Vitesse98 wrote:To be fair to the dude who ordered a beer, unless you know what you're in for through and through, I can imagine a tiki menu being pretty overwhelming. Imagine you see a menu stuffed with exotic drinks with exotic ingredients, each (at least) $13, in a noisy, busy place. It can be overwhelming, and choosing between flying blind for that much cash and going for a beer, the beer is definitely the simpler, easier, cheaper choice. Sillier choice, perhaps, given the location, but I can see an antithetical method to the madness.
boudreaulicious wrote:Also possible that he was accompanying foodie/drinkie (is that a brand extension or what!) date to his/her hotspot destination of choice but ain't a "tiki" kinda guy. Perfectly acceptable, even admirable, that he'd be a good sport for going, no?
David Hammond wrote:My understanding is that they're not using specific cups for specific drinks. The Wife's Jet Pilot is left and my Three Dots and a Dash is right foreground.
ChitownJackson wrote:Going tonight and I'm wondering if Paul can make me a proper '34 Zombie without ordering the full $75 punch bowl.
kanin wrote:Any luck with that? I asked a waitress at the bar and was outright refused.
A tiki bar without single-serving zombies is the equivalent of a brewpub that doesn't offer free samples.
Vitesse98 wrote:Alas, my wife and I've independently heard enough negatives about this place - about the space, about the clientele (what you might fear, at least on a weekend), about the drinks all tasting the same (a friend ordered a Campari-based cocktail, hoping for a difference, but was disappointed)- from so many people, seasoned drinkers, people in the biz and neophytes alike, that I think I've missed my window to convince my wife to go, at least for the time being. A prime complaint appears to question its innately tacky tourist vibe, from the winding theme-park lines in the alley to the emphasis on volume to the unusual sight of McGee shaking hands and greeting as opposed to working behind the bar. On the plus side, everyone seems enthused by the drink presentation and service, so there's that. Hopefully given some time things will settle down.
Vitesse98 wrote:Alas, my wife and I've independently heard enough negatives about this place . . .<snip>
Cynthia wrote:I just finished reading Wayne Curtis's very fun, tremendously informative book And a Bottle of Rum: The History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. It has a whole chapter on Don the Beachcomber, Trader Vic, and the original rise and fall of the Tiki Bar. It had me wishing I hadn't missed the TIki trend -- so I'm pleased to see it coming back to some degree.
That said, is there a time that it is somewhat quieter and less crowded than than it sounds in mgmcewen's post?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Cynthia wrote:I just finished reading Wayne Curtis's very fun, tremendously informative book And a Bottle of Rum: The History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. It has a whole chapter on Don the Beachcomber, Trader Vic, and the original rise and fall of the Tiki Bar. It had me wishing I hadn't missed the TIki trend -- so I'm pleased to see it coming back to some degree.
That said, is there a time that it is somewhat quieter and less crowded than than it sounds in mgmcewen's post?
That is a great book.
=R=
That's a lot of prose to basically say you've never been there.