Quote:
Originally Posted by
ChicagoRon 
Tru does have great pastries, but my recommendation to most people is to go there for the dessert only reservations at 11:30 pm. Tramanto's food is great, but it's not for everybody, especially for the price. (I think there are restaurants like Blackbird that represent a much better value)...plus, it's frustrating to be so full when the 4+ courses of heavenly dessert begin.
For those non-Chicagoans, there are some things of note in case you are thinking of coming to Chicago for a dinner at Alinea....
Both Rick Tramanto/Gail Gand (Tru) and Grant Achatz (Alinea) are alumni of Trio which is now sadly defunct. Tramanto also has a more casual prix fixe Italian in the lobby of the Embassy Suites on State which is a superb value. The chef who ran Trio in between their tenures, Shawn McClain also has three restaurants (Green Zebra (raw/vegan), Custom House,and Spring, which is his oldest and most highly acclaimed.
I agree, the only reasons I would go to Tru again is for the pastries which are world reknown from my understanding.
Tru
676 N. Saint Clair St., Chicago, (312) 202-0001.
French, Global/Fusion/Eclectic. Dinner: Mon-Sat. Closed Sunday.
The cheapest way to eat at Tru, the Rick Tramonto and Gale Gand temple, is to skip dinner and just show up for dessert. Tru offers a few late-night reservations, subject to availability, for their three-course dessert tasting menu, which runs $25--a steal considering that a single dessert on the regular menu is $15. In any case, there's no question it would be hubris to have dinner at Tru and then order the dessert tasting (I recommend an early evening salad and a nap). There's a round of "fruit and custard" desserts, followed by a chocolate round: that's a total of eight different desserts for the four of us at the table, and although there were a few misses--the chocolate-port semifreddo was inexplicable--things like the gianduja napoleon with layers of frozen caramel mousse and hazelnut nougatine were breathtaking. To top it off out came a dollhouse-size float of house-made root beer and Kahlua ice cream float, and then--just to be polite--the staff brought by a tray of truffles and a jar of madeleines, then an entire cart of candies and miniature pastries: nougat, lollipops, truffles, macaroons, gelees. At 1 AM I walked out dizzy with sugar and luxury, convinced I'd never want dessert again and grateful that Northwestern University Hospital was across the street.
--Nicholas Day