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06/07/2017

Michelin steigt bei Robert Parker ein

Der für seine Restaurantführer bekannte französische Michelin-Konzern ist bei der renommierten Wein-Publikation Robert Parker's Wine Advocate eingestiegen.

Michelin habe 40 Prozent des Kapitals erworben, teilte das Unternehmen am Mittwoch mit. Eine Investitionssumme wurde nicht genannt. Die vom amerikanischen Weinkritiker Robert Parker gegründete Veröffentlichung gilt als Referenz im Weinmarkt, seinen Schulnoten-Bewertungen ("Parker-Punkte") wird großer Einfluss auf die Preise zugeschrieben.

Parker hatte den Newsletter mit Weinbewertungen 1978 gegründet. 2012 gab er die Chefredaktion ab. Auch die Bewertung der Weine aus der französischen Bordeaux-Region liegt inzwischen in den Händen eines anderen Weinexperten. Der 69-jährige Parker ist aber weiterhin für Weine aus dem Napa Valley in Kalifornien zuständig. Der Restaurantführer "Guide Michelin" des französischen Reifenherstellers gilt in Gourmetkreisen als "Bibel der Feinschmecker".

"Working with the MICHELIN guide on events in Singapore and Hong Kong-Macau demonstrated to both of our companies how much richer and more impactful the experiences we create for our loyal readers can be when we come together," erklärte Robert Parker Wine Advocate's Editor-in-Chief und Master of Wine, Lisa Perrotti-Brown. "The similarities between our core values, integrity and rigor as critics within the worlds of wine and food were striking. It very soon became apparent that merging to create a sum that is even better than our parts would be an incredible means of offering fine food and wine lovers around the world even more."

Dazu Robert Parker: "Far too long critics have divided wine and food into two separate areas of expertise, but now the most realistic blend of impartial, independent, unbiased, intelligent food and wine opinion and wisdom have been married for the benefit of both wine and food consumers." GW/dpa

source : niko's weinwelten

VILD MAD.The initiative includes a website and app, a curriculum for Danish schools, and foraging workshops led by fifty...
27/06/2017

VILD MAD.
The initiative includes a website and app, a curriculum for Danish schools, and foraging workshops led by fifty park rangers around the country. And while this program was created with the Danish landscape in mind, the website and app will also be available in English as well.
Foraging helped shape the flavors and philosophy of noma’s kitchen, and we believe it can be an incredible tool for people to become acquainted with the landscape; discover new flavors and ingredients; and start new conversations about where food comes from. Stay tuned for ways you can get involved in VILD MAD later this summer. We’ll celebrate with a day-long foraging festival in Copenhagen on August 27.
https://vimeo.com/223121129

Learn more and download the VILD MAD app at http://www.vildmad.dk.

Eleven Madison Park Tops the 2017 Ranking of the ‘World’s 50 Best Restaurants’Today in Melbourne, Australia, chef-world ...
06/04/2017

Eleven Madison Park Tops the 2017 Ranking of the ‘World’s 50 Best Restaurants’

Today in Melbourne, Australia, chef-world heavies gathered for the announcement of the annual World’s 50 Best Restaurants list.

Since it debuted in 2002, the list has steadily gained both authority and notoriety in the restaurant industry (it has also spawned several offshoot awards), but it nevertheless resonates with diners around the world, and high placement guarantees a restaurant’s tables will be more or less filled for the foreseeable future.

The big news this year is that New York’s own Eleven Madison Park nabbed the top spot from Italy’s Osteria Francescana. (It’s the first time a non-European restaurant has topped the ranking since the French Laundry won in the list’s earliest iterations.)

In fact, New York chefs had a strong showing in general. Dan Barber’s Blue Hill at Stone Barns made a big jump, from 48 up to 11. Le Bernardin is 17. And Enrique Olvera’s Manhattan restaurant, Cosme, debuts at number 40 (joining Olvera’s Mexico City restaurant, Pujol, which is at 20).

Also noteworthy, though not unexpected, is the absence of Rene Redzepi’s Noma, which has held one of the top ten spots for the past nine years, owing to the fact that the original location closed at the end of last year.

Here’s the full list; gastro-tourists should start making their reservations immediately.

