MARIANI’S Virtual Gourmet November 16, 2025
NEWSLETTER Founded in 1996 ARCHIVE ![]() Still Life by Giorgio de Chirico (1929)
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THIS WEEK WHY DOES (SHOULD) FINE DINING COST SO MUCH? By John Mariani NEW YORK CORNER CUERNO By John Mariani HÔTEL ALLEMAGNE CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX By John Mariani NOTES FROM THE WINE CELLAR UNDERSTANDING WINESPEAK By John Mariani ❖❖❖
WHY DOES (SHOULD) FINE DINING COST SO MUCH?
By
John Mariani
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Eating out
has never been more expensive. But that’s
always and will ever be the case. As with
everything else––cars, homes, cell phones,
Milky Way Bars––prices never go down. But
there may be a point when the price is too
high, which is becoming a major factor in
people’s budgetary decision as to where to
dine out. A new food and beverage report by
Expert Market reveals that
26% of U.S. restaurants are "struggling to
meet consumer affordability demands";
24%
of restaurants noticed customers limiting
their overall spending; and 17% noticed
customers are choosing lower priced options. Sales
are weaker in New York but the dichotomy there
is that fine dining restaurants are packed
every night and for some getting a reservation may
take weeks––this, despite the food media’s
contention that
“nobody wants to eat that way anymore.” Menus for
$200, $300 and, at the omekase restaurant Masa,
$750 (before wine, tax and tip) haven’t put off
diners at places like Per Se, Marea and Caviar
Russe, and steakhouse in particular, like
Mastro’s or Del Frisco’s (right), see
little or no resistance to $31 shrimp cocktail
or $145 for a tomahawk steak. One hears
that expense accounts are being cut––which is
like saying Hollywood is cutting back on big
budget Marvel movies––but clearly such dinners,
especially private rooms, are not much concerned
with prices if they end up getting bang for the
buck. But what exactly do you get
for your money at a fine dining restaurant? Comparisons
help: hit Broadway shows like the current
“Waiting for Godot” with Keanu Reeves are going
for $1,059 this Saturday. Sunday’s Giants (2 and
8) game will set you back $550. “Handel’s
Messiah” at Carnegie Hall cost $189. All, like
dinner, are one-night events. Once over,
it’s over. So, what do
you get at a fine dining restaurant like Le
Bernardin, Per Se, Jean-Georges, Gabriel
Kreuther and others? To begin
with, the premises will be grand indeed, created
by a well-known designer who works with the
finest materials, lighting, air-conditioning,
bathroom fixtures, staircases, all
individualized to the space. The wineglasses
will be Riedel, the china Bernardaud, the
silverware Cristofle, the napery Sferra. The staff
uniforms may be custom made. Fresh flowers are
everywhere. A chef who
is not the owner may be paid $300,000. The
capital investment in wines may reach
$1,000,000, overseen by a well-paid sommelier,
perhaps two or more. Ingredients like caviar and
white truffles do not fall within the 30-30-30
rule. A pastry chef makes everything, even
breads, from scratch in a specially appointed
kitchen. Waiters and
busboys may make minimum wage $16.50, but
attracting first-rate staff with fine dining
experience will cost more. Now, if you
aren’t particularly interested in what is
demeaningly called “frou-frou” and prefer
instead small, cramped, earsplitting restaurants
with minimal décor, cheap table settings where
they don’t take reservations, be my guest. But
the level of the food and service is simply not
going to be as it is in fine dining, however
delicious the Korean barbecue, Mexican taqueria
or Italian pizzeria may be. Not that
the owner-chefs at such places do not take care
and diligence in their preparation, but they
usually have less access to the best
ingredients, the first choice of seafood, the
best cuts of meat that fine dining restaurants
can afford or demand. If, say, the highest grade
of tuna is available that morning, who do you
think gets first pick? Obviously Masa Takayama
of Masa, so that he feels he can charge $750 for
a 20-26 course meal. When the finest white
truffles come into the market at a minimum of
$300 per ounce, which East Village trattoria can
afford to put them on its menu? And with bottles
of First Growth Bordeaux and Grand Cru
Burgundies costing restaurants $1,000 a bottle,
would you expect to find them in the cellar of a
Brooklyn bistro? Doing a cost analysis of what
a meal at Masa compared to an all-you-can-eat
sushi bar is futile, but you do get what you pay
for. The problem with
too many of those who begrudge others dining out
at the highest level is that they may not have
the acumen, much less the expense account, to do
so. ❖❖❖
NEW YORK CORNER CUERNO 1271
Avenue of the Americas 332-269-0094 By John Mariani ![]()
Less in not always more and bigger is
not always less, as the new Cuerno in the
Time-Life Building manifests in a vast dining
room with long bar, high vaulted ceilings,
wrought iron, exposed brick and Mexican carved
wood throughout. A Miró-like mural by artist
Federico Jordán of a
leering skeleton riding a bull
lends frivolity and green ferns a feeling of
the outdoors. Polished wood tables are
separated at a decent distance from one
another, and waiters pushing carts of food
provide further enticement to the fiery grill
whence it comes.
The size––and some thumping music––means Cuerno
is very loud when full, and conversation is not
easy until the room becomes half full after nine
o’clock.
