5/19/07

IKEA Restaurant - Review


IKEA Restaurant
Atlantic Station
441 16th St.
Atlanta, GA 30363
Open 9:30-8:30 Daily








My mother and I visited IKEA for lunch on 5/19/2007. The IKEA Restaurant also serves breakfast. IKEA is a fascinating store, an import straight from Sweden that offers Swedish furniture and ideas to the U.S. instead of conforming to ours. They don't seem to worry that Swedish things might be too strange for us, instead, they seem sure that we will love everything, and we do... because it is all priced so low. They really do have some great products, and the restaurant is adequate for sustenance and as a food adventure.

IKEA was founded by Ingvar Kamprad in 1943, when Ingvar was 17. His father gave him the gift of starting his own business as a reward for good scholarship. The name IKEA is his initials and the first letters of Elmtaryd and Agunnaryd, the farm and village where he grew up. "IKEA originally sold pens, wallets, picture frames, table runners, watches, jewellery and nylon stockings - whatever Ingvar found a need for that he could fill with a product at a reduced price. When Ingvar Kamprad outgrew his ability to make individual sales calls, he began advertising in local newspapers and operating a makeshift mail order catalog. He distributed his products via the county milk van, which delivered them to the nearby train station."


Back to food - The restaurant is on the second floor and is modern and colorful. I felt like I was in Legoland. Food is served in cafeteria style, similar to La Madeleine. First you select a dessert. I chose Blueberry Cake, my mother chose Daim Cake (like Swedish Snickers Pie). The next case displayed cold sandwiches and salads, some bizarre in appearance like the Shrimp Sandwich.

We decided to have hot entrees. I ordered the Daily Special, Swedish Meatballs and Mac and Cheese; Mom selected the Herb Poached Salmon. We drank bottled water. Our meal came to around $17 for two.


My meal was filling and delicious. Apparently, IKEA has Swedish Meatballs down. They are served with a flavorful gravy and with lingonberry jam! I obligingly dipped my meatballs in the jam and loved it. An interesting combination, but very tasty.

My mother enjoyed her Herb Poached Salmon, which came with new potatoes and vegetables, but I thought the salmon appeared to be a bit overdone. Its texture and flavor were fine, though.

We split the desserts in half so we could taste both. The Blueberry Cake was sweet and really good. There was a light graham-type crust on the bottom, a creamy layer, and a jam layer on top. The Daim Cake was even better with layers of a sweet creamy yellow pudding-like substance and layers of chocolate candy. The top was coated with nuts and chocolate, but the flavor is delicate.


I loved going to the IKEA Restaurant. When you finish, you put your tray on a trolley and the staff removes the trolleys. There are lots of unique touches. Also, you can purchase Swedish cookies and foods at the restaurant. If you want even more selection, there is a whole Swedish foodmarket down on the first floor!

On a scale of 1 to 10 (with 1 being the worst and 10 being the best), how would you rate this restaurant compared to the other restaurants you visit on a regular basis.
This restaurant is best for (Choose all that apply)

• Good food 7 • Quick bite 8 • Family-friendly 10
• Outdoor • Romantic • Special occasion




Ikea Cafe on Urbanspoon

5/12/07

Review of The Colonnade Restaurant

The Colonnade Restaurant
1879 Cheshire Bridge Rd. NE
Atlanta, GA 30324
404-874-5642





Chris R. and his girlfriend, Rachel, ate dinner at the Colonnade on 5/8/2007.

What did you order? How was your food?

Chicken Fried Chicken, Mac and Cheese, Sweet Potato Fries, Rolls, Cornbread (Can’t get enough carbs).

What did your companions order? How was their food?

Veggie Plate: Collard Greens, Baked Potato, Stewed Tomatoes and Okra.

Describe your impressions of the service. Was anything exceptionally good (or bad) about the quality of service you received?

Pretty good…not real friendly to us, but we were the youngest people in there by at least 30 yrs (I’m 24). Fast service though.

What do you think of the décor and atmosphere?

Décor is charming. Quaint little restaurant…seems like it has been there forever.

Do you consider this a good value for the money you spent? If no, why not?

Yeah. We spent about 30 bucks for two, but that included a glass of wine, and we were stuffed by the time we left.

On a scale of 1 to 10 (with 1 being the worst and 10 being the best), how would you rate this restaurant compared to the other restaurants you visit on a regular basis.
This restaurant is best for (Choose all that apply)

• Good food 8.5
• Quick bite • Family-friendly 9

• Outdoor • Romantic • Special occasion

Enjoyed it. Not too many convenient places in Atlanta that serve legitimate Southern food done right. Menu has pretty much every type of Southern entrée you can think of…and most every vegetable. I’ll definitely be back, but be sure to take cash/check or a debit card to withdraw money…no credit cards allowed.

Colonnade on Urbanspoon

5/4/07

Review of Six Feet Under - New 11th Street Location


SIX FEET UNDER – Westside
685 11th Street
Atlanta, GA 30318
404-810-0040

Chris visited Six Feet Under's new location on 11th St. between Howell Mill and Northside Dr. He ate dinner there on 4/18/2007 with three companions.

What did you order? How was your food?


Ordered Fried Calamari as an appetizer. It was good. Then Combo Tacos (catfish, calamari, shrimp) with Homemade Potato Chips.

