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Meinhard1

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#1 Meinhard1
Member since 2010 • 6790 Posts

Has anyone here ever had fine dining?

i.e. expensive food prepared by expert chefs; the kind of restaurant France has a lot of.

Impressions?

Just curious. I'm a Midwestern college student and I don't think I've ever spent more than 26 dollars for a single menu item.

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Ring_of_fire

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#2 Ring_of_fire
Member since 2003 • 15880 Posts

I never have, and not that interested. Probably would only do it for really big events/celebration

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deactivated-598fc45371265

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#3 deactivated-598fc45371265
Member since 2008 • 13247 Posts

Not often. I usually spend more on drinks than food.

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sailor232

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#4  Edited By sailor232
Member since 2003 • 6880 Posts

I've worked as a chef in fine dining. It is very cheap food made to look expensive. Sometimes it is all in the preparation, a long time can be spent on a item of food to get it succulent, but even that is generally done in mass portions to bring the price down greatly. Going to eat at a fine dining place is nice on that very special occasion, other than that food is food and does the same thing whether it be fine dining or Chinese takeaway.

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SaintLeonidas

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#5 SaintLeonidas
Member since 2006 • 26735 Posts

Yes. Craving it currently since I've been watching 'Hannibal'.

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Master_Live

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#6  Edited By Master_Live
Member since 2004 • 20510 Posts

Sure, Chilli's is awesome.

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Shmiity

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#7 Shmiity
Member since 2006 • 6625 Posts

Yeah, I have. However, I am an eater, so those places don't interest me. If you're going to show more plate than food, then I'm not interested. My family is filled with cooks and chefs, and they describe those as places as "Go hungry, leave hungrier"

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cain006

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#8 cain006
Member since 2008 • 8625 Posts

My parents took me and my brothers to a super nice steak place just before they moved. It was like $50 a meal or so.

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junglist101

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#9 junglist101
Member since 2007 • 5517 Posts
@sailor232 said:

I've worked as a chef in fine dining. It is very cheap food made to look expensive. Sometimes it is all in the preparation, a long time can be spent on a item of food to get it succulent, but even that is generally done in mass portions to bring the price down greatly. Going to eat at a fine dining place is nice on that very special occasion, other than that food is food and does the same thing whether it be fine dining or Chinese takeaway.

Real fine dining restaurants are nothing like you are describing...

I've ate at some pretty nice places. The most I've ever spent on a dinner for 2 was 350 at a french restaurant in san francisco.

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sailor232

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#10  Edited By sailor232
Member since 2003 • 6880 Posts

@junglist101 said:
@sailor232 said:

I've worked as a chef in fine dining. It is very cheap food made to look expensive. Sometimes it is all in the preparation, a long time can be spent on a item of food to get it succulent, but even that is generally done in mass portions to bring the price down greatly. Going to eat at a fine dining place is nice on that very special occasion, other than that food is food and does the same thing whether it be fine dining or Chinese takeaway.

Real fine dining restaurants are nothing like you are describing...

I've ate at some pretty nice places. The most I've ever spent on a dinner for 2 was 350 at a french restaurant in san francisco.

Ok then I'm never rich enough to eat at a place like that, and I don't think a place like that exists here in New Zealand. Fine dining here exists as a main meal costing between $80-$120 each and thats in NZ dollars. I'm glad we dont have places like that, imagine the snobs going in those.

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br0kenrabbit

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#11  Edited By br0kenrabbit
Member since 2004 • 17859 Posts

@junglist101 said:

The most I've ever spent on a dinner for 2 was 350 at a french restaurant in san francisco.

I spent about that in Montreal...but I think it was the truffles, mostly.

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PSP107

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#12  Edited By PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

$9.99+ for a burger is expensive.

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lamprey263

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#13  Edited By lamprey263
Member since 2006 • 44539 Posts

to me fine dining is the Cheesecake Factory

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shellcase86

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#14 shellcase86
Member since 2012 • 6846 Posts

Only a handful of times. It's one of the more famous steakhouses in southeastern U.S. Dinner for two plus trip upstairs for desert room was over $300, but it honestly was the best food I ever ate. They have their own farm a few counties over, I believe.

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bforrester420

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#15 bforrester420
Member since 2014 • 3480 Posts

It's a waste of money, in my opinion. I don't believe any food in the world can top a nice, $20 ribeye steak, but that's just my opinion.

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certifieddata

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#16 certifieddata
Member since 2007 • 46096 Posts

I'm not much of a fan, I'd rather have a lot of good quality food so I'm full instead of a small amount of amazing quality that leaves me and my wallet with a void inside.

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jasean79

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#17 jasean79
Member since 2005 • 2593 Posts

Never ate at a fancy upscale restaurant. I eat out of necessity and have found that diners that charge $10 for a meal will give you more quality food than a restaurant that charges 5x that.

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PSP107

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#18 PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@bforrester420 said:

It's a waste of money, in my opinion. I don't believe any food in the world can top a nice, $20 ribeye steak, but that's just my opinion.