You, of course, want to see how they do guacamole, which starts with Michoacan avocado mashed to a fine consistency with lime, cilantro, tomato, onion, chile serrano and salsa pasilla. The fried charring rinds of Mayan octopus are treated to a salsa of avocado and lemon-garlic. They also do a lustrous crudo of hamachi “cooked” by the heat and acidity of chile Chicharron and salsa rasurada vinaigrette from coastal Mexico (above). Cuerno has a section for
tacos, including one of Baja-style
fried branzino
with
dry chile emulsion, coleslaw and avocado, while signature Taco
Taquero introduces you to their beef,
enclosing a skirt steak with fire-roasted bone
marrow, prepared table-side.
Given the back-and-forth of tariffs on beef
these days, Cuerno obtains its grass-fed supply
from South Dakota’s Demkota Ranch, which
includes a massive tomahawk steak that is
ceremoniously wheeled over on a special cart and
carved in front of you from the bone. The meats here
are cooked over a Josper charcoal grill and the
searing adds enormously to the layered flavors
of smoke, caramelized crust, salt
and pepper and fat and lean interior. Of the six cuts
available we chose the rib-eye with roasted
garlic, and the very juicy short rub, slow
roasted for twelve hours and slathered with a
pomegranate glaze and pickled onion. Cuerno also does
an excellent chamorro al horno, a braised
northern-style pork shank with regional adobo,
rice and beans. Owing to the sumptuousness of
these main courses, a dish of fideo
de
poro asado composed of noodles made
from roasted leeks and roasted corn with a
crema poblana seemed more like a side
dish than a substantial one. If you think you
need a side, go for the potato laced with Grana
Padano cheese, truffle and a ranch cream. You’ll most
likely be sated by this point in the meal, but
do share one of the desserts, especially the pastel de campechanas of vanilla ice
cream cake layered with caramel-dripped puff
pastry and
topped with pecans and dulce de leche. Cuerno
swirls and clicks on all cylinders, and it’s
meant to be fun, though not in the formulaic,
tiki-bar driven way of Tao or Buddakhan. The
concept may have come from Mexico, but Cuerno
sits squarely into this midtown location. And
it’s swell to look out the window and see the
glowing neon nights of Radio City Music Hall. Open
daily
for lunch and dinner.
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HÔTEL ALLEMAGNE By John Mariani ![]() CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
“I need not tell you what went
through Louise’s head. She knew exactly
where Dieter would be sending her: The Hôtel
Allemagne, which was owned by an old German
family in Paris and then housed exclusively
German officers. Everyone in Paris knew it
was also where those officers kept
prostitutes. That was the life she faced.
And if Dieter exposed her as being Jewish,
even that awful future would give way to one
even more terrible.
“Well, I will not tell you what poor
Louise went through at the Hôtel Allemagne.
And at that time Paris had many bordellos.
The most famous was called Le
One Two Two (right), from its address
at 122 Rue de Provence, where every form of
sexual deviance was sold in theme rooms—a
pirate ship, a hay loft, Cleopatra’s
boudoir, a medieval torture chamber and
others. The owner was French but catered to
whatever the Nazis wished. And it was there
that Louise was sometimes sent when she was
not being abused at the Allemagne.
“Then D-Day happened, and the Germans
knew it was only a matter of time before
they had to leave Paris. They became more
barbaric towards the Parisians as the weeks
went on.
“It was not until years had gone by
that her reputation as a resistance fighter
was revealed, and she became something of a
heroine in France. And that is the very sad
story of Louise Jourdan.” © John Mariani, 2024 ❖❖❖ NOTES FROM THE WINE CELLAR
UNDERSTANDING WINESPEAK By John Mariani describe
various bottlings as “a little, shy wine like a
gazelle. . . . Like a leprechaun. . . . Dappled, in
a tapestry meadow” and “like the last unicorn.”
As the business of wine has become more
serious, thereby demanding more serious
observations, the verbiage of less elegant writers
on wine is today more along the lines of what sounds
like a chemical breakdown: “Bret in the nose,
incomplete malolactic fermentation, a slight taste
of graphite, a scent of botrytis, and enough
vanillin to suggest overuse of new French
barriques.”
Grip—A vague term
suggesting that a sip of wine lingers on the palate
rather than just slip away.
brettanomyces—Or,
simply, “bret.” A chemical term for an unwanted yeast
whose volatile compounds can cause wines to have a
barnyard or wet blanket smell. Bret can live on many
surfaces within a Brix—A scale used to
determine the must weight or sugar content in
grapes, determined by the numbers of sugar grams or
per 100 grams water or as the percentage of content.
The number can provide winemakers of what the
eventual alcohol may be in the finished wine. One
degree Brix equals 18 grams per liter of sugar.
biodynamic wines—When
the term refers to wines made according to
techniques that emphasize the healthiest, organic
vineyard practices with no use of chemical
fertilizers, it is a process focused on the soil. The term
becomes controversial when some winemakers factor in
the effects of the moon cycle wherein plantings,
spraying, and organic fertilization is done
according to the signs of zodiac. chaptalization—The
addition of sugar to wine must intending to boost
the alcohol level, named after French agronomist
Jean-Antoine Chaptal, who published his findings in
1799. In some wine regions the practice is
forbidden, but it is widely used in vineyards,
including Burgundy, where the sun may not create
enough sugar in the grapes.
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Burcu
Yesilyurt, who lives in Kew in London, described
her “shock” after being confronted by three officers
and fined £150 for pouring a small amount of coffee
down a drain in west London ❖❖❖ Any of John Mariani's books below may be ordered from amazon.com. The Hound in Heaven
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