Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
We still have a good variety in WF but Raleigh has an abundance of each type. Morrisville, a bit west of Raleigh, has a big Asian (especially Indian) population so it has a lot of Indian restaurants.
We have a selection of Indian-ish places. Th best of these is a place called "Flavour of India" located in a little out-of-the-way strip
Those are the best places. The Indian place Steve and I liked in
Raleigh was on a strip mall adjacent to the main road but the
restaurant was well set back from most of the stores. There was a
really good bbq place in that plaza also but it was family run and the family needed to concentrate efforts otherwise so closed the
restaurant.
mall. When my friends and I visited there the first time we were the
only
non-Asians in the place. The buffet was great (and AFAIK authentic)
and I sampled some dishes I had only read about. Plus there was mango
We've been the only gringos in some Mexican places. One, in Savannah, catered to the blue collar crowd but also welcomed those in uniform so
we always got a good meal.
ice cream offered for dessert. I quite liked that.
What about mango lassies for drinks?
8<----- YOU KNOW ----->8
At least the next day, after the first round is well settled.
My favourite thing at the Gyros places (they're all 'Quick Serve') is
this ......
Title: Souvlakia (Greek Shish-Kabobs)
Categories: Lamb/mutton, Bbq, Citrus
Yield: 8 Servings
We usually do a lamb gyro, sometimes a kebab and about half the time, a baklava for dessert.
Depends on my mood which I'll go for - sandwich or souvlaki. And I
don't often do dessert. Unless there is rhubarb pie on offer. Not strawberry/ rhubarb which I consider an abomination.
But others of us like it. The baklava pieces are small so there's
always room for one of them.
I had a version of this at Flavour of India - there was also chicken biryani on offer - but I'd never had goat before. It turns out it's a
lot like lamb - but a bit more "chewy".
A lot bonier too. I've used it in combination with other meats in my chili.
restaurant was well set back from most of the stores. There was a
really good bbq place in that plaza also but it was family run and the family needed to concentrate efforts otherwise so closed the
restaurant.
Got to keep the priorities straight. The couple that owns one of my favourite "day-shift" cafes (06:00 'til 14:00) had taken a struggling location across town an made it very successful. Then they closed it
and sold to another operator. When I asked Kurt about it he replied "Vickie and I are getting "up there" and we're slowing down a bit."
mall. When my friends and I visited there the first time we were the
only
non-Asians in the place. The buffet was great (and AFAIK authentic)
and I sampled some dishes I had only read about. Plus there was mango
We've been the only gringos in some Mexican places. One, in Savannah, catered to the blue collar crowd but also welcomed those in uniform so
we always got a good meal.
My former manager at AZ is of Mexican descent. He has turned me on to
many specialities which I'd never have thought to try. And he's always
"on he money" when rating a new place.
ice cream offered for dessert. I quite liked that.
What about mango lassies for drinks?
Never tried it. These days my most comon drink is water w/lemon. Or
just water and ice cubes. Bv)=
8<----- YOU KNOW ----->8
Depends on my mood which I'll go for - sandwich or souvlaki. And I
don't often do dessert. Unless there is rhubarb pie on offer. Not strawberry/ rhubarb which I consider an abomination.
But others of us like it. The baklava pieces are small so there's
always room for one of them.
It's odd. I like rhubarb pie and I like strawberry pie. But not the combination. I think it's bacause I prefer my rhubarb to be a bit
tart.
I had a version of this at Flavour of India - there was alsochicken DD> biryani on offer - but I'd never had goat before. It turns
A lot bonier too. I've used it in combination with other meats in my chili.
I've use goat and lamb in chile verde - never in red chilli.
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
restaurant was well set back from most of the stores. There was a
really good bbq place in that plaza also but it was family run and
the family needed to concentrate efforts otherwise so closed the restaurant.
Got to keep the priorities straight. The couple that owns one of my favourite "day-shift" cafes (06:00 'til 14:00) had taken a struggling location across town an made it very successful. Then they closed it
and sold to another operator. When I asked Kurt about it he replied "Vickie and I are getting "up there" and we're slowing down a bit."
Understandable. Steve goes to breakfast a couple of days a week (one
with guys from chruch, other day with Legion members) at one of those places. They open up at 0400, close at 11. The family has been in WF
for about 30 years so I wouldn't be surprised to hear some day in the
not too distant future that they're calling it quits.
mall. When my friends and I visited there the first time we were the
only non-Asians in the place. The buffet was great (and AFAIK authentic) and I sampled some dishes I had only read about. Plus there was mango
We've been the only gringos in some Mexican places. One, in Savannah, catered to the blue collar crowd but also welcomed those in uniform so
we always got a good meal.
