Renowned 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.
Crenn is in good company. Chefs at many of the world’s best restaurants made 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.
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.
Nick Kokonas, co-owner of Alinea’s in Chicago, said they shifted to carryout on March 17
and since then have served 82,000 meals. 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 of its employees back by
the end of April at 80% of their former pay and benefits. He thinks to-go meals will
remain even after the restaurant reopens its dining room later this summer.
Others began 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.
“It serves a higher purpose right now. Fine dining is not what we need. Connecting over
nature and food in a beautiful setting and provides a genuine experience — that’s what
we need,” she said. Tusk usually employs 170 people at three restaurants: Quince, the
less formal sibling Cotogna, and the wine bar Verjus. Most employees are furloughed,
but she’s been able to hire back about 25 people to help at the farm. More will come
back soon.
“It’s tough right now, but we’re hoping we get to a break-even point in the next few
months,” she said.
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