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| Dec 10 2006, 3:01 PM EST (current) | Patty | 2 photos added |
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restaurants
by John MarianiJune 2005
Not in the mood for dining solo?
We saved you a seat at some of America’s coolest new community tables.
With these woes in mind, a number of canny restaurateurs have put communal tables in their dining rooms in an effort to allow people to interact on a casual basis over a common good—food and wine. At a communal table (which once connoted vagrant hippies sharing bean sprouts, jug wine and Grateful Dead albums), you can now find the happy buoyancy of people to your left, your right and across the table. This configuration allows you to enter into conversation easily, with an opener like, “How are the truffle-laced potatoes?” rather than “What’s your sign?”
In many cases, communal tables have become part of the trendiest restaurant design concepts. While not unique to the restaurants of China Grill Management (CGM), the company’s 24 high-concept eateries, including China Grill, Asia de Cuba and Red Square in cities like New York, Mexico City, London and Las Vegas, pioneered the communal table idea. In most of those places, the table is integrated into a loud party atmosphere designed to draw solo diners together.
Blue Door, Miami Beach, Florida
1685 Collins Avenue, 305-674-6400. My favorite of CGM owner Jeffrey Chorodow’s restaurants is elegantly swanky Blue Door at the Delano Hotel on Miami Beach. Here the haute Latino cuisine, under consulting chef Claude Troigros, is some of the best in Florida, including an avocado-and-blue-crab salad, lobster with caramelized bananas and his signature “crêpe passion” dessert. The communal table, which features plenty of small bites, shellfish and sushi, is set away from the main dining room, off a lobby hall ideal for people-watching, and you can easily make new friends or meet old ones over a well-made mojito or daiquiri.Enoteca Drago, Beverly Hills, California
410 North Cañon Drive, 310-786-8236. In Beverly Hills, where table-hopping and kiss-blowing at restaurants are nightly rituals, this darling new trattoria is turning out some of the best pastas, antipasti and seafood around to a crowd whose lucky few can claim one of the 10 seats at the communal table. Chef Celestino Drago makes everything from scratch, from the pastas to the thin-crust pizzas, and the small plates are perfect for sharing a morsel of this prosciutto and a piece of that Parmigiano, along with 250 labels on the wine list and 50 vintages available by the glass. You never know whose famous face might be coming through the door.Jer-ne, Marina del Rey, California
4375 Admiralty Way, 310-823-1700. Chef Troy Thompson’s fabulous Asian cuisine is served at Jer-ne in the posh Ritz-Carlton Hotel in the dining room, on the al fresco terrace or at specially built communal tables just off the dining room. Solo diners or groups of friends gather here to sip cosmos and feast on Thompson’s fusion creations, which Los Angeles Magazine has called the best of their kind. The table itself, designed by Guenter Sprang, is 14 feet long and seats 18 people, and is made from “caramel” onyx atop stainless steel. This marina can be a safe haven for singles and solos, and sommelier Alison Junker is very good at discussing wines at the table so everyone gets to learn something while finding like-minded people.Moda, Providence, Rhode Island
525 S. Water Street, 401-331-2288. I’ve been quite impressed by Moda, the hot new restaurant in Providence, RhodeIsland. The name tells you a good deal about the style of the place—black quilted walls, spare tables and chairs, and a wonderful sunset view of the Providence River. Chef Jules Ramos calls his food “Progressive American,” with a fresh take on just about everything, from a tropical scallop carpaccio with spicy coconut dressing to mahi-mahi with tomato risotto and sautéed vegetables. In the center of the upstairs dining room is a communal table that might be taken over some nights by girlfriends having a reunion or guys just back from a sports event. And, after a dinner of grilled prime sirloin with shoestring potatoes, asparagus and tangerine chimichurri or miso-glazed tuna, they might all retire downstairs to the lounge to listen to jazz and watch the river flow.

