on the high end)? By the way - I kind of disagree on the short ribs - because the last time I ate them was at Le Cirque 2000. Not only were the ribs exquisite - but they took the marrow out of the ribs - combined it with some other stuff (who knows what it was?) - and stuffed it back into the ribs. The ribs were wonderful but I could have eaten about a pint of that marrow. Note that at this same meal - I had fruit sorbet for dessert. Sounds boring - but each of the 4 or 5 sorbets was a perfect tromp l'oeil of the fruit. The plate was both delicious - and gorgeous. A real knockout. Robyn
-
Don't know how old your kids are - but use them to try new things. Go for dim sum in Chinatown - then an afternoon movie - even a play if they're old enough - in/near Leicester Square. Lunch and the science museum on Exhibition Road (my lunch choice would be Harrod's - but I suspect your kids are too young to enjoy the monetary sacrifice ). The double decker bus tour! I think it's fun to be a "tourist" where you live (when we have company - we always do the "tourist" thing with them - and I can assure that our tourist stuff is a whole lot more pedestrian than yours is). Robyn
-
I vote for the latter. I think what happens is that people of a certain age (younger than me) are just so busy working - taking care of family - etc. - etc. You don't take the time to slow down a bit and "smell the roses" (quite literally - since the roses in Regents Park were fabulous a few weeks ago). I used to live in big cities when I was young - and - to me - there was nothing better than taking a Saturday or Sunday - and setting off on foot in a particular neighborhood. Perhaps I'd have one destination - and then I'd spend the rest of the day wandering - poking around. Stores - gardens - restaurants - museums - whatever. Sometimes I'd find great stuff. Sometimes everything would be mediocre. But the chase was part of the fun. When I go to a city like London - like I did last month - I do the same thing (of course - as a tourist - I can do it 5 days in a row - not only on a weekend). Can't say I found anything that 10,000 people haven't already discovered - but I had a lot of fun. And - at a minimum - when you walk 5 miles poking around - you will burn off the calories from everything you eat that day! Robyn
-
I bought the package of 4 cedar planks from Williams Sonoma last year (you soak them and put them on the grill) - and really like them for seafood (particularly salmon). Imparts a nice wood fired taste while avoiding the problems of overcooking fish. As for cleaning - if I don't clean the grill - the racoons will pick it apart at night and (try to) lick it clean. The idea of coon spittle all over my food just doesn't appeal to me. So I clean that grill as well as I clean everything else in my kitchen. Robyn
-
Perhaps other people are too polite to mention this. I'm not. I think it's a serious breach of restaurant etiquette to make 4 restaurant reservations for a particular night - knowing that you will cancel 3. What if everyone did that? And I called up one of those restaurants trying to make a reservation - only to be told that the restaurant was fully booked - when - in reality - none of those reservations was made with good intentions. I don't live in New York - so when I make reservations at high end restaurants in New York - I do so well in advance. And if I can't make the reservation (we're booked) - that's the end of me. How would you feel if a high end restaurant booked 4 groups for each table at 8 for Friday a month from now - knowing that it would call 3 of those groups a week in advance to cancel? Robyn
-
I don't agree. When I bought my digital camera - I didn't know anything about digital cameras or photography. And I spent quite a few hours on multiple trips in Best Buy. The sales people there (who don't work on commission) took a lot of time explaining things to me - and answering dozens of questions. And they were pretty much correct in everything they told me. So should I take up hours of a store's time and shop on line just to save a few dollars? No - because if I did that - and everyone else did that - then maybe 10 years down the road - there won't be any place for me to go where I can touch and feel something before I buy it - a place where I can have my questions about the next electronic gizmo I want to buy answered. As someone who *has* to buy certain things on line (like shoes - because I wear a small size that isn't sold where I live) - I can tell you that being forced to buy things on line isn't any fun at all. Robyn
-
Nope - it's a half chicken - raw. The gators at the zoo eat chickens - the gators at the Alligator Farm eat nutria. They eat them bones and all - and you get an idea of their massive jaw strength when you hear them chomping down on the food. Robyn
-
Thanks for the advice. I wasn't aware of the "Omenesque" quality of the light reflection when I was shooting . Guess I was concentrating too much on the food. I think the general quality (apart from the composition) was high because I was staging the shoots in daylight. As for the second shot - I think it's just really hard shooting in a dark restaurant with a flash. I think your suggestions are good ones for shooting in that type of environment - but apart from remembering to use the "close-up" feature - I'm not sure I could handle doing everything necessary to get a good shot without feeling very self-conscious in a fine dining setting (that's just me - the mileage of other people may vary - as may the mileage of the people eating next to them!). So perhaps I had best leave most of this work to the professionals - who generally photograph food under the conditions I had for the first photo. I'll note that the chef for the first photo was wonderful when I asked about taking pictures at some time other than the dinner hour. I doubt a 3 star Michelin chef would be as generous with his time - but I think that leaves plenty of chefs in the world who would be willing to work even with an amateur if the photos will be published anywhere. By the way - I agree about getting a big memory card (not necessarily the maximum - just a big one) - so you can shoot photos the way pros do - click click click click click. Although I wouldn't feel comfortable doing that at dinner - I'm entirely comfortable doing it in other settings. I really like to do animals - and my specialty these days is gators : Robyn
-
Neither have I (that restaurant almost made me - and my tummy - feel like royalty) . It is difficult to explain to someone who has never experienced a real 3 star Michelin European dining experience how it differs from most of the best of what New York has to offer. So I won't try. As for people who say ambience shouldn't count - I've been trying to come up with a good analogy. I'm not sure this is good - but here it is. I like to get a massage now and then - and say I find a masseuse who's terrific. Don't you think the quality of the massage experience will be different if I have the massage in the spa at the Breakers in Palm Beach - as opposed to the YMCA? The logical extension - albeit reductio ad absurdum <sp?> - of saying ambience doesn't count is rating take-out places and restaurants with the same yardstick. Robyn
-
There's an Uncle Tai's in Boca Raton - and the owner was supposed to have run a terrific restaurant in New York. Don't know how many stars it had (if any). Robyn P.S. After reading a little further in the thread - see you found the name of the restaurant. The Boca Center is in Boca Raton FL (perhaps there's another branch of this restaurant in Dallas). Uncle Tai's opened in Boca - I'd guess - in the 80's. It was very elegant then - and it's still fairly elegant. And the food is quite good - particularly in terms of Florida Chinese restaurant standards. It's certainly a far cry from your typical Chinese restaurant. On the other hand - it's not anywhere near a 4 star NYT restaurant (although perhaps it was in New York).