1. Eleven Madison Park, New York City
2. Osteria Francescana, Italy
3. El Celler de Can Roca, Spain
4. Mirazur, France
5. Central, Peru
6. Asador Etxebarri, Spain
7. Gaggan, Thailand
8. Maido, Peru
9. Mugaritz, Spain
10. Steirereck, Austria
11. Blue Hill at Stone Barns, Pocantico Hills, New York
12. Arpège, France
13. Alain Ducasse au Plaza Athénée, France
14. Restaurant Andre, Singapore
15. Piazza Duomo, Italy
16. D.O.M., Brazil
17. Le Bernardin, New York City
18. Narisawa, Japan
19. Geranium, Denmark
20. Pujol, Mexico
21. Alinea, Chicago
22. Quintonil, Mexico
23. White Rabbit, Russia
24. Amber, Hong Kong
25. Tickets, Spain
26. The Clove Club, England
27. The Ledbury, England
28. Nahm, Thailand
29. Le Calandre, Italy
30. Arzak, Spain
31. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, France
32. Attica, Australia
33. Astrid y Gaston, Peru
34. De Librije, Netherlands
35. Septime, France
36. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, England
37. Saison, San Francisco
38. Azurmendi, Spain
39. Relae, Denmark
40. Cosme, New York City
41. Ultraviolet, China
42. Boragó, Chile
43. Reale, Italy
44. Brae, Australia
45. Den, Japan
46. Astrance, France
47. Vendôme, Germany
48. Restaurant Tim Raue, Germany
49. Tegui, Argentina
50. Hof Van Cleve, Belgium

By Alan Sytsma - Grub Street
Image
Daniel Humm, who took over Eleven Madison Park’s kitchen in 2006. Photo: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Relais & Chateax

Dominique Crenn Finally Makes It Onto World’s 50 Best List; Just Not the Top 50The full list will be unveiled next weekN...
29/03/2017

Dominique Crenn Finally Makes It Onto World’s 50 Best List;
Just Not the Top 50

The full list will be unveiled next week

Next week in Melbourne, Australia, the World’s 50 Best Restaurants will reveal its annual ranking of expensive culinary establishments run by a collection of predominantly male chefs. But today, the guide unveiled its consolation prize: the 51-100 list, a mix of older venues that fell off the proper list along with newer spots making their debut.

This year’s big news is the appearance of Dominique Crenn. Long heralded as one of America’s great chefs, Crenn has been notably absent from a list whose judges have historically shortchanged female culinarians; there were just two woman chefs on last year’s list (perhaps in recognition of this oversight, the organizers feted her with the dubious honor of “World’s Best Female Chef.”)

Crenn has finally made the cut in 2017. Well, sort of. Her Atelier Crenn in San Francisco, an experimental tasting menu spot that holds two Michelin stars, debuted at 83. Unfortunately, unless the guide changes its policy, the low ranking means her restaurant isn’t the recipient of a multi-paragraph writeup. No link to her website is provided. No gorgeously list food photos are included. And the guide doesn’t even publish her phone number. (Here’s that website link in case you want to check it out.)

In other big news, Thomas Keller’s extravagantly pricey Per Se, the subject of blistering reviews from the NYT’s Pete Wells in 2016 and Eater’s Ryan Sutton (that’s me), continued its free fall to 87. It’s a steep drop from 2013, when the three Michelin-starred temple ranked in the top 10. By contrast, Keller’s Napa Valley flagship, the French Laundry, crept back up to 68 from last year’s 85 following a $10 million kitchen renovation (it was once ranked the “world’s best restaurant”).

A number of prominent venues unexpectedly dropped off the main list. Fäviken, Magnus Nilsson’s heralded but hard-to-get-to destination in northern Sweden, fell from 41 to 57. Cape Town’s Test Kitchen plummeted from 22 to 63; it was the only restaurant on the list located in Africa. And New York’s Estela, an affordable-ish and perennially packed small-plates place that doesn’t even offer a tasting menu, fell from 44 to 66.

Here's the full back 50. Use the comments to chime in on whether you agree or disagree with the selections.

