Arab Times

Fine dining finds new ways to serve

Rethinking the experience entirely

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WASHINGTON, June 24, (AP): San Francisco chef Dominique Crenn was huddled with staff one day in mid-March when she learned that coronaviru­s restrictio­ns would close the dining room at her celebrated restaurant, Atelier Crenn. Immediatel­y, everyone started brainstorm­ing.

“We said, ‘OK, who are we? We are people at the service of people, always here to feed the community,’” Crenn said.

Since then, Crenn and a skeleton crew – 20 of the 70 people she usually employs – have made hundreds of meals for medical workers and firefighte­rs. They’ve sent meals to a nearby domestic violence shelter. They’ve started a takeout business, selling multi-course tasting menus – a seven-course luxury kit is $145 – and even a wine tasting kit.

Crenn is in good company. Chefs at many of the world’s best restaurant­s are making quick pivots to weather the coronaviru­s. Some say carryout has been so popular that they’ll continue when dining rooms reopen. Others stayed closed but made meals for their furloughed staff.

Alinea in Chicago used to welcome guests with a $365, 18-course tasting menu; it’s now cooking up a six-course to-go feast for $49.95. Copenhagen’s Noma, which usually requires reservatio­ns months ahead, opened an outdoor burger and wine bar. Les Amis in Singapore is selling grocery items like artisanal butter and caviar.

Restaurant­s were hit hard by the new coronaviru­s. In the US alone, the industry lost 6 million jobs in March and April. But fine dining was hit hardest of all, says David Portalatin, an industry adviser with The NPD Group. At the low point, in April, US fine dining transactio­ns were down 82 percent from a year ago, he said.

Fourteen US restaurant­s – including Atelier Crenn and Alinea – have earned the highest rating of three stars from the Michelin Guide. Of those, just one – The Inn at Little Washington in rural Virginia – has reopened its dining room at half capacity. The restaurant put mannequins at its empty tables to make the space look more inviting.

Some three-star restaurant­s, like The French Laundry in Yountville, California, and Restaurant Gordon Ramsey in London, have temporaril­y closed, saying that was the best way to protect guests and staff. Others aren’t offering carryout but are still cooking. Eleven Madison Park in New York is making 3,000 meals per day for frontline workers.

In Paris, renowned chef Alain Ducasse started Ducasse Chez Moi, offering delivery of meals like salmon ceviche for $14 and foie gras baked in a crust for $28. Delivery has been so popular it will continue when Ducasse’s restaurant­s reopen.

Alinea shifted to carryout on March 17. Since then, it has served 82,000 meals, said Nick Kokonas, the restaurant’s co-owner. It started with $35 entrees like beef wellington, which sold out every night, and moved on to tasting menus.

Kokonas said carryout was so successful that Alinea hired all its employees back by the end of April at 80 percent of their former pay and benefits. He thinks to-go meals will remain even after the restaurant reopens its dining room later this summer.

Toshi Szpyra, a behavioral analyst in Chicago, was looking forward to celebratin­g her wedding anniversar­y at Alinea earlier this month. Instead, she and her husband ordered a six-course spring tasting menu. Each dish came prepared with instructio­ns for how to reheat and plate the meal, she said. The highlight? Scallops with ham and peas on fennel with a white wine vermouth cream sauce.

Some fine dining restaurant­s are using the closure to redesign their interiors or retool their menus, said David Mitroff, a restaurant consultant and founder of Piedmont Avenue Consulting. Restaurant­s of this caliber need to keep things fresh and interestin­g, he said.

Others are rethinking the experience entirely. Quince, a three-star restaurant in San Francisco, will likely be closed until fall. But starting in July, co-owner Lindsay Tusk is planning to offer lunches and dinners at the Marin County farm that grows the restaurant’s produce.

 ?? (AP) ?? Driver Rey Escanilla (left), sits beside parked jeepneys at the Tandang Sora terminal which have been home for them since a lockdown started three months ago on June 17, in Quezon city,
Philippine­s.
(AP) Driver Rey Escanilla (left), sits beside parked jeepneys at the Tandang Sora terminal which have been home for them since a lockdown started three months ago on June 17, in Quezon city, Philippine­s.

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