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I used to overeat at buffets until I realized the discomfort of my bloated stomach and the inability to get up and move afterwards just wasn't worth it. Now I just choose my favorite things and eat until I feel reasonably full. But I'm a big eater, so I'm pretty sure I always make my money back anyway :D
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They just aren't as good as they used to be.
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I'm embarassed to admit-- I love me a good buffet, as long as the quality is there. Any time I'm in Las Vegas, I try to stop at my fave buffet there, at the Wynn. (They have a green pea risotto that is AMAAAAAAZING.)
And for you L.A. Buffer Lovers: there's a new "Vegas Seafood Buffet" open in Hollywood, a block west of the Chinese Theater. It's the sister restaurant to the same thing in Glendale... and it's really good. They just opened last week and it's $20 for dinner. Great selection of seafood (of course) but also a good teppanyaki station (you know, grilled in front of you, like Benihana), Brazilian churrasco station, and excellent desserts including a chocolate fountain with fresh fruit for enrobing. ;-) |
Buffets are a great way to try something you might not normally try. Just remember, everything in moderation. I prefer something with quality over quantity, as some of these cheap places don't treat the food with much integrity.
My introduction to Indian food was via buffet, as I was afraid to explore it previously. I was able to find out the items I did and didn't like, so that when I went out with friends for Indian food, I had a better idea of what the food was. Many ethnic restaurants will have a Lunch Buffet, which will let you do just this. One of my top picks for Ethnic Buffet close to home (Los Angeles) is here: http://wahibmiddleeast.com |
Nice Indian buffet in Silicon Valley: http://www.passagetoindia.net/restaurant/?q=node/32
This place is always packed with South Asians, food is great. A little on the spicy side, so be aware.... |
Isn't there a new, massive buffet opening up in Las Vegas by the end of this year? I've never been to a Vegas one, but do any of them ever offer Middle Eastern fare? That would be a draw.
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Originally Posted by Tad's Broiled Steaks
(Post 19242453)
Isn't there a new, massive buffet opening up in Las Vegas by the end of this year? I've never been to a Vegas one, but do any of them ever offer Middle Eastern fare? That would be a draw.
Planet Hollywood's buffet has a nice Middle Eastern station. |
I think it also has to do with price ,
$7-$10 buffets are just a little more than you pay for lunch at a fast food place , so I expect a few good things but not the world, but if I am paying $20-$25 I do expect the world , a good selection , good quality and soft drinks included , If you are on vacation then you might splurge at a few of the $25-$35 places which better have Prime Rib , Lobster or Crab and a few other special things . I try and eat a lot , but not so I need a wheelbarrow to get me out of there :D Soarer |
Originally Posted by soarer
(Post 19245668)
I think it also has to do with price ,
$7-$10 buffets are just a little more than you pay for lunch at a fast food place , so I expect a few good things but not the world, but if I am paying $20-$25 I do expect the world , a good selection , good quality and soft drinks included , If you are on vacation then you might splurge at a few of the $25-$35 places which better have Prime Rib , Lobster or Crab and a few other special things . I try and eat a lot , but not so I need a wheelbarrow to get me out of there :D Soarer |
Originally Posted by Tad's Broiled Steaks
(Post 19246364)
Oh, $20-25 seems like a steal for a buffet, if that's what "good" Vegas ones average out to. I used to go to one near Koreatown in Manhattan, called Todai, which became Minado, which is now IchiUmi. Any regulars to all three of those places care to comment on how different each is? I've only eaten at the first two (and when it was in Jordan, in Hong Kong, Todai). Those seemed to be a good deal at about US$20 for lunch.
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There's a Mexican buffet opening near us. It's replacing a Chinese buffet that closed a few months ago. I'm interested to try it once, just to see how lousy it is. :)
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When I eat at buffets, it's around lunch time. I try to get there when they start serving around 11am, I know the food will be freshly cooked.
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Originally Posted by kipper
(Post 19249610)
There's a Mexican buffet opening near us. It's replacing a Chinese buffet that closed a few months ago. I'm interested to try it once, just to see how lousy it is. :)
Really, a Mexican buffet? Do any more of those exist where you live? I'd much prefer that over a Chinese one, but if the former starts serving Jell-o too... |
Originally Posted by Tad's Broiled Steaks
(Post 19265322)
Seems it would be an article in The Onion- City zoning laws require buffets; Plans for an Egyptian-themed hotel across the street protested.
Really, a Mexican buffet? Do any more of those exist where you live? I'd much prefer that over a Chinese one, but if the former starts serving Jell-o too... |
Stayed at a hotel where I had Executive Lounge access with buffet last weekend:
- Trip One: Two croissants, yogurt, bowl of corn flakes - Trip Two: Scrambled eggs, two sausages, two strips of bacon, potato wedge, piece of ham All washed down with juice. It helps when you don't have any compulsion to get your "money's worth". |
At Le Meridien in Jakarta (unusual architecture for both Jakarta {well, that part of the city} and a Le Meridien), I'd stock up on eggplant/avocado/olives liberally drowned in olive oil, oh and shrimp, and the next course was whipped cream and blueberry pancakes. Things I yearn for from home; though eggplants and avocados are all over Jakarta (and the former in many regional Indonesian cuisines), it had that grilled Turkish accent which wasn't commonplace. Pancakes, well, maybe at a colonial Dutch restaurant...but then, they wouldn't be the HUGE pannekoek found in Holland either.
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IchiUmi received a C grade rating issued by the New York Health department. It was posted in the front window of the restaurant. I wonder if this will kill their business.