51. Mikla (Istanbul)

52. Nihonryori RyuGin (Tokyo)

53. Burnt Ends (Singapore)

54. Lyle’s (London)

55. Disfrutar (Barcelona)

56. Nerua (Bilbao)

57. Faviken (Jarpen, Sweden)

58. Momofuku Ko (New York City)

59. Combal Zero (Italy)

60. 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)

61. Hertog Jan (Bruges, Belgium)

62. Quique Dacosta (Denia, Spain)

63. The Test Kitchen (Cape Town, South Africa)

64. La Grenouillere (La Madelaine-sous-Montreuil, France)

65. Biko (Mexico City)

66. Estela (New York City)

67. Benu (San Francisco)

68. The French Laundry

69. Hisa Franko (Kobarid, Slovenia)

70. Aqua (Wolfsburg, Germany)

71. Lung King Heen (Hong Kong)

72. Schloss Schauenstein (Furstenau, Switzerland)

73. La Colombe (Cape Town, South Africa)

74. The Jane (Antwerp, Belgium)

75. Sud 777 (Mexico City)

76. Lasai (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

77. Martín Berasategui (Lasarte-Oria, Spain)

78. Indian Accent (New Delhi)

79. Maaemo (Oslo)

80. Le Cinq (Paris)

81. Maní (São Paulo)

82. Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare (New York City)

83. Atelier Crenn (San Francisco)

84. The Restaurant at Meadowood (St. Helena, CA)

85. Belcanto (Lisbon)

86. Odette (Singapore)

87. Per Se (New York City)

88. Selfie (Moscow)

89. Mingles (Seoul)

90. Manresa (Los Gatos, CA)

91. St John (London)

92. Twins (Moscow)

93. Le Chateaubriand (Paris)

94. Kadeau (Copenhagen)

95. Quay (Sydney)

96. Epicure (Paris)

97. Sushi Saito (Tokyo)

98. Hedone (London)

99. Florilège (Tokyo)

100. Olympe (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

by Ryan Sutton Eater.com
Mar 28, 2017, 2:26am EDT
Picture by Patricia Chang

14/12/2016

Top New York Restaurants !

No one person can review every new restaurant in New York, but not long ago, I felt confident that I could hit all the ones where a customer who had a full dinner and no drinks would spend, say, $125 or more. I didn’t always choose to weigh in, but those cases were rare.

Over the last year or so, I started to notice that there were so many places in that price range that even if reviewing them all were possible, it didn’t make a lot of sense. Among Japanese restaurants alone, there were a half-dozen high-end omakase places serving cooked food, sushi or some combination. Some I wrote about, some I may circle back to later on, and others left me wishing I had saved room for a second, more interesting meal.

Despite what you may read in the comments on some of my reviews, these high-end meals are not really for “the 1 percent.” Even the most expensive restaurant is not in the same league as a $25 million apartment over Central Park.

Still, the growing distance between the very rich and everybody else is replicated, in miniature and with less alarming implications, in the city’s restaurant scene. So I was encouraged when three tasting-menu places that were among my 10 favorite restaurants this year bowed to more moderate budgets by adding a shorter, cheaper meal (Aska and Günter Seeger NY) or an à la carte option (Agern).

I cheered for Greg Baxtrom, a product of several famous tasting-menu kitchens, when he brought a similar level of creativity to Olmsted, an affordable neighborhood spot in Brooklyn. And I smiled every time I spotted a bottle of wine for under $55 at Le Coucou, a reformed and refined homage to the fancy old-school French restaurants that have mostly vanished from New York.

Month after month, I was surprised by the good, resourceful kitchens I found squirreled away in spaces that barely qualified as restaurants: wine bars and bar bars and a nostalgic lunch counter called Mr. Donahue’s, where $20 buys a full dinner of American food my grandmother would have recognized.

The cost of running a restaurant is notoriously punishing. Often the pain is passed on to us, but sometimes it inspires chefs to think a little harder. This year, those are the restaurants I want to tell you about. They are presented here roughly in the order of the intensity of my desire to go back again, which diverges here and there from the number of stars that flew above their reviews.

