enframed wrote:
OrthodoxEaster wrote: Fri Jul 05, 2024 1:46 pm
Some places gouge, but I'm not gonna complain about pricing too much b/c so many restaurants, even high-end ones (often when they don't have
finance-world backers and sometimes even when they do) operate on razor thin margins w/increasing labor costs and seriously jacked wholesale food costs. Quality raw material isn't usually cheap nowadays, even when you're buying decent meat and vegetables at home. Portion sizes do seem to be shrinking at restaurants, though, and not always at places that served way too generously in the first place.
I am convinced that in Los Angeles,
all new high(er)-end restaurants are backed financially by people (Hollywood and adjacent, and more recently, large real estate developers) who 1) want a to own a restaurant so they can have a place to go with them and their friends, whenever, 2) need deep expense line for the their taxes, 3) don't really care if these places make it five years, cuz they'll open another one anyway. You can see what these places are by the low number of kitchen staff, as they are all open kitchens, of course. Menus are small, plates are small, things are very composed. Wine lists are small (so are the cellars, physically, by design), cocktails are short and start at $20, some arrive in two parts, so you can mix them yourself ( also fuck you, you finish making my $24 drink, thanks).
I'm a little miffed cuz I just spend $208 (before tip) on four cocktails (short), two appetizers, and a very small pizza.
That said, these places do keep people employed at decent money, so there's that.
That's a fucking travesty. I'd have never guessed it, but it sounds like the state of higher end food is actually more ridiculous in LA than it is in NYC. It's funny b/c when I go to Philly, I come back thinking that the restaurant scene here in New York is a dopey minefield for suckers. But what you just described sounds a good deal worse.
I dunno how they do it, but people who aren't necessarily rich kids do sometimes still open places in New York w/o a stream of Wall Streeters and their tax write-offs backing them up. And sometimes even w/backers who give a shit. It gets harder and harder, but still.
I've never encountered a two part mix-it-yourself cocktail (the big trend here seems to be grossly overpriced mocktails). And for $208
after tax and tip, I can usually eat many courses of amazing food (at least, something way more ambitious than pizza) and down a few glasses. Not so hard to be very, very satisfied and a little drunk for that kinda cash.
The first episode of Season 3 of The Bear actually annoyed me
less than the overall tone of the previous season, which seemed like it was trying too hard and pushing the drama. Whereas this season's opener was simply a very pretty—but entirely pointless and cameo-filled—abstraction. Maybe it was self-sconsciouly arty and w/o much substance (what purpose did those flashbacks even serve? just to bring people up to speed who had head the hype but had never watched the show before?), but somehow, it bugged me less than where things had been heading before. Granted, this was a whopping one episode. I am not hopeful, but let's see where it goes.