$20 is expensive.

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BeardMaster

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#19  Edited By BeardMaster
Member since 2012 • 1686 Posts

I had filet mignon at the tavern on the green, which i believe is one of the most upscale restaurants in the world.

Although i was a fairly young at the time and dont remember it being that amazing. It was also while i was staying at the Plaza Hotel in the room home alone 2 was filmed in. One of the many benefits of having some super rich dude trying to bang your mom.

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RadecSupreme

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#20 RadecSupreme
Member since 2009 • 4824 Posts

Never been to "Fine Dining" but I've been to many great and somewhat expensive restaurants with $50 plates per person with really great food. I will eventually like to try Fine Dining but I don't think it'd be common place for me because I despise small portions of food no matter how good, if I find that it's not worth the price.

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#21  Edited By hippiesanta
Member since 2005 • 10301 Posts

yes, and bored of it..... as a client and as a flight attendant serving fine dining food in first class cabin.... waste of money actually because I got the skill to cook the same thing at home ( I was in a culinary school)

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bforrester420

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#22 bforrester420
Member since 2014 • 3480 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@bforrester420 said:

It's a waste of money, in my opinion. I don't believe any food in the world can top a nice, $20 ribeye steak, but that's just my opinion.

$20 is expensive.

Everything is relative.

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ShepardCommandr

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#23  Edited By ShepardCommandr
Member since 2013 • 4939 Posts

Nope and don't want to.

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comp_atkins

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#24 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38670 Posts

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

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PSP107

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#25  Edited By PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@comp_atkins said:

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

5 hours? lol, its must of been a special kitchen?

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comp_atkins

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#29 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38670 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

5 hours? lol, its must of been a special kitchen?

lol, the kitchen tour only took about 10 minutes...

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PSP107

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#30  Edited By PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

5 hours? lol, its must of been a special kitchen?

lol, the kitchen tour only took about 10 minutes...

So what did you do for 4 hours and 50 minutes?

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ferrari2001

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#31 ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts

I once attended a black tie affair that cost $800 a table. I didn't pay for it thankfully.

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PSP107

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#32 PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@roulettethedog said:

Fine dinning is more about ambiance then the food. Truthfully, I'd rather eat at Applebee's then spend $300 at club Douche that is the hit spot now.

I agree with the ambiance. But let me ask you, I still have $45 worth of Applebee's Gift Cards that I had for about a year, I finally plan on taking my friend someday soon but I was wondering how is the food?

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awesome3496

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#33 awesome3496
Member since 2008 • 2209 Posts

"Empty your mind of everything that doesn't have to do with fine dining. Fine dining and breathing."
On-topic now, getting something that's not on the dollar menu is fine dining for me!

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Meinhard1

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#34 Meinhard1
Member since 2010 • 6790 Posts

@awesome3496 said:

"Empty your mind of everything that doesn't have to do with fine dining. Fine dining and breathing."

On-topic now, getting something that's not on the dollar menu is fine dining for me!

Ha, I don't know what it is about this post. But it's a classic. Thanks.

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Meinhard1

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#35 Meinhard1
Member since 2010 • 6790 Posts

Some of you are saying that it's more about the atmosphere, which I can see.

I'm sure some restaurants rely more on atmosphere / presentation, while others have an excellent culinary team / head chef.

I'd love to try though someday. Maybe Eleven Madison Park in New York. We'll see.

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awesome3496

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#36 awesome3496
Member since 2008 • 2209 Posts

@Meinhard1 said:

@awesome3496 said:

"Empty your mind of everything that doesn't have to do with fine dining. Fine dining and breathing."

On-topic now, getting something that's not on the dollar menu is fine dining for me!

Ha, I don't know what it is about this post. But it's a classic. Thanks.

You're welcome! The quote was from an episode of Spongebob :P

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#37 Tigarian
Member since 2005 • 215 Posts

Only once. While visiting San-Francisco I decided to try one of the classy seafood restaurants near Fisherman's Wharf. It was something like 40 dollars for a mixture of crab and lobster, 12 or 15 bucks for a little avocado salad (not much there, but it sure looked pretty) and something like 8 bucks for a glass of wine. It was all really good, and the waiter was very polite and friendly even though it was obvious we didn't exactly fit in (when he listed off the wine selection, I just asked him for some decent red stuff).

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comp_atkins

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#38  Edited By comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38670 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

5 hours? lol, its must of been a special kitchen?

lol, the kitchen tour only took about 10 minutes...

So what did you do for 4 hours and 50 minutes?

yeah.. that's where the 18 courses came in....

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shellcase86

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#39 shellcase86
Member since 2012 • 6846 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@roulettethedog said:

Fine dinning is more about ambiance then the food. Truthfully, I'd rather eat at Applebee's then spend $300 at club Douche that is the hit spot now.