1. Le Coucou

The genius of this project from the chef Daniel Rose and the restaurateur Stephen Starr is that it gives us almost everything we loved about New York’s old-line French restaurants without the things we didn’t. The dining room isn’t stuffy, the service isn’t snooty, and people don’t get seated in Siberia if their pronunciation of boeuf bourguignon doesn’t have the right backhand spin. (As far as I can tell, Le Coucou doesn’t have a Siberia.) The wine list covers the historic old appellations of France, but it also embraces emerging ones and exciting regions from other countries while pricing bottles in a range that’s unusually democratic. Meanwhile, Mr. Rose knocks the dust off some archetypal premodern French dishes. Sole Véronique gets its peeled grapes and its butter-girded sauce along with a sense of conviction that’s can’t be faked. The fleecy quenelles of pike, half-submerged in a lava flow of sauce Américaine, have a finer flavor than the ones at La Grenouille, which some people still think of as the city’s standard-bearer. Mr. Rose isn’t simply hauling out museum pieces, though. He’s making them fresh again, and relevant. ★★★; 138 Lafayette Street; SoHo 212-271-4252; lecoucou.com.

2. Lilia

Look around the concrete-floor dining room, glance at the one-page menu, and you could be at any number of casual Italian restaurants. Start eating, though, and you realize Lilia has something else going on. That something is Missy Robbins, the chef and owner. She’s a sleight-of-hand cook. You don’t see her tricks coming, but you taste them and wonder how she did it. Like Jonathan Waxman at Barbuto, she relaxes the tight grip of Italian cuisine without changing it in ways that are cheap or tortured. It would be easy enough for her to tidy up her seafood appetizers, her main courses of fish and meat grilled on an open fire, and her pastas, which I can never eat without smiling, and serve them in a dressier dining room. It would be hard, though, to make them taste better. ★★★; 567 Union Avenue, Williamsburg, Brooklyn; 718-576-3095; lilianewyork.com.

3. Mr. Donahue’s

This tiny retro lunch counter has the attentiveness to atmosphere of a period movie. The lighting has a diffuse, analog softness. The music sounds like a Jonathan Schwartz radio broadcast with the soliloquies about Sinatra edited out. The most remarkable bid for nostalgia is the food proffer: an old-fashioned main course like roast beef or a nearly filler-free meatloaf of dry-aged beef, with a good sauce and a choice of two carefully considered sides for $19.99. The counter stools and handful of table seats aren’t as hard to come by as you’d expect, possibly because Mr. Donahue’s isn’t particularly celebratory. It has a contemplative, almost wistful mood. If that happens to be your mood, too, I can’t think of a more congenial place to eat well downtown. ★★; 203 Mott Street, NoLIta; 646-850-9480; mrdonahues.com.

4. Le Coq Rico

The Alsatian chef Antoine Westermann has built a poultry-focused bistro that’s more compelling and carnally satisfying than any modern steakhouse. His star dish is rotisserie chicken, and his secret is buying old breeds raised by farmers who let them feed and mature longer than usual. The meat has a depth of flavor you rarely encounter. Other birds, like duck and squab, play minor but memorable roles on the menu. The dedication to poultry continues with eggs and livers; the foie gras is very fine, as you’d expect, but a more telling sign of how much care goes into the ingredients is the plate of gorgeous, creamy chicken livers. The prices can make your eyes pop, but so can the portions. And while Mr. Westermann spends half his time in France, he hasn’t hit autopilot on Le Coq Rico. He was in the house one recent night, and new breeds of chicken have strutted onto the menu since my review. ★★; 30 East 20th Street, Flatiron district; 212-267-7426; lecoqriconyc.com.

5. Agern

The ambitious Nordic invasion of Grand Central Terminal by the Danish entrepreneur Claus Meyer has many facets, including a food hall and a Danish hot dog stall, but Agern is the one that has food worth missing a train for. The chef of this comfortably formal restaurant is Gunnar Gislason, importing the philosophy of cooking with underappreciated ingredients from nearby that he follows at Dill in Reykjavik, Iceland. The beet baked in ashes and salt that is carved at tableside, like a steamship round, may not be as exciting as its ceremony, but like much of the cooking, its flavors are honest and appealing. You can order à la carte or amble through the “field and forest” tasting menu ($140) or a nonvegetarian excursion ($165). Both prices include service and a round and tangy loaf of house-made sourdough with a memorably crackling crust. ★★★; Grand Central Terminal, 89 East 42nd Street, Midtown East; 646-568-4018; agernrestaurant.com.

