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Originally Posted by cyberdad
Been a while since I've had a good meal at one of these. A visit to the one in Santa Clara this spring was pretty dismal....right down to the torn and frayed upholstery on the booths! I recall them as being pretty decent in the 70s and 80s, however.
Another chain I don't think has been mentioned as generally being good is J.Alexander's Steak Houses. I think there are about a dozen or two around the Midwest and South. Mrs. Cyberdad and I have yet to be disappointed. Also on the subject of steakhouses....I'd agree with Texas Roadhouse belonging on the list of good places. DSM, indeed has a good one...as does MEM and JAN. I'd also include their similar competitor, Logan's, as a good chain. I have no complaints with the food at Logan's, but the atmosphere gives me heartburn: too bright, too noisy, too many servers running willy-nilly, too focused on table turnover, I hate them having a server go table to table selling gift cards all December-long. |
There is something specifically wrong about each chain restaurant. By definition, they're run by people who are more concerned about things like food cost and adhering to whatever their regional manager says than they are in your overall experience. I've never been impressed by franchise restaurant I've been in (high end steak houses included). Personally, I would rank Burger King/Wendy's above the chains everyone has talked about here. At least they help me when I'm hungover. :p
If more of the business travel set actively sought out independent restaurants, then we wouldn't be faced with the generic mass manufactured crap that chains sell. |
Houlihan's! Yes, we're 2 San Francisco foodie snobs and were a bit peeved that Houlihan's was the only restaurant in the Buffalo Marriott. We were there to see family and decided to bite the bullet, since it would be too difficult to coordinate anything else. Very, very pleasantly surprised w/the quality of all of the food, especially the grilled Ahi salad and other seafood choices (yes, in Buffalo!!!) You learn something new every day... :)
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Miller's Ale House in Florida ^
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Originally Posted by thegeneral
There is something specifically wrong about each chain restaurant. By definition, they're run by people who are more concerned about things like food cost and adhering to whatever their regional manager says than they are in your overall experience. I've never been impressed by franchise restaurant I've been in (high end steak houses included). Personally, I would rank Burger King/Wendy's above the chains everyone has talked about here. At least they help me when I'm hungover. :p
If more of the business travel set actively sought out independent restaurants, then we wouldn't be faced with the generic mass manufactured crap that chains sell. This business traveler does NOT eat at chain restaurants. Unless I'm hung over in a place like Japan and faced with raw squid or a cheeseburger for breakfast. :D |
Of all the chains I know about, the only one I actually seek out in any city is P. F. Changs. In the case of Asian food, I prefer knowing what I'm going to get without surprise.
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Originally Posted by fredmartens
Steak: I'll take the Keg (Baseball Sirloin). Not into overpriced steak joynts.
Quickie chains: Portillo's Hot Dogs, (man is that chocolate cake good there) or a DoubleDouble at In-N-Out. Gyros: The Smokehouse in Wheaton, IL. The gyro plate is about a pound... yikes...(well, not really a chain, they have 2 of 'em). Honorable mention: McCormick & Schmicks. I love the beef-n-cheddar croissant at Portillo's too...and another Chicago-area joint called Brooster's Chicken...my god, I can't get enough of their chicken. When visiting my parents who now live in Canada, Earl's and Montana's are the two places we usually go out for a nicer meal. Unlike most people, I just don't have much of a problem with Chili's and TGI Friday's. I rather like Friday's, to be honest. |
P.F. Chang's and In 'N Out are reliably good, but I've eaten a couple times at Applebee's and never liked the food there.
Originally Posted by xanthuos
I rather like Friday's, to be honest.
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I think P.F. Changs is delicious. Their lemon scallops is one of my very favorite things, snobby or not. They don't have one here in San Francisco, but they are in the suburbs all around us, so we make the odd pilgrimage just to go there on ocassion. And being from Dallas we know our chain restaurants. The entire Papas line is good, from burger to seafood to barbeque.
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Great American Restaurants, group of about 6 in Northern Virginia. Best crabcakes at a chain restaurant, all food/service is great, prices very reasonable.
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Noodles, Inc.!
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North Carolina restaurant chains
Here in NC, the 4-restaurant (chain?) Lucky32 in Greensboro, Cary, Raleigh and Winston-Salem is excellent. http://www.lucky32.com/
and the five Rocky Top Hospitality Restaurants (I've enjoyed Michael Deans) http://www.rockytophospitality.com/facilities.asp are a nice change of pace from the Ruth Chris, Angus Barn or 42nd St. Oyster Bar that business travelers frequent in the triangle area. My favorite local chain were the restaurants run by Giorgios Bakatsias, til he got busted for tax problems. When he is not womanizing, he is one fantastic cook. His George's Garage http://www.ghgrestaurants.com/garage/garage.html and Cafe Parizade http://www.ghgrestaurants.com/pariza...estaurant.html in Durham are the remaining restaurants and are both outstanding. -outoftown |
a few more places
cheap filling food:
in and out del taco (esp. the one in barstow, ca) sit down ordering: p.f. changs (decent and less chance of bichi bichi) cpk (consistent and great with a good local/season beer) |
Originally Posted by rrz518
(Post 3449116)
I can't believe no one has thought of China Grill. NYC, Miami, Las vegas
PF Changs is an OK runner up, but CG is stunning. Crappy Service and WAY too much $$ for the quality: Mid 30's waitress calling my wife (mid 40's) "baby" as in "Oh I'm sorry baby, I'll bring the drink you asked for", didn't listen well to our questions about the menu, brought out wrong entrees, poor & incorrect pacing of items ordered. Acoustics in the restaurant stink, not easy to hear your partner. Lamb Ribs - could have been a stellar item but they put the plum sauce on way too early so it burnt rather than caramelized. Lobster pancakes - very good item. Drunken Chicken - so f'in dry, not good at all. Duck Fried Rice - decent fried rice with good amounts of duck in it. For the above & 3 drinks, I can think of MUCH better places to spend $150. Won't be back. |
Originally Posted by stimpy
(Post 3451283)
The Cheesecake is OK. I've eaten at the one in Beverly Hills several times. But as the reviewer you quoted says, it's mid-market. The service to me is a step below what you should get with the prices you pay. And with the huge menu that they have, some dishes are good and others so-so.
And what does he mean about mid-market chains in France? There aren't any. The only thing close might be Hippo but I rate them lower than a TGIF. |
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