jesteinf wrote:
According to their website, Pastoral's charcuterie mainly comes from Salumeria Biellese. While this may not have the cachet of Salumi, it's certainly nothing to sneeze at.
Pastoral is mainly focused on cheese (they refer to themselves as Pastoral: Artisan Cheese, Bread and Wine), selling a limited number of products to accompany cheese. They do not hold themselves out to be a gourmet food store.
Perhaps I'm just judging it based on what I want it to be, not what it actually is aiming to be. I do love chacuterie, more so than cheese, so that probably colors my personal take.
jesteinf wrote:
Also, I'm not sure why we should be comparing to establishments in other cities. I mean, you can get better sushi than Katsu in other cities but that doesn't make it any less of a GNR.
kennyz wrote:
I agree that comparisons with other cities ought to be irrelevant.
This is a tough one. It's hard for me not to compare a place to other, similar, establishments even if the best comparisons aren't local. Especially when a place isn't actually producing the food, but is instead curating a selection, this seems fair. To compare an Italian restaurant in Wausaw, WI against one in Florence, Italy wouldn't seem fair at all - they've got access to very different talent, ingredients, and cultural context.
With a US cheese (/wine/charcuterie/etc) shop, they all basically have access to the same wares (with certain exceptions), and so what I end up judging is in large part the selections they've chosen. I'm not near as knowledgeable about cheese as I am charcuterie, and so my judgement here is based more on that than anything else (which to jesteinf's point, may not be a fair way to judge them).
Again, that's just how I look at it and may not be how others, and the GNR process itself, looks at it. Marion St Cheese Market,
also up for a GNR, is on my list of places yet to visit, so maybe I need to make the trip out there soon and try to reach a better local comparison.
-Dan