6. Aska

“Oh, not a New Nordic tasting menu,” I hear you say. “We had a New Nordic tasting menu last night!” Well, this one has reindeer lichen and the cinders of burned lambs’ hearts — you didn’t have that last night, did you? It also has a chef, Fredrik Berselius, who has become very adept at broadening and intensifying the flavors of his ingredients. Some of these are imported, like wild wood pigeon from Scotland. Others are grown or foraged nearby. Mr. Berselius is not dogmatic. He does have his share of strange ideas, but even the odd stuff pays off when you eat it. Upstairs in the selectively lighted dining room, the Unabridged Berselius is a 19-course tasting menu for $215, and the abridged, 10-course version is $145. (All prices include service.) Down in the basement is a casual lounge with small plates, none costing more than $16, although you won’t find any blackened hearts down there. ★★★; 47 South Fifth Street, Williamsburg, Brooklyn; 929-337-6792; askanyc.com.

7. Hao Noodle and Tea by Madam Zhu’s Kitchen

Forget about the name. Tea is never mentioned by the servers (though it should be, because it’s good), and noodles may not always be the best thing on the table. It doesn’t matter. There is skillful, contemporary Chinese food all over the menu, and color photographs to let you now what you’re in for. Most of the dishes are drawn from either Beijing, Shanghai or Chongqing. Peppers are not quite everywhere, but they are strongly represented in many dishes. So many fresh green chiles lurk in Madam Zhu’s Spicy Fish Stew that eating it is a contact sport. There is some shading to the cooking, too. I counted three distinct frying styles, and clearly need to return to finish the survey. ★★; 401 Avenue of the Americas, West Village; 212-633-8900; madamzhu.com.
NYT FoodRestaurant ReviewsVolgen op

8. Günter Seeger NY

Two of my meals were stunningly good and pure. A third had a few too many ordinary moments, which kept me from writing a full-blown rave for a restaurant where the only option at the time was a 10-course dinner for $148. Since then, a four-course, $98 menu has been added. If you can swallow either price, then I say: Go. Mr. Seeger, who earned national praise when he was in Atlanta, has a formidable command of classical European techniques, but he keeps his skills in the service of simplicity. Changing the menu every day, he almost seems to undress his ingredients, revealing the beauty of what’s under the surface. It’s high-risk cooking, and watching him pull it off can be thrilling. ★★; 641 Hudson Street, West Village; 646-657-0045; gunterseegerny.com.

9. Olmsted

One problem with the rise of expensive tasting menus is that a lot of culinary intelligence and imagination is locked up inside restaurants that are hard for most people to afford more than once a year, if that. Olmsted’s chef, Greg Baxtrom, worked at some of those places, but he makes his own smart, inventive food inside a Brooklyn spot where I could imagine eating once a week. The carrot crepe with littleneck clams, an immediate Instagram star, is both a novelty and a fine way to start dinner. Prices are kept in line in part through affordable ingredients like guinea hen, roasted and confitted in a memorable main course. There’s an inviting garden where you can have drinks and elevated bar snacks while inspecting the backyard agriculture. Homegrown kale greens up Olmsted’s take on crab Rangoon, while eggs are supplied, one at a time, by a resident pair of quail. As of Sunday, they’ve weathered their first winter snow. ★★; 659 Vanderbilt Avenue, Prospect Heights 718-552-2610; olmstednyc.com.

10. Llama Inn

As far as I’m concerned, there ought to be two Peruvian restaurants in every New York neighborhood. One would serve rotisserie chicken, and the other would present more adventurous pieces of that country’s kaleidoscopic cuisine, as Erik Ramirez does at Llama Inn. Mr. Ramirez makes an excellent ceviche and a tiradito whose marinade looks on the plate like lightly reduced Tang and tastes spicy, fruity and quietly thrilling. He also makes the only quinoa salad I’ve ever looked at without feeling pity, either for the salad or for myself. ★★; 50 Withers Street, Williamsburg, Brooklyn; 718-387-3434; llamainnnyc.com.

14/12/2016
Aska Wins a Spot in the 2017 New York Michelin GuideMichelin released its 2017 restaurant rankings for New York on Tuesd...
16/11/2016

Aska Wins a Spot in the 2017 New York Michelin Guide

Michelin released its 2017 restaurant rankings for New York on Tuesday — several days earlier than planned, because the guidebooks were made available early. There are no changes in its coveted three-star rankings, which remain at six: Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare, Eleven Madison Park, Jean-Georges, Le Bernardin, Masa and Per Se.
Photo
Fredrik Berselius, the chef at Aska in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Credit Bryan Thomas for The New York Times

Ten restaurants have two stars, with the addition of Aska in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and the elimination of Ichimura at Brushstroke.

