Crepe suzzette, finished at the table. Photo: iStock
“It’s a way for diners to engage directly with the Ornos team and to be fully immersed in the overall environment,” says Matteo Giacomazzi, the director of operations at Estiatorio Ornos in San Francisco. At the new Greek restaurant by chef Michael Mina, a certified fish sommelier escorts a fish cart to a table, displaying the fresh catch of the day. Based on the guest’s selection, the sommelier will then suggest a preparation method best suited for the specific fish type. One of the methods - salt-baking - extends the presentation further, when the whole fish arrives at the table encased in a salt shell, is released from it with an artistic swing of a knife, and is then finished beside the table with a sauce.
At the just-opened Chef Guo in NYC, the first U.S outpost for Chinese superstar chef Guo Wenjun, fish is again the star of the show; the ‘Tricolor Sea Swallow’ dish is brought to the table in the accompaniment of two different fruit juices and a dollop of yogurt. The waitstaff will first add the juice papaya to the fish and mix it in front of the customer, allowing a taste. Then in goes the kiwi juice, and lastly, yoghurt is added.
Indeed, tableside presentations have gone creative and beyond the classic steakhouse; at Nashville’s one year-old The Continental, from celebrity chef Sean Brock, diners watch vanilla custard being whipped and adorned with toppings of their choosing, and get to salivate as pâté en croûte is sliced and dressed in front of their eyes. Guacamole crushed right in front of you is trending (Babalu in Memphis, TN, is a standout), and cocktail carts abound nationwide. Pasta has entered the game as well; The Oval, a 30-seat chef's tasting counter inside Chelsea Market’s La Devozione, which opened in December 2021 in NYC, puts tableside parmesan grating to shame by offering a dish of eliche giganti, a spiral-shaped pasta, cooked in anchovy cream and served in a wine glass with beetroot cream, whipped goat cheese, toasted almonds, and capers. On arrival, the wine glass is then swirled tableside by the server, transforming the flavours and the colour of the dish into dramatic hot pink. Fish, again, is the star at the intimate, prix-fixe-only Gilda's Dining Room at the Proper Hotel in San Francisco - chef Jason Fox brings a small charcoal grill into the room and scorches pink chunks of albacore tuna tableside, finishing it with refreshing yuzu ponzu.
These small acts of transformation are not only entertaining, but they help drive sales and tease interest. As social media evolved from favouring pretty still images - those were Instagram’s good old days - to moving Reels and catchy TikTok videos, so did the dining experience. “When one person orders a dish and the rest of the room sees it, they always ask about it and want to participate,” says Ryan Cole, the co-founder of Hi Neighbor Hospitality Group, which includes The Vault Steakhouse in San Francisco. At this luxurious, dimly lit restaurant, tableside presentation rules the agenda. “With social media, it is a must-have to be a part of something others are doing so you don't feel left out, and it’s a way to show everyone a more unique experience,” Cole says.
The evolution of food-centric social media - TikTok recipes in particular - has also contributed to the fact that diners have gotten more curious about the step-by-step processes necessary to achieve a beautiful, delicious dish. The interest now goes beyond ingredients and into sustainability, specific techniques and expert nuance. Tableside presentations, in alignment with that, not only tantalise but educate. At Chef Guo, the step-by-step process, assisted by the staff, is, according to the restaurant, designed to be both novel and eye-opening. “Chef believes the tableside presentation can let the diners experience the changing flavours, which we call pre-taste, middle-taste and after-taste,” says director of operations, Irene Qin. “When we show the diner how to add the three flavours, they can appreciate the different layers of the food.”