I agree with the ambiance. But let me ask you, I still have $45 worth of Applebee's Gift Cards that I had for about a year, I finally plan on taking my friend someday soon but I was wondering how is the food?

It's edible, but they're not very good. Their appetizers are good, but the entrees are bland.

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coolbeans90

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#40 coolbeans90
Member since 2009 • 21305 Posts

@Storm_Marine said:

Not often. I usually spend more on drinks than food.

me, too

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LexLas

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#41 LexLas
Member since 2005 • 7317 Posts

Across the street where i work there is a restaurant on top of the Hyatt Hotel in SF. Been there a few times, you spin around and view the entire city as you eat. I've been there few times, for business mostly. During my 8th grade graduation we went there to eat, instead of going to Great America, we were pretty pissed off. All we got for about $100 dollars was a tiny meal that was smaller then my fist, and then a small bowl of soup. Not worth it dude. When going to an expensive nice place, your not going to get much food, but its more about the atmosphere. This was years ago, i'm sure $100 will not even get you a meal there any more. Stick to a good bar restaurant like the Outback, or Red Lobster, those places are cool to me.

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PSP107

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#42 PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

5 hours? lol, its must of been a special kitchen?

lol, the kitchen tour only took about 10 minutes...

So what did you do for 4 hours and 50 minutes?

yeah.. that's where the 18 courses came in....

When did you guys get full?

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comp_atkins

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#43  Edited By comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38670 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

the most ridiculous meal i ever had was at per se in NYC for my girlfriend's birthday back in 2005.. iirc at the time it was ranked in the top10 restaurants in the world. my brother worked there shortly after graduating from culinary school so we got vip treatment including complementary wine pairings w/ each course. the meal was 17 or 18 courses ( including desserts and sorbets ) and took around 5 hours w/ a tour of the kitchen included. it was fantastic.

5 hours? lol, its must of been a special kitchen?

lol, the kitchen tour only took about 10 minutes...

So what did you do for 4 hours and 50 minutes?

yeah.. that's where the 18 courses came in....

When did you guys get full?

we were both very full by the time they started dessert. for our dessert iirc they brought us 3 different things, one for each of us and one to share. then the brought us out custard or creme brulee or something which neither of us could even touch. then they brought out chocolates and macaroons which we ended up just taking home.

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mccoyca112

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#44 mccoyca112
Member since 2007 • 5434 Posts

I've never tried it as of yet. I'd like to once in my lifetime for the experience, but I'm in no rush. I enjoy places that are more down to earth, and not overly expensive. @Lexlas- See, that'd be what I'd describe as an experience. It seems neat, but that price tag(and likely increased now?)? It just doesn't compute with me.

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PSP107

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#45  Edited By PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@comp_atkins:

so based on your experience, will you spend a lot of money to do it again?

Actually what was the 2005 bill?

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gkalns2311

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#46 gkalns2311
Member since 2013 • 45 Posts

meh maybe a few times. i'm not too fond of it in that it's too pricy for basic items and you can't really relax.

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comp_atkins

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#47 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38670 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins:

so based on your experience, will you spend a lot of money to do it again?

Actually what was the 2005 bill?

they charged us the prix fixe cost of $175 per person, which iirc at the time was the cost for the 8 or 9 course menu without wine pairing. the wine pairing would have been an additional $100 each. so we ended up getting 18 courses rather than 8-9 and we got the pairing for free. $350 for the bill and we threw in a $150 tip to make it an even $500.

i don't know if i'd want to spend that kind of money again for a single meal, but it was worth the one time experience. maybe on a special occasion.

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#48  Edited By PSP107
Member since 2007 • 18792 Posts

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins:

so based on your experience, will you spend a lot of money to do it again?

Actually what was the 2005 bill?

they charged us the prix fixe cost of $175 per person, which iirc at the time was the cost for the 8 or 9 course menu without wine pairing. the wine pairing would have been an additional $100 each. so we ended up getting 18 courses rather than 8-9 and we got the pairing for free. $350 for the bill and we threw in a $150 tip to make it an even $500.

i don't know if i'd want to spend that kind of money again for a single meal, but it was worth the one time experience. maybe on a special occasion.

$150 tip? how much wine did you have?

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comp_atkins

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#49 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38670 Posts

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins said:

@PSP107 said:

@comp_atkins:

so based on your experience, will you spend a lot of money to do it again?

Actually what was the 2005 bill?

they charged us the prix fixe cost of $175 per person, which iirc at the time was the cost for the 8 or 9 course menu without wine pairing. the wine pairing would have been an additional $100 each. so we ended up getting 18 courses rather than 8-9 and we got the pairing for free. $350 for the bill and we threw in a $150 tip to make it an even $500.

i don't know if i'd want to spend that kind of money again for a single meal, but it was worth the one time experience. maybe on a special occasion.

$150 tip? how much wine did you have?

it wasn't a matter of drunkeness :) we were seriously hooked up and the servers were great. like i said, if we were charged for the wine pairing it would have cost us $550 before tip anyway.