There are a dozen new one-star restaurants: Agern, Contra, Faro, Günter Seeger NY, Kanoyama, L’Appart, La Sirena, Nix, Sushi Ginza Onodera, Sushi Inoue, Sushi Zo and Ushiwakamaru.

In addition to shuttered restaurants like Juni and Rosanjin, a handful of other places lost their one-star status: Brushstroke and Bouley, which the chef David Bouley says he will relocate, and M. Wells Steakhouse, Pok Pok NY, Somtum Der, Spotted Pig and Sushi Azabu. There are a total of 77 starred New York restaurants in the latest guide, which goes on sale this week.

By FLORENCE FABRICANTNOV. 15, 2016
The New York Times

Fredrik Berselius, the chef at Aska in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. © Bryan Thomas for The New York Times

Restaurants Banning Children: Is It Good for Business?How some chefs balance the risk of alienating customers with creat...
05/11/2016

Restaurants Banning Children: Is It Good for Business?

How some chefs balance the risk of alienating customers with creating kid-free zones

Between 2013 and 2015, the food news world was rocked with stories of tiny tots being banned from bars and restaurants throughout the world. It was an era of last-straws. At Houston’s Cuchara, owners banned kids after an unruly child scratched their wall with a quarter, causing $1,500 in repair costs. At Flynn’s in Australia, “screaming babies” inspired owners to outlaw children under the age of seven. 2014 was also the year Grant Achatz, chef of three-Michelin-starred Chicago restaurant Alinea, tweeted that he was considering banning children after an eight-month-old “diner” wouldn’t stop crying, annoying everyone who’d come for the $200+ per-person meal. It caused such an uproar that Achatz went on Good Morning America to defend his comment.
"How have banned-children policies stood the test of time?"

The debate is still ongoing. “They throw olive oil on the floor, they upturn the water, they send the salt cellar flying across the room, they try to dismantle the furniture, they shout, they cry and above all, they hate fish,” the owner of a restaurant in Rome told La Republica earlier this year, justifying his decision to ban the under-five crowd. Just a few months ago, Jamie Oliver banned strollers from his restaurant Fifteen due to space concerns.

And every time a restaurant announces a policy that limits children, it goes viral — beyond just the think-pieces written by those rooted in the restaurant industry. Photos of signage are shared on social media; Facebook, TripAdvisor, and Yelp fill with reviews that have more to do with children than the quality of the Chilean sea bass. Those who want a child-free dining experience often cheer with delight, while parents and grandparents often feel personally persecuted or attacked by these rules.

The risk of alienating customers in a service-oriented business is a real one (parenting blog Scary Mommy responded to the Rome restaurant’s child ban with an article titled, “You Know Who Hates Screaming Children In Restaurants The Most? Parents”). So the question is — how have these policies stood the test of time?

In July 2011, it was an easy choice for owner Mike Vuick to ban children under six at his Pittsburgh-area restaurant McDain’s (“just when did our precious ‘pets’ become everyone else's pet peeves? Are these bans even legal?” asked the accompanying news coverage). Vuick’s main source of business was the large driving range for which the restaurant was simply an amenity. “Our customers were golfers, older, conservative,” he says. “We did it on behalf of customers who said they left their children at home with a babysitter and now there’s a kid over there screaming their head off and ruining the customer’s dinner.”

Vuick had incidents where children were running in the restaurant and coming close to “knocking over servers carrying hot liquids.” Enough was enough, and according to Vuick, “20:1” the response to the kid ban was overwhelmingly positive. Before the policy, McDain’s was at 80-percent capacity, “and this just put it over the top.”

Vuick says that he did lose some business; customers who used to come with their children decided to stop visiting altogether. “But they were replaced by a whole bunch more people who came to support me,” he adds. The McDain’s restaurant closed a few years ago (Vuick recently turned 70 and “couldn’t keep up with it”), though the driving range is still open. During that time, Vuick says the age restriction was an overwhelming success.