My former manager at AZ is of Mexican descent. He has turned me on to
many specialities which I'd never have thought to try. And he's always
"on he money" when rating a new place.
Good person to know. (G) So many Mexican places give you a limited
choice (burrito, taco, chimichanga, etc) with rice and beans on the
side. I like a place that has more variety--and hortchata on the drinks side.
ice cream offered for dessert. I quite liked that.
What about mango lassies for drinks?
Never tried it. These days my most comon drink is water w/lemon. Or
just water and ice cubes. Bv)=
It's good, sort of like a thinned down mango yogurt.
8<----- YOU KNOW ----->8
favourite "day-shift" cafes (06:00 'til 14:00) had taken a struggling location across town an made it very successful. Then they closed it
and sold to another operator. When I asked Kurt about it he replied "Vickie and I are getting "up there" and we're slowing down a bit."
Understandable. Steve goes to breakfast a couple of days a week (one
with guys from chruch, other day with Legion members) at one of those places. They open up at 0400, close at 11. The family has been in WF
for about 30 years so I wouldn't be surprised to hear some day in the
not too distant future that they're calling it quits.
I'm a bit surprised they don't do lunches whilst having breakfast all
the time.
My former manager at AZ is of Mexican descent. He has turned me on to
many specialities which I'd never have thought to try. And he's always
"on he money" when rating a new place.
Good person to know. (G) So many Mexican places give you a limited
choice (burrito, taco, chimichanga, etc) with rice and beans on the
side. I like a place that has more variety--and hortchata on the drinks side.
Never had that - but I do have a recipe so you can mae it at home.
ice cream offered for dessert. I quite liked that.
What about mango lassies for drinks?
Never tried it. These days my most comon drink is water w/lemon. Or
just water and ice cubes. Bv)=
It's good, sort of like a thinned down mango yogurt.
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
Understandable. Steve goes to breakfast a couple of days a week (one
with guys from chruch, other day with Legion members) at one of those places. They open up at 0400, close at 11. The family has been in WF
for about 30 years so I wouldn't be surprised to hear some day in the
not too distant future that they're calling it quits.
I'm a bit surprised they don't do lunches whilst having breakfast all
the time.
They used to, but I think the events of 4 years ago made them cut back their hours, then realised they liked the shorter time frame. They do
stay open longer on the Monday before Thanksgiving; they do a free meal (turkey and the works) for vets and senior citizens.
I'm a bit surprised they don't do lunches whilst having breakfast all
the time.
They used to, but I think the events of 4 years ago made them cut back their hours, then realised they liked the shorter time frame. They do
stay open longer on the Monday before Thanksgiving; they do a free meal (turkey and the works) for vets and senior citizens.
The pandemic disrupted many food-service places. We had a new place
whose opening day was on the first day of the quarantine. Not the best timing. Bv)= But they set up tents w/spce heaters and soldiered on. My Sunday breakfast bunch were ther on our first Sunday and quite liked
how they handled the problem. They've certaily lasted longer than the O'Charley's franchise which they replaced.
We have a local cafe which does free dinner on Thanksgiving and Xmas. Owned by a Palestinian, Sgt. Pepper's Cafe is well-known in the area. Owner, Ziyad Samara, told the local paper "This country has been very
good to me. This is my way of giving back."
I ate there one Thanksgiving when all the family was "elsewhere" for
the day. When I attempted to pay pay Ziyad got huffy with me saying
"No! No! Free for all!"
So, I left a tip on the table of about what the meal would have cost
from the menu. Hey, she's working her holiday. That deserves special consideration.
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
I'm a bit surprised they don't do lunches whilst having breakfast all
the time.
They used to, but I think the events of 4 years ago made them cut back their hours, then realised they liked the shorter time frame. They do
stay open longer on the Monday before Thanksgiving; they do a free meal (turkey and the works) for vets and senior citizens.
The pandemic disrupted many food-service places. We had a new place
whose opening day was on the first day of the quarantine. Not the best timing. Bv)= But they set up tents w/spce heaters and soldiered on. My Sunday breakfast bunch were ther on our first Sunday and quite liked
how they handled the problem. They've certaily lasted longer than the O'Charley's franchise which they replaced.
There was an O'Charley's in the site I mentioned a few weeks ago that can't seem to hold anything longer than 6 months. It was there when we first moved to WF, but gone soon afterward. It's good to hear that the place that replaced your O'C's is doing well.
We have a local cafe which does free dinner on Thanksgiving and Xmas. Owned by a Palestinian, Sgt. Pepper's Cafe is well-known in the area. Owner, Ziyad Samara, told the local paper "This country has been very
good to me. This is my way of giving back."
