Alinea can change literally on a daily basis. I as well had a shorter, albeit delicious menu in October of '13, and the service was fine. I have had meals there that are 14 courses and 28 courses. The fall and winter get kind of tricky with ingredients for obvious reasons... That said, I returned in February of '14 with a friend and had an extremely filling feast of 20 courses. So you can really never predict what's going to happen.
I think that without having eaten there more than once, or not at all, many people's minds immediately shift to what I call the 'cookbook' idea of Alinea... i.e. they think of the food documented in the cookbook, and as it was the first couple of years of the restaurant's existence. And the length of the menus as well. Going in and expecting those presentations and that exact menu length might lead you to disappointment. Chef Achatz's cuisine has certainly evolved since then..!! The only way to really know is to try it.
If you go one night and your friend goes the next and he gets an extra course you didn't get and you feel jilted, then maybe Alinea isn't the place for you... there aren't any rules and nothing is promised except something that is surprising, delicious and fun.
The one thing I've learned that with anything Chef and Nick do as far as their restaurant endeavors go, always expect the unexpected... The second you start trying to predict them is when things will go wrong for you. I realize that can be difficult because so much of the product is really cool food porn, but having a truly open mind really helps.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I found it interesting that when we were discussing various prospective places in Chicago to take our guests, Grace wasn't even on their radar. Given Grace's status, its Michelin stars and its shared DNA with Alinea, I think that probably says more about our guests than Grace. But at the end of the day, for well-traveled international visitors who aren't necessarily dialed into fine dining (in the way many of us are), it seems that Alinea is very well-known and Grace may not quite be there yet.
=R=
Without speaking to the character, cuisine, or opinion of either restaurant, it just takes flat out
time to be established on an international level. The times I have been abroad and eating great, people ask me as an American about places like Alinea, The French Laundry, Eleven Madison, and Jean Georges. I learned this from actually traveling and actively paying attention to restaurants and eating at some on my trips.
Now, speaking specifically to Grace... I think it's an incredible restaurant; one of the country's best. It's one of the most unique and defined dining experiences on the face of the planet. It is warm, consistent, and the cuisine is truly unique and delicious... I'm sure that it will reach that go-to status very quickly! The restaurant world has room for a lot of people...!
"People are too busy in these times to care about good food. We used to spend months working over a bonne-femme sauce, trying to determine just the right proportions of paprika and fresh forest mushrooms to use." -Karoly Gundel, Blue Trout and Black Truffles: The Peregrinations of an Epicure, Joseph Wechsberg, 1954.