eatchicago wrote:While I like NW Cutlery and I'm a very good customer, it's "greatness" in my mind only seems to come out of a lack of any reasonable alternative.
It's a good resource for specific purposes, but I don't think I'd send someone there unless they had needs that would be met by NW Cutlery's specific purposes.
I like to think of a GNR as a place that I'd send someone, no matter what they needed, because they simply would be better off for the experience. I think that if I sent friends to NW Cutlery, they'd think I was a weirdo unless they specifically needed a knife sharpened or a specific piece of kitchenware.
Chicago should have 10 places just like this and it's a shame that we don't. But that alone doesn't make NW Cutlery a GNR in my book.
eatchicago wrote:While I like NW Cutlery and I'm a very good customer, it's "greatness" in my mind only seems to come out of a lack of any reasonable alternative.
It's a good resource for specific purposes, but I don't think I'd send someone there unless they had needs that would be met by NW Cutlery's specific purposes.
I like to think of a GNR as a place that I'd send someone, no matter what they needed, because they simply would be better off for the experience. I think that if I sent friends to NW Cutlery, they'd think I was a weirdo unless they specifically needed a knife sharpened or a specific piece of kitchenware.
Chicago should have 10 places just like this and it's a shame that we don't. But that alone doesn't make NW Cutlery a GNR in my book.
Llama wrote:Would you send someone to Old Fashioned Doughnuts for anything but an apple fritter?
stevez wrote:Llama wrote:Would you send someone to Old Fashioned Doughnuts for anything but an apple fritter?
Llama, your point is well taken, and for the record I support this nomination, but to answer you question, YES. Old Fashioned has some of the best donuts in town and while they are overshadowed by the apple fritter and its surrounding hype, I would absolutely send someone there for their chocolate and/or blueberry donuts in a heartbeat.
Llama wrote:eatchicago wrote:While I like NW Cutlery and I'm a very good customer, it's "greatness" in my mind only seems to come out of a lack of any reasonable alternative.
It's a good resource for specific purposes, but I don't think I'd send someone there unless they had needs that would be met by NW Cutlery's specific purposes.
I like to think of a GNR as a place that I'd send someone, no matter what they needed, because they simply would be better off for the experience. I think that if I sent friends to NW Cutlery, they'd think I was a weirdo unless they specifically needed a knife sharpened or a specific piece of kitchenware.
Chicago should have 10 places just like this and it's a shame that we don't. But that alone doesn't make NW Cutlery a GNR in my book.
I'm not sure I agree with that. Would you send someone to Old Fashioned Doughnuts for anything but an apple fritter? Or to Honey One for anything but the few things they serve? Many of the restaurants we have as GNRs follow the "do one thing and do it well" principle, should the Resources be any different?
It's a shame we don't have 10 places making Country-Fried Bacon, but it's good we celebrate the one place that does make it.
aschie30 wrote:I fall into the camp that doesn't view Northwestern Cutlery as anything special. It's a place where you get your knives sharpened. <Shrug.> It's got a good selection of knives, but if we're being honest, so does Sur La Table and Williams-Sonoma. Actually, if I'm being really honest, those two places are probably more deserving of a GNR(esource) as they're both greater cooking resources for me than Northwestern Cutlery.
Khaopaat wrote:aschie30 wrote:I fall into the camp that doesn't view Northwestern Cutlery as anything special. It's a place where you get your knives sharpened. <Shrug.> It's got a good selection of knives, but if we're being honest, so does Sur La Table and Williams-Sonoma. Actually, if I'm being really honest, those two places are probably more deserving of a GNR(esource) as they're both greater cooking resources for me than Northwestern Cutlery.
The big difference I see is that, when you go to Sur La Table, the staff isn't likely to know too much in-depth info about any particular product, especially from a professional perspective (not that I have a professional perspective, but someone else's is certainly appreciated when I'm in the market for knives or other kitchen implements), whereas the folks at Northwestern Cutlery seemed far more knowledgeable and willing to share what they know about their products.
Also, I was told (by a Sur La Table staffer when I called to ask some questions) the knife sharpening service at Sur La Table consists of one of the staff members running your knives through a Chef's Choice sharpener and charging $1/inch of blade, and has a 48-hour turnaround time...meanwhile, Northwestern Cutlery has a dedicated guy doing nothing but getting knives frighteningly sharp using a grinding stone, charges a flat $4/knife, and sharpens them while you (and a bunch of culinary students, and maybe the occasional chef) wait.
Kennyz wrote:I'd agree with eatchicago's point if we were still talking about a program for Great Neighborhood Restaurants. But now that we've added Resources, I don't think it applies anymore. "Resource" implies utility more than inspiration. I don't think we can hold Resources to the same "would you send an out of towner who didn't even ask for a donut" standard.
aschie30 wrote:I fall into the camp that doesn't view Northwestern Cutlery as anything special. It's a place where you get your knives sharpened. <Shrug.> It's got a good selection of knives, but if we're being honest, so does Sur La Table and Williams-Sonoma. Actually, if I'm being really honest, those two places are probably more deserving of a GNR(esource) as they're both greater cooking resources for me than Northwestern Cutlery.
Edited: On further thought, I can't say NC's selection or pricing is any better that cutlerynmore.com - that's where I usually buy my knives. Or Ebay.
eatchicago wrote:I believe a GNR, restaurant or resource, should be a place that rises to the level of the "out of town visitor" test.
eatchicago wrote:I believe a GNR, restaurant or resource, should be a place that rises to the level of the "out of town visitor" test.
eatchicago wrote:I like to think of a GNR as a place that I'd send someone, no matter what they needed, because they simply would be better off for the experience.
stevez wrote:A craftsman at work.
eatchicago wrote:My dad had a stone he could sharpen with in the back of his shop. He would sharpen knives for himself and his friends and he did a darn good job. He taught me how to do it at the age of 9. It took one afternoon to get it right and I didn't ruin a single knife. I was pretty good at it.
aschie30 wrote:My feeling is that any city that has real chefs has places like NWC; it's there to serve a ready-made market.
eatchicago wrote:aschie30 wrote:My feeling is that any city that has real chefs has places like NWC; it's there to serve a ready-made market.
I'm betting that most chefs or good restaurants have a good sharpening machine in the kitchen and do it themselves. Faster, cheaper, and a pro needs sharp knives all the time. Hopefully someone who has pro kitchen experience can speak to this.
jimswside wrote:many places where I worked/cooked had a knife service that would come in each week, change out the dull knives, leaving us sharp ones in their place.