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Posted (edited)

NYT Diners Blog just announced that Sam Sifton will be the new restaurant critic. Sifton has been Culture Editor for the paper (he had also served as dining editor there) and will be replacing Frank Bruni.

(Deep breath.) Thoughts?

ETA the dining editor bit.

Edited by chrisamirault (log)

Chris Amirault

eG Ethics Signatory

Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

Posted

A little snooping around revealed this NYTpicker blog entry about Sifton, who dissed star ratings systems in a Wall St Journal article:

We don't seek to reduce our arguments about a particular piece of art to a number, or letter grade, or golden spatulas, or whatever. These are numbers that aren't based on any rational or countable thing.

When asked about the NYT's restaurant rating system, he said that they were "the exception that proves the rule here." As NYTpicker cracks, it's good, I guess, that they're not golden spatulas.

Chris Amirault

eG Ethics Signatory

Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

Posted

I was going to say... doesn't making Sam Sifton the reviewer pretty much throw in the towel with respect to supposed reviewer anonymity?

--

Posted

Grub Street just posted a Sam Sifton Reader. Their take on his oeuvre:

The writing is punchy, showing a flair for creative food description ... while also evincing some of Bruni’s humor. ... Sifton also has an eye for the anecdote: He spends two paragraphs describing a funny incident at Junior’s, wherein a man asked the host after his mother (“a big woman”). He knows his way around a simile and isn’t afraid of pop culture[.]

Grub Street doesn't expect much of a change from Bruni based on their quick review. More at the link, including excerpts.

Chris Amirault

eG Ethics Signatory

Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

Posted

Bill Keller weighs in on the anonymity question here:

Some restaurants care desperately about critics, and keep the equivalent of a TSA watch list at the reservation desk. Others, probably most, are not on the lookout for critics because they are plenty busy doing their jobs. A review is almost always based on multiple, unannounced visits at different meals, and a reviewer’s own experience can be cross-checked with intelligence from others.So, while we don’t intend to put Sam’s face on sides of MTA buses, I’m not going to lose a lot of sleep over this.

But... for many of the most high profile restaurants in the most high profile restaurant city in the country, the people who "are plenty busy doing their jobs" are "on the lookout for critics." And what is this "intelligence" exactly?

Whatever you believe about the anonymity issue, this feels like a dodge, not an answer.

Chris Amirault

eG Ethics Signatory

Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

Posted

The anonymity requirement is malarkey, but so is Keller's rationale that many restaurants won't recognize Sam Sifton. I doubt there is a single potential three star restaurant that will not peg Sifton as soon as he steps out of his cab.

Holly Moore

"I eat, therefore I am."

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Posted
The anonymity requirement is malarkey, but so is Keller's rationale that many restaurants won't recognize Sam Sifton.  I doubt there is a single potential three star restaurant that will not peg Sifton as soon as he steps out of his cab.

Restaurants miss critics all the time. In this week's review of Union Square Cafe, Frank Bruni mentioned a recent visit, where his party sat down and was then ignored for 40 minutes. Now, Danny Meyer is one of the city's savvyest restauranteurs, his places have received multiple reviews from Bruni, and they've had 5 years to learn what he looks like. Yet they missed him. If Union Square Cafe can miss Bruni, you've got to figure that it can happen just about anywhere.
Posted
So, it is a given that Marea will be his first?

As Sneakeater mentioned, Frank Bruni will be reviewing Marea, unless there is some kind of culinary earthquake between now and August 19.

It will be interesting, though, to see how Sifton begins. Bruni's first review was Babbo, and it was more about setting a tone for his tenure, since there was clearly no particular reason why Batali's restaurant needed a re-review at that time.

  • 6 months later...
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