I honestly forget that tiny boxwoods exists past brunch
You must not be a full fledged member of The Ladies Who Lunch.swimmerbabe11 said:
I honestly forget that tiny boxwoods exists past brunch
State of Grace is a great place. Reality of these lists is places come and go and being the "it" or "trendy" place plays a part. Especially if you aren't a place constantly updating your menu.Ragoo said:
We went to State of Grace yesterday for brunch and thought it was very good. Not on the list so maybe it is played out and not hip enough or OG enough to muster a mention?
AgLA06 said:State of Grace is a great place. Reality of these lists is places come and go and being the "it" or "trendy" place plays a part. Especially if you aren't a place constantly updating your menu.Ragoo said:
We went to State of Grace yesterday for brunch and thought it was very good. Not on the list so maybe it is played out and not hip enough or OG enough to muster a mention?
Places like Mark's or Tony's and Mocking Bird Cafe just aren't the norm.
AgLA06 said:You must not be a full fledged member of The Ladies Who Lunch.swimmerbabe11 said:
I honestly forget that tiny boxwoods exists past brunch
AgLA06 said:They're in the old Pass and Provisions space, correct?Ragoo said:
Bludorn is entirely too low. Criminally low.
It and Mark's were probably 2 of my top 5 all time places to dine. Unique atmosphere and always great.ChipFTAC01 said:AgLA06 said:State of Grace is a great place. Reality of these lists is places come and go and being the "it" or "trendy" place plays a part. Especially if you aren't a place constantly updating your menu.Ragoo said:
We went to State of Grace yesterday for brunch and thought it was very good. Not on the list so maybe it is played out and not hip enough or OG enough to muster a mention?
Places like Mark's or Tony's and Mocking Bird Cafe just aren't the norm.
Man, I loved Mockingbird cafe.
I think there are a few factors... not 'new' is one and the other Ford restaurants in the Heights seem to get the love. Plus, there is a huge push back on just listing a ton of expensive places as the best, which, frankly, they usually are, but the Beard awards and others try to recognize less formal places, too.Ragoo said:
We went to State of Grace yesterday for brunch and thought it was very good. Not on the list so maybe it is played out and not hip enough or OG enough to muster a mention?
you wonder when the last time she stepped foot in these places was.AgLA06 said:jja79 said:
Gatlin's being on the list invalidates it to me. They seem like nice people but it's ordinary in its best day.
It was quite good back in the days of a shed on 19th before the barbecue craze and moving to a brick and mortar.
I'm not sure how they're tied into things, but they get an exorbitant amount of love and publicity for the quality of their products and service. F&F is no different. Hell, they have a "chef" on the food network all the time.
I don't get it and I'm a sucker for backing local GOOF joints.
Curious why you say this. This is her job. I can easily see her eating at 200 or so restaurants a year. And this is a yearly top 100 so even if it's a holdover from prior years, I would think she would revisit to reconfirm. Now, I don't know if she does that, but it doesn't seem outlandish.Diggity said:you wonder when the last time she stepped foot in these places was.AgLA06 said:jja79 said:
Gatlin's being on the list invalidates it to me. They seem like nice people but it's ordinary in its best day.
It was quite good back in the days of a shed on 19th before the barbecue craze and moving to a brick and mortar.
I'm not sure how they're tied into things, but they get an exorbitant amount of love and publicity for the quality of their products and service. F&F is no different. Hell, they have a "chef" on the food network all the time.
I don't get it and I'm a sucker for backing local GOOF joints.
Obviously, she isn't visiting all 100 restaurants every year, but it seems clear that she hasn't gone to either of these in a long while.
As mentioned, Gatlin's was really good on 19th, then they moved. Quality dropped while competition increased.
Fege's was really great in the early days of Greenway. I didn't dislike it that last couple times I went, but it's nowhere near the level of places like Truth, Pit Room, Corkscrew, Roegel's, etc.
I doubt she's paying out of her own pocket at this point . At least not for a decent chunk. I imagine it's industry sponsors and Chronicle funded by a good bit. As much crap as we like to give her, the 100 list and restaurant week took the Houston food scene to a new level. And as much love as Houston gets, I still think it's underrated nationally.Diggity said:
how many restaurants would she have to visit on a yearly basis in order to come up with a "Top 100"?
she also claims to visit new restaurants several times. It's just not realistic or practical to think she visits every one of these restaurants every year.
