Eateries offer last night out
Alicia Robinson
For those who want to usher in 2004 with gastronomic fanfare, many
area restaurants are offering New Year’s Eve champagne toasts with
hors d’oeuvres, dinners and, in some cases, music and dancing.
Several restaurant employees said they’re planning for huge crowds
on the last night of the year, which can be one of the busiest nights
because seemingly everyone goes out.
Roy’s in Newport Beach expects to serve more than 500 dinners,
mostly to people who come in before heading to a club or hotel for
dancing, Roy’s General Manager Barry Pierce said.
“It’s actually one of our heaviest nights of the year in terms of
that 6 o’clock to 10 o’clock time period,” he said.
There won’t be live music, but “we decorate big time,” he said.
Menu items for the evening are still being finalized, but in the
past, Roy’s has served a surf and turf dinner and a fish fillet with
shellfish, and caviar appetizers and Dom Perignon by the glass are
New Year’s Eve standards, Pierce said.
Diners at Roy’s are expected to partake of high-end wines and
champagnes that cost at least $100 a bottle.
In terms of food, the last dinner of this year won’t be much
different than any of the preceding ones at Scott’s Seafood in Costa
Mesa, general managing partner Mark Kuehn said.
“I have a different theory about New Year’s Eve, and that is to
run the same menu that we normally do and not surprise anyone with
either price point or food that they’re unfamiliar or uncomfortable
with,” he said.
Kuehn took a lesson from New Year’s Eve 1999, when he saw other
restaurants offering special menus with sky-high prices because it
was “the millennium.”
“I think it was a gross abuse of the hospitality industry to
overcharge everyone like that,” he said.
So Scott’s is serving its usual beef and fish entrees as well as
its seafood cioppino, an herbed tomato soup with crab, mussels, clams
and fresh fish.
Because the restaurant is near the Orange County Performing Arts
Center, Kuehn plans on a first dinner seating between 6 and 7:30 p.m.
for people attending shows. Later in the evening, a dance floor will
be cleared, and guitarist and vocalist Mike Kelsen and his band will
provide music.
As well as the traditional New Year’s champagne, Kuehn said
patrons will be drinking classic cocktails such as cosmopolitans,
martinis and old fashioneds made with high-quality bourbon.
“People like that big, showy martini glass that they can sip,” he
said. “It’s very stylish.”
The last day of 2003 will be the end of the line for Chimayo
Grill, a southwestern-style eatery that restaurateur David Wilhelm
opened about nine years ago in Fashion Island. Wilhelm will
completely remodel the space and reopen it in April as Rouge, a more
casual take on the French fare he’s become known for at Costa Mesa’s
Chat Noir and French 75 in Laguna Beach.
Although it will be the restaurant’s last night in its current
form, Wilhelm said, New Year’s Eve won’t be a blowout event.
“Actually we’re going to keep it very low profile,” he said.
“We’re going to do an open house. We’re just going to invite people
to stop by.”
No dinner will be served, but guests can stop in between 5:30 and
9:30 p.m. for champagne, hors d’oeuvres and margaritas before heading
to later celebrations.
Chat Noir, another Wilhelm venture that opened in October, is
inaugurating a “black cat ball” for New Year’s Eve, complete with a
four-course menu, a five-piece band and dancing.
Dinner selections will include onion-crusted sea bass on lobster
pomme puree, a seared foie gras with roasted duck breast and duck leg
and thigh confit in an orange sauce.
Guests will get black cat paw fake tattoos, and women are
encouraged to dress in the black cat theme, with a prize offered for
the best outfit.
Wilhelm said this year’s black cat ball may be the first of many.
“You have to start a tradition someplace, so this is what we’re
doing the first year,” he said. The later of the two dinner seatings
already has a waiting list, but Wilhelm said there may be space left
in the earlier seating.
For reservations at Roy’s, call (949)640-7697. To reserve a table
at Scott’s Seafood, call (714)979-2400. Space may still be available
at Chat Noir, which can be reached at (714)557-6647.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.