Many of the restaurants that have limited children have done so in an effort to better use their space and improve a late-night atmosphere. In 2013, Houston restaurant La Fisheria decided to ban children under nine after 7 p.m. (Before that time, they continued to offer a kid’s menu to the under-aged crowd.) “Seven o’clock is not a time for children, especially when we serve drinks and wine,” the owner told local news station KHOU 11 after the policy went public.
"“There’s a lot of people that feel they are not accountable for their own or their child’s actions.”"

But today, La Fisheria has a new location, new owners, and an end to that children’s policy. Anas Mousa, a partner, says “the reason why they had this restriction at the old location was because it was a small place. Now we have all this space to fill.” According to Mousa, while the first location had an occupancy of 99, its current location can seat 299. The old location was a “little romantic place, and if you got a kid running around the whole restaurant would hear it,” he says. “Now with a bigger restaurant, we don’t want to have restrictions because there’s no need for it.”

Unfortunately, while La Fisheria’s child ban quickly made national news, it hasn’t been so easy to let customers know that the policy no longer stands. Mousa says they regularly get phone calls from people asking about the restriction. The restaurant posted about it on social media, too, but there are probably customers out there who will continue seeing La Fisheria as an adults-only spot — at least late at night.

Whether restaurants catered to children wasn’t much of a concern until recently. Family sizes have fallen, making it more affordable for parents to take their one or two children out to eat than four or more. (According to Gallup polls, most people reported “four” as the ideal number of children before 1971.) Children who grew up in the 1960s or earlier often say that restaurant outings were either rare — and very memorable — occasions or something that never happened at all. In 1970s America, many women were still protesting the existence of “men’s only” restaurants or sections — whether or not children could come along was a serious afterthought.

Today, that’s all changed. As going out to eat has become a more regular (and therefore casual) event, children have been invited along and manners have changed — much to the chagrin of many restaurant employees.

“A lot of parents think they’re paying for the space and service and taking a break, and therefore taking a break from parenting as well,” says Liam Flynn, owner of Australia’s Flynn’s Restaurant. He instituted a ban on unruly children under seven last year in response to a crying infant and its poorly behaved parents. “There’s a lot of people that feel they are not accountable for their own or their child’s actions,” he adds.
"“Having children in this style of restaurant was not profitable to my business.”"

Chris Shake, the owner of Old Fisherman’s Grotto in California, says that parents today are much more permissive than when he was growing up. “People just feel because they’re paying for service, that it’s their space.” Between 2009 and 2011 the Grotto slowly stopped catering to children — removing strollers, then its kid’s menu, then booster seats and high chairs, finally saying that children making loud noises or crying weren’t allowed at all.

“The more we did, the more we realized that our dining room got quieter, the guests were enjoying it more, and even some of the mature guests were commenting on how nice it was not to be around kids,” Shake says. “Over the years, you become callused from the mean and hurtful remarks parents say about the policy, but the good of it outweighs the negativity.”

“I’ve been here for 15 years and could see having children in this style of restaurant was not profitable to my business,” Flynn says. “[The restaurant] is too small, too intimate, and probably a bit too upmarket and too boring for kids.” Right after the ban was made public, Flynn’s had its best month ever business-wise, itself its own news story. While the initial popularity has fallen off somewhat, Flynn doesn’t believe that the kid’s policy has had a negative impact.

While the child “ban” always ruffles some feathers, the approach taken by Cuchara restaurant in Houston may be worth emulating. Rather than a restriction, co-owner Charlie McDaniel explains the restaurant created a simple card that’s handed out to families. It begins, “Children at Cuchara don’t run or wander around the restaurant,” and continues with a list of other encouraged behaviors. “There are no restrictions, just etiquette,” McDaniel says.

Since the card came out, he hasn’t had any incidents of children crawling under other patrons’ tables, taking coins and scratching the walls, or other physical damages. “We have a lot of families that come here and have children that know how to behave,” McDaniel explains. It’s for this reason that they didn’t want to ban children entirely. “It’s really intended for the parents, not for the kid,” he says. Ultimately, it’s up to parents to set boundaries for what is and isn’t okay to do in a restaurant.

As McDaniel says, “Every once in a while someone gets offended by it — but they’re the [guests] you don’t want.”

eater.com
Tove Danovich is a freelance journalist now based in Portland, Oregon.
Editor: Erin DeJesus

Photo: ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images

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