I don't have social media, but that would be a great question to ask regarding her process. It would probably be a great article for her to publish.Diggity said:
how many restaurants would she have to visit on a yearly basis in order to come up with a "Top 100"?
she also claims to visit new restaurants several times. It's just not realistic or practical to think she visits every one of these restaurants every year.
I mean if she's getting $50k - $100k a year from the Chron just in expenses, then good for her and I'm even more jealous.schmendeler said:
I would be surprised if any meal she is eating for consideration for being mentioned in the Chronicle isn't 100% expensed.
It's the full Chronicle staff that visits the restaurants, several people and their names are mentioned in the Chronicle articles. So between all of them they can visit lots of places annually. They pay cash (obviously expensed) in order to try and be anonymous, though I'm sure the higher end places would all recognize Cook. At least this is the information that they've published before.MAS444 said:
I'm sure most of her meals are comped by the restaurants...whether she's "working" or not. If they're not, they're off the list.
I think part of it is you're only thinking about it regarding her only eating there for dinner. 3 dinners and 3 lunches a week is 312 visits a year. I'm sure it would be like having a part time job if we still worked our normal jobs. But we'd all kill to have a second paying job that purely worked with our current schedule and comped our lunches and dinners at really nice places.Diggity said:
not even talking about the money, which (as mentioned) isn't her own.
just the logistics of doing multiple trips to the new restaurants would be a full time job.
as far as re-visits, I'm sure she spot checks some places, but how many of these places would she have to actually eat at every year in order to put together a comprehensive list? 300? 500? I'm just not seeing it.
you seen what they're paying newspaper staff these days!Diggity said:
that makes sense...didn't realize she had a staff of folks going on these visits.
Does bring up the question of how the Chronicle has the budget to pay for this department, when they're hemorrhaging money everywhere else it seems.
I don't think she has to start from scratch and literally try every restaurant in town. Between the people involved, nature of the restaurant, buzz about it, reviews by other diners, etc., there's probably only a couple hundred places that can make a legit argument to be included. Wouldn't be too hard to try all of those. Does this mean a place never falls through the cracks? No. But I think this would get you most of the way there and is credible.Diggity said:
not even talking about the money, which (as mentioned) isn't her own.
just the logistics of doing multiple trips to the new restaurants would be a full time job.
as far as re-visits, I'm sure she spot checks some places, but how many of these places would she have to actually eat at every year in order to put together a comprehensive list? 300? 500? I'm just not seeing it.
To be fair, that's not unusual. Chalk it up as her doing you a favor and steering the masses to other places on your behalf.Diggity said:
well there you go.
guess she just has bad taste in BBQ
Maybe I'm the outlier, but come restaurant week I'd be lying if I didn't admit I'll pull out the top 100 list and see if any have an interesting menu during the month of August to hit up for lunch or a less expensive dinner for a night out.schmendeler said:
I would imagine this list is a big driver of traffic for them
it's really good. I've been several times, chef awarded best chef in Texas by James Beard awards earlier this year. They're moving from a super-obscure location next to a gas station under the RR tracks to a nicer locale. Thai food.Biz Ag said:
STREET TO KITCHEN
Is road kill their specialty?
Thanks for the info - will have to check it out.chico said:it's really good. I've been several times, chef awarded best chef in Texas by James Beard awards earlier this year. They're moving from a super-obscure location next to a gas station under the RR tracks to a nicer locale. Thai food.Biz Ag said:
STREET TO KITCHEN
Is road kill their specialty?
Stuff like this I just don't get, even from their perspective. Charge $20 for a dish plus a 20% service charge for a total of $24 and people will be irate over the service charge. Just charge $24 for the dish and most people will never think twice about it (versus $20). Seems like a huge unforced error to irritate your customers is a way that is easily avoided.Diggity said:
Food is great.
Mandatory 20% "service charge", which they insist is separate from the tip, is obnoxious.
Everything about the experience feels "mom and pop", except for the bill at the end.