Dude Weather Subscribe to Secrets Minneapolis / St. Paul
Faces are changing fast at the Walker Art Center's 20.21.
Chef Scott Irestone tendered his resignation abruptly last week. Executive sous chef Asher Miller — now acting head chef — said he was on vacation and returned to find that his boss of three years had left the Wolfgang Puck family, where he'd been working since 1996 (in Las Vegas, for Spago, Chinois, and Postrio, before coming to Minneapolis to open 20.21 in 2005).
"There was no indication anything was wrong before I left," Miller says. "All I know is, the parting of ways was very much Scott's decision."
Miller, a veteran of Fermentations in Dundas, MN, and Cafe Barbette, also has been with the Walker restaurant since it opened. And he's refreshingly forthright about his desire to take Irestone's place.
"I want the job," says the slim, shaved-headed 27-year-old. "And I'm doing the job now. So it makes sense."
No word yet from Puck HQ, however, on whether or not they're even considering Miller or plan to bring in another seasoned Wolfgang-inspired line man from Vegas or L.A.
No matter what happens, Miller promises the menu at 20.21 will remain consistent. There is, apparently, no room at all for a local man to experiment (which gives one a clue as to what might have ired Irestone, does it not?). The careful fusion of Asian and American tastes — quail in pineapple-black pepper sauce, fried calamari salad, Shanghai Maine lobster — is set in stone.
"Everything in the restaurant is per Lee Hefter [Puck's first lieutenant out of Spago - Beverly Hills] and you just don't mess with Chef Lee," Miller explains. "Our menu is and always has been Lee's. But the cool thing about that is while everything stays the same, your job is to make it a little more perfect every time."
One thing at 20.21 has changed, however. The frothy and ebullient hot-pink Andy Warhol portrait of Marilyn Monroe — a fixture in the lounge since the restaurant's inaugural dinner — has been switched out with the dour, green-hued likeness of Mao Tse-tung.
Hey, Chef Lee. . . what's the deal with that?
Caye iwc replica watches Caulker independently without replica watch the stingray encounter. replica Corum There are also replica watch market tours to Shark iwc replica watches Ray Alley, where copy iwc watch you can touch copy iwc watch a sand shark. replica iwc watch However, it involves replica watches a 45-minute boat Concord imitation ride to the replica cartier watches site and swimming replica watches in deep water. Panerai Ferrari Scuderia Replicas Thus, I only Emporio Armani Black Ladies Watch Ar0210 replicas suggest this tour Concord imitation for teens and replica iwc watch adults.Other tiny deserted Cartier Pasha Diamond 18kt Rose Gold Mens Watch WJ120051 islands tha replica iwc watch Replica Shine iwc replica watches
Baseball:
Warning Track Power by Alex Halsted
Sports:
On the Ball by Britt Robson
Weather:
Dude Weather by Jimmy Gaines
Fiction:
Write Now! by Terry Faust
Hockey:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Style:
Hook & Eye
Misc:
Is This News?
Fiction:
Yo, Ivanhoe by Brad Zellar
Food:
Consider the Egg by Stephanie March
Wine:
Beyond the Cask
Food:
Food Fight!
Media:
To the Slaughter
Misc:
Outrage by Staff
Food:
Chef's Table
Guest Commentary:
Just Passing Through
Humor:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Cars:
Road Rake by Chris Birt
Commentary:
Read Menace by Tom Bartel
Society:
The Adventures of Melinda by Melinda Jacobs
Politics:
Defenestrator by Rich Goldsmith
Food:
Breaking Bread by Jeremy Iggers & Ann Bauer
Books:
Cracking Spines by Max Ross
Music:
Hear, Hear by Staff
Art:
The Vicious Circle by 6 Critics
Secrets:
Secrets of the Day by Kate Iverson
Theater:
Seen in the City by Staff
Film:
Talk About Talkies by Staff