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Originally Posted by lavedder
(Post 19305093)
IchiUmi received a C grade rating issued by the New York Health department. It was posted in the front window of the restaurant. I wonder if this will kill their business.
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Originally Posted by lavedder
(Post 19305093)
IchiUmi received a C grade rating issued by the New York Health department. It was posted in the front window of the restaurant. I wonder if this will kill their business.
http://consumerist.com/2008/10/resta...on-report.html |
Originally Posted by sendbillmoney
(Post 19306657)
Did they do the classic C concealment maneuver with their grade?
http://consumerist.com/2008/10/resta...on-report.html |
Originally Posted by Tad's Broiled Steaks
(Post 19265322)
Really, a Mexican buffet? Do any more of those exist where you live? I'd much prefer that over a Chinese one, but if the former starts serving Jell-o too...
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Originally Posted by N965VJ
(Post 19346805)
I was at an all-you-can eat Mexican place in MSY (forget the name, it was on Veterans Highway in Metarie). You would raise this little flag thingy on your table and the server would come ask you what you wanted more of. Not that great. I think it was a small regional chain.
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I don't enjoy most buffets in the US, even including some expensive ones I've tried in Vegas. OTOH, I thoroughly enjoyed a Sunday Jazz Brunch at Zinc in Prague and always go to the Friday brunch at Mina A'Salam when in Dubai. The Sunday buffet at the Hilton Beverley Circa55 restaurant comes closest for me in the US if you can get a table outside on a beautiful California day.
Apart from the food quality issues, I think the difference is those mentioned are meant to be spread out over at least three to four hours. Your table is your table for the afternoon. You take the papers, or your book, or the family and have a leisurely afternoon. I can eat about six small plates (side plate size) and tend to go for one theme on each plate - rather than a bit of this and a bit of that. At Mina you can wander around "The Wharf" outdoor cooking/grill stations, get freshly cooked dim sum, cocktails mixed, as well as the other dishes laid out inside Al Muna. Its a bit like the difference in UK drinking culture and the rest of Europe, although I acknowledge in advance that's a generalisation. We tend to do vertical drinking (or our young people do:)) wheras there is a more cafe culture in France, etc. US buffets do seem to be more about how much food how quickly for how little rather than an extended social occasion. And I agree about "Chinese buffets" - my home town is over run by them and they are universally disgusting. |
I love them.
I love buffets. That's my problem. If been to one tonight and eat 8500 calories. I Have lost 4 stone 7 this year. Started at 20.7 and now 16.0
luckily for me, tonight was the first buffet I have had all year and come about this site searching how bad a buffet can be. so my answer is have what you want in moderation. 1 big meal 1ce a month. Monday to Friday 1200 cals. If once a year u want a buffet, go nuts. Just not every week. |
I'm quite taken by Turkish and SE Asian buffets-- relatively healthy options at the former, and good varieties at the latter.
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I used to be able to eat a lot more as a kid. Now, not so much. In fact, most of the time I don't really consider buffets worth the cost because of this--especially if I'm only going to eat as much or only a little more than what a regular restaurant would serve.
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I don't eat at buffets for three reasons. First of all, I usually do better cost wise by ordering off the menu. I don't eat enough to make a buffet a cost effective option. Second, I find that many buffets (at least, around here) may have many different dishes, but they all taste suspiciously the same. And last, I have seen too many people use their hands at a buffet to make me decide that I'd rather skip that visual.
(Yes, I know it happens back in the kitchen as well. But I haven't seen it back there!) |
Originally Posted by aquamarinesteph
I don't eat at buffets for three reasons. First of all, I usually do better cost wise by ordering off the menu. I don't eat enough to make a buffet a cost effective option. Second, I find that many buffets (at least, around here) may have many different dishes, but they all taste suspiciously the same. And last, I have seen too many people use their hands at a buffet to make me decide that I'd rather skip that visual.
To answer the OP directly, one plate is always enough. Get me into a really good churrascaria in Rio however and all the rules go out the door, as i will sit and eat meat for 2 hours straight until I am in a coma. |
Originally Posted by KDS777
(Post 29259717)
While buffets as a rule do not really exist up here in Canada, never having socially caught on per say,
Buffets are simply gross. My sister-in-law however loves them and is always suggesting one when the in-laws get together. I have thankfully found a guaranteed way not to overeat when we do. I try and choose a seat where I can watch the buffet line. The behemoths that waddle through loading up plate after plate are more than sufficient to kill anything resembling an appetite. |
The first time I went to Vegas, I gained 6 pounds in 3 days from buffet over-indulgence. I've since learned to moderate a bit, but I still love some of the Vegas buffets (Wynn, Bellagio, Aria & Mirage). I love the fact that you don't have to decide what to eat from a written description and risk being disappointed when someone else at your table orders something better. I always try a bit (i.e. a spoonful) or anything that looks good and then go back for more of the things I really liked.
I also like the fact that you can mix things up and make your own creations (such as visiting the dessert station to put caramel sauce and pecans on on your breakfast waffle (don't forget to add crispy bacon!). However, not all buffets are created equal and I won't go to a crappy buffet just for the quantity. These can usually be judged by the low price and waist size of the average customers. I also generally avoid anything with special children's prices since that brings with it a whole range of issues that I'd rather not deal with while dining. |
Originally Posted by Badenopch
Huh? There are many buffets in Canada the most prominent being the nation-wide Mandarin restaurant chain. Most hotel breakfasts are buffet style and Indian, Chinese and Thai buffets are quite common.
Talking about the Golden Corral style of buffet, or what's found in LV. It's what made America famous for gastronomy. |
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