Food Review
Archived Posts from this Category
Archived Posts from this Category
Posted by Fiona on 10 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   A casual place with a light, summery feel, Goldstein’s Bagels adheres to its field of bagels and bagel sandwiches. It is not a place for the carb-conscious, but has some combination of fillings to suit just about anyone else.
   The pricing is somewhat deceptive. The pre-designed bagel sandwiches are reasonable, but with the prices of the individual fillings, a custom bagel can come to as much as six dollars.
   The bagels themselves come in a variety of flavors. The cheese bagels have cheese mixed all the way through them. They all have substance enough to hold their fillings well, but can sometimes border on stale.
   The menu also features the “bageldog,†a hotdog baked inside a sesame bagel, which turns out to be a successful if unique idea. The bagels do not come with sides, but are surprisingly satisfying on their own.
   For dessert there are chocolate and blueberry bagels, and a variety of sturdy but tasty fruit-and-cream-filled bagelish pastries. The soda machine is never watery.
   The service is only so-so, so I give the place three and a half stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 09 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   The prices may be daunting for those on a budget, but the quantity and quality for the money are both well above average. Although even one who eats only a main course at Dave & Busters will not feel hungry again for the rest of the day, the appetizers deserve a mention.
   The combination plate includes Buffalo wings and bacon potato wedges that taste exactly as one imagines they should when not faced with an imitation. Also available are mushrooms deep-fried in a crispy, flaky, buttery batter that adds to their flavor instead of replacing it.
   The menu includes beef and veggie burgers, steaks, chicken, and seafood, all of them juicy, well seasoned, and in extremely generous portions. The fish of the fish and chips is battered with the same care and balance as the appetizer mushrooms, and just enough seasoned salt baked in.
   Dave & Buster’s also has an enormous arcade area, a sort of Chucky Cheese that caters to adults as well, and it is frighteningly easy to spend the equivalent of several meals on it in an afternoon and hardly notice. Along with the classics, there are a few unusual games, including a multiplayer quiz show.
   A perfect special occasion treat, I give it five stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 08 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   Although pricey, as good seafood always is, Cameron’s Seafood is well worth the sporadic or special occasion splurge.
   Featuring every usually eaten type of fish, including thick steaks of swordfish and other moderately hard-to-find species (in the economical and not the ecological sense, of course), it always rewards the challenging task of deciding, whatever the decision may be. All the varieties are perfectly seasoned to compliment their own individual flavors.
   While the sides could not be mistaken for more than that in the presence of the fish, the “smashed potatoes†in particular could easily overshadow the main dishes of other similar restaurants. The fish and chips achieve the elusive, delicate balance of the right fish to batter ratio.
   The menu has recently been expanded to include high-quality beefsteaks and burgers, and the restaurant also includes a fish market for cooking at home.
   The staff is cheerful and courteous, and the nautical atmosphere is comfortable and inviting. Expert in its field and all it dabbles in, I give Cameron’s Seafood five stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 07 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   With its polished hardwood interior and exclusively double-digit prices, McGrath’s looks like a potential high-class or special occasion favorite, but the fair, somewhat slow service, understandable in most places where fine cuisine is produced, in this case hints almost subliminally at the experience to come.
   The ordinary fish dinners of varying species are served in meager portions and are exactly that, ordinary. The fish and sides alike are bland and, while generally inoffensive to the hungry, are the bare minimum of what constitutes a seafood dinner.
   The fish of the beer-battered fish and chips, on the other hand, are a few fillets of flavorless cod buried within mounds of oily batter with a powerfully alcoholic taste, though it is by no means intoxicating. This could be considered somewhat unfortunate for the establishment, as it leaves even the hungriest guest lucid enough to recognize the fish as unappetizing after one piece at most.
   For seafood in the same price range, but with the quality to back it up, Cameron’s Seafood is a much better choice. Although most of McGrath’s menu is not repulsive, taking into account its unfounded apparent opinion of itself and its prices’ reflection thereof, I can give it only two and a half stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 07 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   For high-quality Italian food at low sit-down prices, Charlie’s Trio is the way to go. The meal begins with fresh garlic bread, never bland or too strong, with olive oil for dipping. Vegetarian options abound, but so do seafood, chicken, beef, and even veal.
   The lasagna, available with either meat or spinach, is thick, cheesy, and satisfying. The penne alla norma is an interesting and effective mix of eggplant, pine nuts, spinach, and other assorted vegetables in perfectly balanced marinara sauce. Rich cream sauce is liberally applied to the dishes that feature it, many of which, including the clam linguini, are pleasantly filling enough to be shared between two people.
   The ravioli, meat or cheese, is more parts sauce and fewer parts substance than the other items, but a bite of the actual pasta will dispel any feeling of regret or disappointment in one who orders it. Charlie’s also excels at pizzas, available in personal as well as family size.
   The restaurant itself is small with subdued lighting and soft, comfortable seating. The service is prompt and friendly. Without a single bad choice on its considerable and varied menu, I give it five stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 06 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   Often referred to simply as Islands, its full name is descriptive and accurate. Served in a cheerful, tropically themed atmosphere, Islands’ burgers are among the best available, as are their vegetarian versions, and come with several themed condiment combinations.
