When it comes to food, I’ve savored the good, I’ve sampled the
bad, and I’ll try the ugly at least once. I’ve broken into a baguette warm from
a Parisian oven, and I’ve broken bread with people all over the world. I’ve
bitten into buffalo mozzarella in the heart of Tuscany, and I’ve pecked at
Peking duck in the restaurant of its birth. Some say I’ve sampled some of the
best things on earth while others wrinkle their noses and say I’ve supped with
savages. But I’m hardly a braggart. I tell you this so that you comprehend the
full meaning when I declare Gigi the worst restaurant I’ve ever visited.
This Midtown establishment was declared to be tasty and reasonably
priced by most Yelpers. But there is nothing reasonable about charging for a
bottle of tap water…per person. I understand that it’s filtered water, but I need
a filter for my mouth more than I need one for my water. This is Miami, not
Mexico.
Guard your water with your life. Mine was stolen off my table with
no reasonable explanation when I went to wash my hands. My food was sitting on
the table, but my water was nowhere to be found. It took 20 minutes, two
reminders, and dehydration-induced delirium to get more water. It was 80
degrees outside.
I started with my comfort food. Pork Buns are the equivalent of the bodies of male soccer players -
I’ve never seen one I don’t like. Until I tried the pork buns at Gigi. I guess the
dry shreds of tasteless pork were a welcome contrast to Miami’s humidity.
When I was 12 years old, I was diagnosed with an overbite. That’s
2 years of expensive dental work, some of which went down the drain after I found
bones in the last two of my five slices of Hamachi.
Hamachi is yellowtail, but my server didn’t actually know that. So I had my
five rubbery slices of lukewarm raw yellowtail on a bed of radioactive sweet
potato. Though I’ve never bitten into the tread of a well-worn truck tire, this
dish gives me a pretty good idea of what that would taste like. The bones even
looked like pebbles after I dislodged one from my gums. I complained about the
bones and was told that “some cuts have bone. It comes like that”. Do not order
this dish unless you and your dentist have a serious score to settle.
I’m no expert on how to run a restaurant, and I can’t begin to
comment on those challenges. But I assume it’s wise to settle the bill before
the customer dies of old age. I gave my card to the server before I got the
check because I had already waited so long. Big mistake. I was charged $15 for
the $14 hamachi. My server snapped, “SIGH…I’ll ask” and glared at me. I said
forget it and left. This is the first time I’ve ever paid a restaurant to let
me leave.
Staying with family in rural China, ordering andouille in France, tasting
Thailand’s street food, and chewing on Chinese street-corner skewers has given
me a taste of the good, the grotesque, and both. Accordingly, I’ve recovered
unscathed from bi-annual episodes of food poisoning, and I maintain that every
episode of food poisoning combined was better than this one meal at Gigi. The food
is terrible, and the prices are an abominable. The service is the worst I’ve
ever experienced, and I can’t think of any restaurant that fails as miserably
as this one.