Ethan Ray wrote:Willy nilly?
Menus change for hundreds of good reasons, even if the item is a popular... and I think other people have already hit on this in the earlier replies.
I didn't start this thread; so, I'm probably not the only one that has lost a favorite menu item.
Ethan Ray wrote:But it sounds like you should quit frequenting chef-driven restaurants.
If things didn't change on menus we'd all be still eating the same food our grandparents ate, or the menu would just keep on getting continually longer.
Condescend much? Yes. We'll take our $500-$800 per month restaurant budget and start going exclusively to chains because we're not appreciative enough of chefs.... NOT!
Ethan Ray wrote:It's pretty bold to make the assumption that every time you dine at a place that the menu isn't stuck in antiquity... unchanged.
I mean, At Denny's or Waffle House... It wouldn't surprise me in the least. Nor at a Chinese takeout place... but at Lou Lou?
Come on man. If you're even looking at this website I'd like to make the assumption that you "get this" and are seriously into food and dining... Perhaps I am mistaken?
Every time we go to any restaurant we ALWAYS ask about the specials before ordering. That doesn't preclude us having favorites, does it?
Ethan Ray wrote:I mean, dining should be an experience and you should relish in trying new things!
Not always. Sometimes it's about your comfort food. A chef should understand that he's taking a risk every time his menu changes. Some folks will like it more, some folks will like it less. The former will probably come back more frequently, and the others might just fade away. If you completely revamp your menu, then it's the biggest risk of all. That's why I mentioned Azalea.
Ethan Ray wrote:Who cares if they're out of/don't have the salad? Don't pout, don't get up and leave, don't refuse to return! Savor life and eat and be merry. Don't grumble about the salad being gone.
We didn't grumble or pout. We even returned a few times, but it never clicked for us at the new Sears Ave. location. That was just the one reason that also meshed with the topic of this thread.
Ethan Ray wrote:GIVE NEW FOOD A CHANCE.
I DO. ALL THE TIME. IT'S NOT A CONTRADICTION TO ALSO HAVE FAVORITES.
Ethan Ray wrote:Furthermore, stopping to go to a restaurant entirely because they changed their menu and don't have what you want is pretty extreme - and petty. Obviously you enjoy the food there enough, so why not try something new? Hell, even fast food places change their menu.
You make unwarranted assumptions. We didn't quit going because of that one salad. We gave it a few trys. It just wasn't our Lou Lou's anymore. I don't see how this makes us petty, that we didn't want to drive several miles further for a place that we enjoyed less. They were the ones that moved, and changed not us. They didn't run their plans by us before they did it either. Does that make them petty?
NOTE FOR THE OBLIVIOUS: We're happy that they're doing well! No hard feelings!
Ethan Ray wrote:Frankly, I see the note about the salad at Lou Lou now being called the "seasonal salad", but if it was the exact same as the "autumn salad" why on Earth would you want to eat things that our in season in autumn at any other time of the year? It's silly. Don't go looking for the tomato salad in December, or the pear salad in June. It's that simple.
You do realize that lettuce isn't in season in winter. Right? How many restaurants do you think are serving salads with lettuce in them right now, in the middle of February? What's silly is thinking we can't use any of the technology invented over the last 200 years, so we can eat greens and vegetables out of season, or fly in fresh seafood for that matter. Personally I like seafood, and fresh veggies year round. And I don't feel silly about it in the least.
Ethan Ray wrote:I realize that every word I've said is probably been in vain, but it's really shocking to me how silly you guys can be about "what's on the menu" and how extreme some people are when they're not satisfied (by refusing to return).
Like I said before. It was more a "drifting apart" than a "refusing to return". Varanese picked up a lot of our business during this time. Does your "try new food" include trying completely new restaurants? Are we allowed, in your universe, to shift our spending to new restaurants that suit a fancy just a little better?
Ethan Ray wrote:You'll find if you apply the same logic to a grocery store, you'll quickly run out of places to locate food./end rant.
I don't like it when a grocery does it either. I might even shift some business to another grocery that gives me more of a reason to return. Happens. All. The. Time. Still gotta eat though. So. I'll get what I like, wherever I can.
A chef has to understand that their restaurant is more than the food. It's about making connections with people. Most of those connections might not ever be apparent. Sever too many of those hidden connections all at once, and your restaurant might not make it. Ask Azalea.