When did Minnesotans get to be so bitchy?
I'm thinking back to a conversation that I had with a food-obsessed acquaintance last winter. The subject was Ringo. Specifically, we were talking about the restaurant's strategy for presenting a kind of edible, changes-every-month culinary global getaway: you know, the flavors of Ivory Coast in August, Peru in September, Taipei in October.
The polite version of my pal's assessment is that he found the business plan of first-time restaurateurs Jim and Stefanie Ringo to be a bit of a folly. That's putting it nicely.
While I don't possess his powers of clairvoyance, I will admit that the mechanics behind frequently changing menus can be tricky. Still, Lucia's Restaurant has been skillfully switching it up every week for the past quarter-century, although Lucia Watson's enviable success lies in part in a tightly disciplined focus: brief menus, straightforward cooking.
The Ringos, on the other hand, are attempting a dozen-plus dishes in and out each month, with libations to match, all inspired by a veritable United Nations of culinary traditions. Could it all blow up? Maybe. But doesn't it also sound kind of fun?
"The worst curse in this business is getting bored with your own menu," said chef Ryan Aberle. That works for diners too; one more chicken Caesar flatbread and I'll fall into a doze so deep I'll never awaken.
Globetrotting menus
Aberle certainly has the adrenaline required for this kind of feat. After nearly five years of running Wayzata's NorthCoast, where he became known for adventurous, on-the-fly tasting menus, Aberle is now finding himself, for example, spending most of May preparing kimchi for his Seoul-inspired menu, or gearing up for his July foray into South Africa by testing wildebeest recipes.