-
I'm not sure about that. I only went to Le Cirque 2000 once - and the food I ate was more Italian than French (although it wasn't 100% in either camp). And I think it got a 4 star rating - yes? Robyn
-
Apropos of "star inflation" - I'll add that in a city like London - which is every bit as big as New York - there is only 1 3 star Michelin restaurant in the city proper - and 2 others near the city. And you're not talking large numbers when it comes to 1 and 2 star restaurants either. By the way - I don't remember a Chinese restaurant at Bellagio. Must be relatively new (or perhaps I missed it - you could eat in that hotel for a week and not try everything). Robyn
-
It is. I don't know what your goal in dining is - but my goal (at times) is to get the best possible food in the best possible surroundings. I can live with lots of different kinds of music or atmosphere - as long as whatever is going on isn't so loud that I can't hear the staff explaining the menu or my husband talking to me. But - in addition - I want space! I'll give you a "for example" We had dinner at Cafe Boulud one night - in one of the tables along the side wall. The tables were small and tight as (fill in the blank). And then the 2 guys next to us (obviously lawyers) start talking about a case in Florida - and the judge and lawyers in that case - in very graphic (unflattering) personal terms. And my husband and I raise an eyebrow - because we happen to be lawyers - and the case and the people they're talking about - well we know everything about them. Now mind you - we live in Florida - and here we are in New York hearing all this stuff at a New York restaurant. If I wanted to hear the latest gossip about Miami lawyers - I would have stayed home and gone to my local bar. I don't need it to intrude on a very expensive meal. Anyway - we let these guys prattle on for a while - and then we told them who we were - and that their very public discussion wouldn't go unreported back home. Boy - were they pissed. Anyway - in my opinion - any place this can happen isn't a 4 star restaurant. When I am paying big bucks for a meal - I want excellent food - excellent service - in lovely surroundings - and a modicum of privacy. Robyn P.S. Having just returned from a week of fine dining in London - I can only say that 3 out of the 4 starred Michelin restaurants I ate at were better than anyplace I've dined at in the US in recent years - with the exception of ADNY (which was more Europe than NY). Not that I have an overwhelming amount of experience. It's just that when you go to most NY restaurants - no matter what food is being served - almost everything is too hurried - too cramped - the dining simply isn't pleasant. P.P.S. Mea culpa. I'm braindead tonight. At dinner - my husband reminded me that we had a world class meal at Le Cirque 2000 in New York (and it was Italian) - and one at Nobu too. Not recently. Probably 5 years ago or so. As for the atmosphere at Nobu - it might have been unusual because we were a party of 12 and had a really big private table in the back of the restaurant.
-
Here's one of the first pictures I took with a flash. I'd appreciate any constructive criticism (I think the picture is a bit out of focus - I forgot to use the close up setting). Robyn
-
Have you exchanged email with fromages.com? What did they say (if you did)? Robyn
-
I was planning to post some pictures I took in London when I write about the restaurants - but I didn't know how to do it. Thought I'd take advantage of this thread to learn. This is my first effort (actually it's about my 10th effort - but it's my first successful effort ). Guess the first time is the hardest. By the way - this is sweetbreads and monkfish - the chef's signature dish at 140 Park Lane. Yummy. And the camera is a Kodak Easyshare DX6340. I think the chef will be happy with these pictures. Robyn
-
Sorry it took me so long to get back to you. Yes - women of all ages get married and have bridesmaids - but I think the latter tends to become more infrequent as women age (there's just something a little weird about a 40 year old bridesmaid IMO - I think the dresses were made for younger women ). I agree that at a fine restaurant - all guests - no matter who they are - or how they behave - should be treated the same. On the other hand - wait staff who have a limited number of tables during a busy shift - when they rely on tips for a living - sometimes cannot avoid showing their hostility toward diners who put them in a position of not making the tips they would like to get (whether it's because they don't eat a lot of food - like a group of 10 women who split 5 salads - or because they're just lousy tippers - like a group of very young people like my nieces or very old people like my parents who think that 10% is plenty - or a group of Europeans who aren't accustomed to US tipping practices). I think most wait staff have a set of stereotypes when it comes to tipping - and some of the stereotypes aren't unjustified. And this may show up in the type of service a diner receives. I'm not saying it's right. I just think it happens. Robyn