I hate to say it (for a number of reasons, and he should probably reconsider his position now as a result), but I agree with Lou. More important than how I feel about the food, though, is the (for me) intolerable din of the restaurant at peak dining times. (Maybe I'm just getting old.) So I go in between, and treat it as an outstanding wine bar that happens to have food, if I want any. That alone suggests how I feel about the wine list. There's also the occasional opportunity to ask Mark himself a question, which wasn't always the case during the swell and crush of mealtimes.
But I can see why people are rather miffed at the (sometimes) total lack of California wines on the list.
I admit I still don't. Aren't there enough California wines on enough lists in and around the city? Is there nowhere else for the thirsty zin-craving masses to drink, at all?
I think that one problem is that of identity: if Mark had all Vietnamese wines on the list, no one aside from the occasional "where's my Cakebread?" have-it-my-way point-misser would object. It's that it's not an identifiable wine-region restaurant...not Italian, not French, etc....and that behaviors that people would not only tolerate, but embrace, in those establishments become somehow intolerable at the SD.
Also, there's this: do Olken and those who agree with him patrol the lists of California-cuisine restaurants for the proper representation of non-Californian wines? Somehow, I doubt it.
I guess that, for me, the specificity of the complaint is what makes it impossible to countenance. Is Olken also objecting to the menu at The Slanted Door with equal pique? "Sure, it's perfectly fine modernish Vietnamese, but do you mean to tell me Phan can't find a cous-cous or a pizza recipe good enough to put on the list? Where's the sushi? Where's the bacon cheeseburger?" To my knowledge, you will find
no one who thinks that Phan can't say, "this is my cuisine, these are the boundaries, I'm not making linguini with clams, I'm not the Cheesecake Factory, please accept my invitation to go somewhere else if you want something other than what I make," and yet somehow it's unacceptable for Mark to set the same boundaries for the wine list? Absurd.