The times, they keep changing. Back in the end of 2006 Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter opened up a West Village restaurant-cum-club-for-his-friends called The Waverly Inn and it was very successful. Limos and wealthy scenesters lined up (to the neighborhood's dismay) and if you wanted a reservation so you could try then-chef John DeLucie's truffled mac 'n' cheese? You had to know someone who knew Graydon's assistant's number (or try and score a reservation in person three days ahead). But that was then.
Waverly Inn Reservations Hit OpenTable, Fat Lady Sings
Missy Robbins, Chef
Missy Robbins took over as executive chef at A Voce last September with her style of cooking that's both neatly composed and rustic Italian. In one appetizer, for example, huge rectangular planks of seared trumpet royal mushrooms are gently set on a cloudlike hazelnut fonduta and simply garnished with greens and truffles. It may look like a salad on the plate, but served with a glass of red wine, it eats like a steak dinner. At her last chef gig—Spiaggia in Chicago—Robbins attracted the attention of Barack and Michelle Obama, who were regulars. And in today's New York Times, Frank Bruni does a little hail-to-the-chef thing: “As we all wonder whether our new president has the requisite judgment to steer us away from economic catastrophe,” he writes, “we can take some comfort from this: he has the requisite judgment to appreciate Missy Robbins.”
John DeLucie, Chef and Partner, Waverly Inn
John DeLucie has been entrenched in New York's restaurant scene for well over a decade, with stints at three-star restaurants and high end hotel kitchens along the way. Most recently running the show at La Bottega, he is currently a partner and the chef at the Waverly Inn, where New York's celebs go to see and be seen while dining on haute versions of comfort food classics.

