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by Genevieve Lill
Forty-two-year-old cinematographer, Steven Heuer, recently attended a dark dining evening in L.A. with a woman he was dating. They were mum on whether they’d discussed taboo topics, but the evening, run by Opaque, which hosts weekend dinners at the Hyatt in West Hollywood, was a hit. His date reported that it was the best dinner she’d ever had.
“It’s completely awesome for a date,” Heuer reports, “Maybe not for the first date, but for the second or beyond. You’re tempted to be a bit risqué.” So what’s the sex appeal of eating blind? Heuer was amazed at the heightened sense of hearing and taste. But, dieters be warned: you’re also more likely to clear your plate.
“This is the best thing for people trying to get kids to eat their vegetables,” Heuer jokes. “Normally I’m a picky eater and would have left some vegetables to the side.” The irony is, if you dine in the dark, people are less likely to notice.
Without being able to judge a book, er, a vegetable by its cover, diners are left to grope blindly what’s on their plates and the table around them. Heuer laughed at himself when he reached around an invisible centerpiece for his date’s hands—only to realize the obstacle wasn’t even there. Likewise, New Yorker Erin Peschiera, 28, who had a “blind” date with her husband at Greenwich Village bistro Camaje, found that working without hand-eye coordination proved difficult when getting food from plate to mouth.
“My favorite part was the feeling of being sight-deprived. Seeing can be very distracting, so I was very focused on my other senses and the company of my friends, the food, and the wine.”
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1 kate // Mar 11, 2008 at 10:55 am
I would make such a mess…. Sounds amazing though. They have a place like this in paris also
2 eroticaamy // Feb 7, 2008 at 1:08 pm
I can’t wait to try this with my boyfriend. Sounds very sexy.