   The fries are not too greasy, and many excellent sauces are available to go with them, but they are served in baskets big enough that they must be shared or part of them taken home.
   Along with the everyday soft drinks, Islands serves an array of quality tropical alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. The experience of the Lava Flow, for example, can only be described as closely akin to drinking a cheesecake in the best possible way.
   Islands also used to feature a variety of chicken options, but in a recent professed anniversary celebration, the menu has been revised and most of the non-burger items eliminated.
   Dessert is still exceptional, particularly the Kona Pie, a mocha ice cream cake with an Oreo crust that could tempt the most satiated diner.
   In the case of large groups with varying tastes, a better option in Old Town Pasadena would be Barney’s Beanery, with its equally fine burgers and much wider selection, and for students, families, and anyone else with a tight budget, Wolfe Burgers, also in Pasadena, with its cheaper but comparable beef, turkey, and veggie burgers, more casual atmosphere, and outdoors-indoors theme, may be a better option.
   For fine burgers and drinks, Islands is still top-notch, but taking into account its prices, I can only give this formerly five-star establishment three and a half stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 06 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   While the wolf theme set up by the founder’s convenient last name is used only jokingly, the prominent theme of indoor plant décor allows the guest to feel as if he or she is picnicking in the woods, except that the food is not cold from a journey.
   Although a typical, casual burger joint in many ways, Wolfe Burgers allows customers to dress their beef, turkey, or veggie burgers to fit their own tastes at a small condiment bar, and will provide additional condiments, including grilled onions and avocado, on request.
   There are also Mexican options, sandwiches, hot dogs, and a large breakfast menu.
   In addition to traditional fries and onion rings, Wolfe Burgers serves deep-fried mushrooms, breaded and lightly seasoned with a well-placed hint of cinnamon. One leaves the table with a mild case of the greasy, sedentary feeling that so often accompanies American food, but in this case it is not so much the food as it is the quantity one is likely to consume once having tasted it that is to blame.
   An excellent value for the money, I give it four stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 06 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   A typical ‘50s nostalgia diner with an emphasis on Coca-Cola, The Rocky Cola Café specializes in greasy, deep-fried American foods, and does them reasonably well. The chicken and fish are over-battered, leaving one feeling heavy, lethargic, and vaguely ill, but that is more or less the gastronomic fashion it follows.
   It is a decent place to bring children who cannot be persuaded to try anything but traditional American food, but for adults it is more appetizing the less it is contemplated, despite how amusing the spectacle of a cockroach crawling across a grade A health inspector sign may be.
   True to its name, the Coca-Cola at the Rocky Cola Cafe is less watered down than in many diners and fast food places, and tastes closer to the bottled version, and worthy to be poured into their Coca-Cola brand glasses.
   Unremarkable is the best one-word description of the place, and I give it three stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 06 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   Barney’s Beanery is one of very few restaurants that really do have something for the whole family. Printed as a newspaper to accommodate its size, the menu encompasses many different kinds of cuisine.
   The hamburgers, far from the basic choice they appear to be, are available with every imaginable combination of condiments, with beef, turkey, or veggie patties, and come with thick, seasoned fries that are far from ordinary.
   There are Italian and Mexican options, as well as American chicken and seafood, all done as well as an ordinary restaurant’s specialty. Breakfast is served all day, including omelettes with as many combinations of ingredients as there are for the hamburgers. Although it would be an impressive feat for one person to sample all that Barney’s has to offer, it seems that all it does it does superbly.
   The food is accompanied by friendly service and a ‘60s retro atmosphere. The tables are collages of famous faces, there are license plates on the walls from every state, and a few booths are inside a double-decker bus. There are televisions in and around the bar area, so non-sports fans may find it uncomfortably crowded during football games. Other than this, the only drawback one may encounter there is severe indecision, so I give it five stars out of five.
Posted by Fiona on 06 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Food Review
   Its name conjures images that are not too far from the reality, images of all-you-can-eat arrays of American staple foods. With a small salad bar, dessert bar, meat counter, and the ever-present basics: fried chicken, mashed potatoes, and macaroni and cheese, Hometown Buffet neither excels nor fails at anything it attempts.
   The customer should be aware when filling his or her plate that the food counters are very loosely monitored and within the reach of children who may find traditional utensils (and hygiene) tiresome, but even if some dishes must occasionally be bypassed for this reason, one will find that the entire meal turns out to be much the same bounty of homogeneous mediocrity each time.
   The few exceptions to this rule are the brisket, always well marinated, and the garlic mushrooms with their well-balanced blend of seasonings.
   A small step outside the bounds of its overarching conventionalism is the availability of a few flavors of soft-serve frozen yogurt alongside the chocolate and vanilla ice cream. Unfortunately the yogurt itself is less than a step outside the bounds of the general quality, and I give the restaurant as a whole three stars out of five.
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