Roberta's
#31
Posted 05 November 2010 - 04:19 AM
#32
Posted 05 November 2010 - 02:09 PM
This has become something of a chef playground. Not just The Chang.
ETA: Oh, he also said they'd acquired wine glasses to replace the jam jars. Good thing too.
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#33
Posted 05 November 2010 - 02:15 PM
--H.L.Mencken
.............................
Sissies and wastoids
#34
Posted 05 November 2010 - 02:41 PM
)How crazy is it to try it on the weekend? like tonight
#35
Posted 05 November 2010 - 02:59 PM
Roberta's
I haven't tried on the weekend, but I would expect some craziness most nights. Very popular. As I recall, I went on a weeknight in a thunderstorm and waited about half an hour for a table. And the wait area is not that comfortable.
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#36
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:05 PM
Maybe its because I'm at work and am using an old browser - but their menu page is blank. And the other pages are unreadable because of the pictures used as backgroundSome restaurants these days post their prices on the interweb.
And there is an ATM at the door.
#37
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:10 PM
No appetizer/entree division on the menu of course, but around $11 to $15 for things like sweetbreads, tripe or cuttlefish, up to $24 for a pork chop. $6 to $8 for snacks. $9 for a meat or cheese plate.
Given what we've been hearing, the actual menu might be expanded somewhat. Hard to spend more than sixty or seventy a head on food, though.
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#38
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:12 PM
thanksAh, the problem is yours.
No appetizer/entree division on the menu of course, but around $11 to $15 for things like sweetbreads, tripe or cuttlefish, up to $24 for a pork chop. $6 to $8 for snacks. $9 for a meat or cheese plate.
Given what we've been hearing, the actual menu might be expanded somewhat. Hard to spend more than sixty or seventy a head on food, though.
this is what I see
Menu

Homepage
#39
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:24 PM
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#40
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:29 PM
#41
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:33 PM
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#42
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:35 PM
Oyster with citrus granita
Shiro ebi with poppy seeds - I would have thought these were langoustines in a blind tasting - now I remember there's a langoustine and poppy seed dish at Atelier de JR - Roberta's dish is better
Pasta with uni sauce and mussles
Scallop topped with hackleback caviar
Uni with burrata - a surprisingly great combo
Tile fish with matsutake
Treviso with vincotto and blue cheese
Celery root with mascarpone
Whole roasted normandy duck that was hanging for a month
Roast mangalitsa pork (shoulder chops)
Extremely aged steak, served with small breaded bits of sweetbreads, and potatoes that were too strongly vanilla flavored for me
Cheeses (the weakest course of the meal I think, Consider Bradwell on a weak day and served too cold)
Parsley ice cream with lemon curd
Sunchoke pudding
I think only some of the items are available on the menu. All the ingredients were top notch, execution extremely solid, and price was totally unrealistic (we came with folks who are known to the house).
The place was packed constantly from about 6pm until we left, I think some folks were waiting in the bar area/holding pen for well over an hour.
#43
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:35 PM
)What is the price point like for non-pizza (since it is cash only need to know how much to bring)
)How crazy is it to try it on the weekend? like tonight
Some of the larger items, like the duck Orik mentioned, aren't always available because they aren't always ready. These items will be more expensive than the items Wilf mentioned, assuming they're ordered whole, a la carte.
--H.L.Mencken
.............................
Sissies and wastoids
#44
Posted 05 November 2010 - 03:44 PM
Mystery solved. It works fine in Firefox. Bonner is using lameass Internet Explorer.You shouldn't see the text superimposed on the home page photo, but you should see links to menus superimposed over that half-a-bowl photo.
"None of you get it." - Wilfrid (on the Beatles)
"I don't have time to point out all the ways in which you're wrong" - irnscrabblechf52
#45
Posted 05 November 2010 - 04:57 PM
wow, that's a completely different restaurant!We were there from 5:30 until about 11pm, and went through quite a bit of wine so I'm probably forgetting a lot, but from what I recall we had:
Oyster with citrus granita
Shiro ebi with poppy seeds - I would have thought these were langoustines in a blind tasting - now I remember there's a langoustine and poppy seed dish at Atelier de JR - Roberta's dish is better
Pasta with uni sauce and mussles
Scallop topped with hackleback caviar
Uni with burrata - a surprisingly great combo
Tile fish with matsutake
Treviso with vincotto and blue cheese
Celery root with mascarpone
Whole roasted normandy duck that was hanging for a month
Roast mangalitsa pork (shoulder chops)
Extremely aged steak, served with small breaded bits of sweetbreads, and potatoes that were too strongly vanilla flavored for me
Cheeses (the weakest course of the meal I think, Consider Bradwell on a weak day and served too cold)
Parsley ice cream with lemon curd
Sunchoke pudding
I think only some of the items are available on the menu. All the ingredients were top notch, execution extremely solid, and price was totally unrealistic (we came with folks who are known to the house).
The place was packed constantly from about 6pm until we left, I think some folks were waiting in the bar area/holding pen for well over an hour.
Everything is always OK in the end. If it's not OK, then it's not the end.










