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Restaurant Dining Experiences Discuss any topic relating to eating out. For specific restaurant reviews and recommendations use one of the forums above.

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  #16  
Old 10-01-2007, 06:58 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by smalltruck View Post
I keep going to the hole in the wall propieteter run places where the owner really does care about the food.
George
Yes, smalltruck! Exactly what I'd like to do. Unfortunately, in SE MO-my part of it anyway--these places don't last long enough for me to get started on the menu! I keep hoping for a small place that has really great food that will last. Doesn't seem to happen, though. We had a really great Indian restaurant-went out-couple years later they reopened in another location-this time they were trying to please the populace so they went to total buffet with offerings from places like England, Italy-you catch my drift-no more great Indian food-God, I love that stuff. The Indian offerings are now bland . . . and people think they are spicey-catch my drift?
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  #17  
Old 10-23-2007, 01:29 PM
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To be honest, I really don't think so.

I think I'm far too susceptible to suggestion, and I don't know enough yet about food and wine.

I'm trying to learn, though. I've been really lucky to have had some pretty amazing dining experiences lately (thanks to the current SO, mostly). But still....I read Ruth Reichl and I really envy her palate. It seems to have come so naturally to her.
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  #18  
Old 10-23-2007, 04:42 PM
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It's the same in my area. My husband and I have gotten pretty good at judging restaurants, though -- we've been to a bunch of new, opening establishments in the last few years and the three we really loved wound up getting high marks in the paper, zagat, etc. Unfortunately one closed down anyway -- an Indian joint (why do they keep getting the short end of the papadum?). Best garlic and cheese naan I've ever eaten.
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  #19  
Old 01-22-2008, 10:42 AM
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I like to think my girlfriend and I can judge pretty good. One thing we have going is we can definitely compare a lot as we eat out quite a bit (at least in 2007 we did!)

sometimes 3-4 times a week.

aside from that I travel a lot, europe, asia, and eat great food all over the world...again....my reviews are based a lot of comparison.

Since my interest in cooking my own at home....I have learned to review not only by comparison, but a lot better by taste. I too went to a kind of "best of" place yesterday for lunch, same thing, soup and a sandwich place, not quite as cheap....and we both felt ourselves reviewing the food more so for specific tastes rather than comparison. Cajun chicken soup with no chicken.....french dip on not french bread....french onion soup that I can cook better.

I am not sure if I'm just being a brat and too picky or what.

one thing you have to keep in mind is best of...a lot of factors come into play, not just food. Atmosphere, price, location, cuisine, staff, etc...I mean, Grays Papaya is a "best of" restaurant, but for 20 cents more I can get a much better tasting hotdog!! Same with the "Grease Trucks" of New Brunswick, NJ....or White Rose System......

take white rose, a place that is known for burgers, like a large white castle.....anyone would say the hamburger has waaaay to many not cooked well onions with what seems like the crappiest grade of ground "meat" i've ever seen.....me...I see it as a great greasy breakfast!

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  #20  
Old 01-22-2008, 12:17 PM
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was it voted "BEST OF" in some newspaper campaign? Those campaigns are a crock..lol

I LOVE eating in small family (clean bathrooms though..lol) operated hole in the walls. Love the coffee there, great service, great food great atmosphere.

I do admit that I've not been out to eat like this in like forever..since I left ny in '99...places where you didn't have to order anything...they just asked you what were you in the mood for or they would tell you that today the cook's chilli was out of this word and they knew you liked your chilli with cheese.

sigh.

lol

Now, you go to these holes in the walls in Miami and you have to get into an argument with the server about how you didn't order a double order of plantains and you're not paying for it just because she put 2 orders on one plate and a single order comes with only 3 slices of plantain!

( yes, just happened the other day when I went to have a "CALENTADO" that's a Columbian breakfast...rice and red beans with a fried egg on top...I asked for a side order of sweet plantains..lol)
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  #21  
Old 02-17-2008, 04:57 PM
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It really bugs me that the vast majority of people seem to have been brought up on pre packaged food and ready made meals that they don't know real food when they taste it, they actually prefer what they are used to. There is a well known chain restaurant close to me which is truly awful, they even advertise on their menu that their tomato sauce is a brand name from a jar. It is run by children, the manager only looked about 18. When you walk in you know its going to be bad but you think "I won't complain" because ;

(a) they dont care
(B) the apology will be parrot fashion and insincere
(c) you will get another meal but you will be agitated and will not enjoy it
(d) your second plate will be as bad as your first

Anyhow this restaurant is around 100 covers and it is packed almost every night because it is a brand name. Its a real shame that there are so many good quality independant restaurants up and down the country losing out because people do not know what good food should taste like. A customer was complimenting me on my lamb shank one night , she said "It was really lovely it was better than Iceland's" You might need to be in the UK to find that amusing.
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  #22  
Old 04-13-2008, 08:44 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kuan View Post
I believe I can. Today I went to a "best of" place. It's a soup and sandwich place.

$4 for a cup of too salty soup out of a bag.

$6 for a two slices of ham and one slice of American swiss cheese food on an underbaked sandwich roll. Shredded lettuce and two thin slices of tomato.

Give me a break. Seriously one wonders how these places stay in business.
That is very terrible, how do they sell at that price?
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  #23  
Old 05-04-2008, 04:56 AM
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Default Maybe not "better" but definitely

more realistically than someone who's never worked in the field before.
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  #24  
Old 05-04-2008, 07:40 AM
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I agree that best-of places don't become famous for food necessarily, but a gimmick, location, fashion, etc.

I remember going to Carnegie Deli in ny thinking "I'm really gonna have a NY experience!" only to be sorely dissappointed. My friends ordered pastramis and corned beef sandwiches etc that were piled 6inches high. I ordered a grilled cheese but instead got this weird 6 inch high sandwich of 5 slices of bread with 4 slices processed cheese in between each bread slice. It was worth taking a picture of but it couldn't be eaten. There was nothing remotely resembling a grilled cheese about it. And those yucky pickles they give you???? UGH!
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