I ate there one Thanksgiving when all the family was "elsewhere" for
the day. When I attempted to pay pay Ziyad got huffy with me saying
"No! No! Free for all!"
So, I left a tip on the table of about what the meal would have cost
from the menu. Hey, she's working her holiday. That deserves special consideration.
I'm sure it was well appreciated. It sounds like a place we would
enjoy if we're ever out your way.
There was an O'Charley's in the site I mentioned a few weeks ago that can't seem to hold anything longer than 6 months. It was there when we first moved to WF, but gone soon afterward. It's good to hear that the place that replaced your O'C's is doing well.
O'Charleys is struggling. They're down to 58 store (from 600+) and
have closed their commissary in Nashville, TN in favour of Performance Food Group supplying their stores.
We have a local cafe which does free dinner on Thanksgiving and Xmas. Owned by a Palestinian, Sgt. Pepper's Cafe is well-known in the area. Owner, Ziyad Samara, told the local paper "This country has been very
good to me. This is my way of giving back."
I ate there one Thanksgiving when all the family was "elsewhere" for
the day. When I attempted to pay pay Ziyad got huffy with me saying
"No! No! Free for all!"
So, I left a tip on the table of about what the meal would have cost
from the menu. Hey, she's working her holiday. That deserves special consideration.
I'm sure it was well appreciated. It sounds like a place we would
enjoy if we're ever out your way.
The owner's son has taken over the Ritz's location I mentioned Kurt & Vickie have closed in a previous post. It's now Sgt. Pepper's West.
We'll see how Tarik does there. There are several state offices
near-by and only one other (Mexican) sit-down cafe. Lot's of fats food though.
Got a Mickey' D's, Burger Whop and Hardee's. As well as Domino's Pizza
and America's oldest (and first) drive-thru called Maid Rite.
https://visitspringfieldillinois.com/LocationDetails/?id=Maid-Rite-San wich-Shop
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Maid Rite Hamburgers
Categories: Five, Beef, Poultry, Sandwiches
Yield: 4 Servings
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
There was an O'Charley's in the site I mentioned a few weeks ago that can't seem to hold anything longer than 6 months. It was there when we first moved to WF, but gone soon afterward. It's good to hear that the place that replaced your O'C's is doing well.
O'Charleys is struggling. They're down to 58 store (from 600+) and
have closed their commissary in Nashville, TN in favour of Performance Food Group supplying their stores.
Don't know what commissary is supplying Cracker Barrel but Steve no
longer orders their livers and gizzards. They used to be fresh cooked;
now they're frozen and cooked from that stage so they're rock hard.
So hopefully those with good taste will patronise the cafes and spread
the word among co-workers. There will always be some die hard fast food devotees in the crowd tho, keeping those places going.
and America's oldest (and first) drive-thru called Maid Rite.
https://visitspringfieldillinois.com/LocationDetails/?id=Maid-Rite-San wich-Shop
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Maid Rite Hamburgers
Categories: Five, Beef, Poultry, Sandwiches
Yield: 4 Servings
A couple of years ago we took I-80 from Pennsylvania, westward. Stopped
to visit West Amana for a bit, picked up a cook book. Browsing it, I
saw a recipe for Maid Rite burgers; I'll have to check the cook book to see how well it matches this one.
O'Charleys is struggling. They're down to 58 store (from 600+) and
have closed their commissary in Nashville, TN in favour of Performance Food Group supplying their stores.
Don't know what commissary is supplying Cracker Barrel but Steve no
longer orders their livers and gizzards. They used to be fresh cooked;
now they're frozen and cooked from that stage so they're rock hard.
All I ever do at C-B is breakfast. Usually the "Mama's Pancake
Breakfast"
8<----- SNIP ----->8
So hopefully those with good taste will patronise the cafes and spread
the word among co-workers. There will always be some die hard fast food devotees in the crowd tho, keeping those places going.
and America's oldest (and first) drive-thru called Maid Rite.
https://visitspringfieldillinois.com/LocationDetails/?id=Maid-Rite-San wich-Shop
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Maid Rite Hamburgers
Categories: Five, Beef, Poultry, Sandwiches
Yield: 4 Servings
A couple of years ago we took I-80 from Pennsylvania, westward. Stopped
to visit West Amana for a bit, picked up a cook book. Browsing it, I
saw a recipe for Maid Rite burgers; I'll have to check the cook book to see how well it matches this one.
It's a different Maid-Rite - ours pre-dates the Iowa based chain. The
Iowa chain opened a store here and the local Maod Rite owner sued them
for infringement. And won his case.
That being said, I'm not a big fan of loose-meat burgers. But, their "home-made" root beer is most excellent. Better than my attempt.
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