What did your companions order? How was their food?

Baked Grouper with Parmesan x 2 and Seafood Quesadilla.

Describe your impressions of the service. Was anything exceptionally good (or bad) about the quality of service you received? What do you think of the décor and atmosphere?

Good…light-hearted service. Atmosphere was cool. Old warehouse in industrial area of Midtown West. View is ridiculous! Worth calling ahead and waiting to be on the upstairs deck. You can see Downtown, Midtown and Buckhead from your seat sitting above the tree line.

Do you consider this a good value for the money you spent? If no, why not?

Yes, $10-15 meals with a great view and comparable to many upscale seafood restaurants.

On a scale of 1 to 10 (with 1 being the worst and 10 being the best), how would you rate this restaurant compared to the other restaurants you visit on a regular basis.
This restaurant is best for (Choose all that apply)


• Good food - 9
• Outdoor - 10

I highly recommend it.


Six Feet Under - Westside on Urbanspoon

Review of White House Restaurant


White House Restaurant
3172 Peachtree Rd. NW
Atlanta, GA 30305





Chris R. ate breakfast here on 4/7/2007 with one other guest.


What did you order? How was your food?

Bacon, Eggs, toast, hashbrowns. Decent. Wanted to try them because I heard they are Greek (got to support my Greeks), but really nothing special.

What did your companions order? How was their food?

Omelet - Decent

Describe your impressions of the service. Was anything exceptionally good (or bad) about the quality of service you received? What do you think of the décor and atmosphere?

Typical small diner. Reminds me of the yesteryears. Service was fine, nice lady but she was swamped, so she forgot to refill coffee, get hot sauce, etc.

Do you consider this a good value for the money you spent? If no, why not?

Yeah average value. Around 20 bucks for 2 of us.

White House on Urbanspoon

4/23/07

Atlanta Journal and Constitution Mention

When Foodies was in the Atlanta Journal and Constitution!

(Mentioned in list towards the bottom. A screenshot of our Bacchanalia review accompanied the original article)!










JOHN KESSLER

Reviews and reaction stir the pot
Published on: 03/01/07

Readers of the Feb. 21 Dining In/Dining Out section of The New York Times got an extra something to read a full-page ad in which restaurateur Jeffrey Chodorow took the Times' lead restaurant critic, Frank Bruni, to task in an excoriating 1,100-word letter to the food editor.

The back story, briefly, goes like this:

Chodorow is best known as the financier behind the short-lived Rocco's on 22nd, the opening of which was documented on the NBC reality TV show "The Restaurant." But he also runs a couple dozen big, splashy restaurants from L.A. to London.

His latest baby is Kobe Club, a Midtown Manhattan draw for wealthy beef fetishists who would consider paying $190 for a tasting of wagyu beef raised on three different continents. Bruni gave Kobe Club a majorly harsh zero-star review — he complained of "insipid or insulting dishes" and compared the decor to a "torture chamber" — and Chodorow hit the proverbial roof.

Chodorow's assertion that Bruni lacks the "food background" and thus the credentials to review restaurants is what got everyone talking. But the part I found most fascinating is where Chodorow announces — catch this — a blog (http
www.chinagrillmgt.com/blog in which he promises to follow food critics in their steps.

Chodorow writes that his blog will contain "a special section entitled Following Frank [Bruni] and After Adam [Platt, critic for New York Magazine], in which I will make a follow-up visit to restaurants they write about for the purpose of reviewing their reviews."

Love it.

I've never met a restaurant critic with a hidden agenda or a closet full of axes to grind. But I imagine they exist, and anything that exposes them is good.

Rather, most critics see their reviews as salvos launched into a public debate and strive to be accurate with fact and honest with opinion. No more, no less. If Chodorow really has the time, the energy and the stomach to parse two restaurant reviews a week, his efforts will only deepen the meaning of the review.

Chodorow will also find that his is one of many voices. Nowadays, when general-circulation publications come out with restaurant reviews, blogs and message boards everywhere light up. The review itself becomes a list of talking points around which conventional wisdom collects.

Alternate reviews have also started to proliferate on personal blogs. Some are dashed-off paragraphs; others thoughtful, graded looks at the food, decor and service at a particular restaurant. Many begin with the phrase, "After reading about ..."

In Atlanta, there is no shortage of people who follow restaurants and want to get their opinions heard. Often, these opinions are expressed pointedly in response to reviews written by the city's troika of food opinion: Meridith Ford here at the AJC, Besha Rodell at Creative Loafing and Christiane Lauterbach at Atlanta Magazine.

Here's a sampling:

http://www.atlantacuisine.com/: Far and away the most active local site, this board features reviews, coupons and a lively discussion board where local print reviews are often parsed as a jumping-off point for a thorough, often intelligent, sometimes mean-spirited back-and-forth. Reading the posts reminds me of crashing a cocktail party where everyone knows everybody else, has had a couple of drinks and talks loudly. The site has spawned a fun free paper, published monthly, called Atlanta Cuisine.

www.accessatlanta.com/restaurants/content/restaurants/talk.html: This is AJC's board, where people can post their restaurant experiences.

http://www.atlantafoodies.blogspot.com/: Formatted reviews (i.e., questions with answers) of both upscale and casual restaurants. The writer identifies herself as a native Atlantan and dyed-in-the-wool foodie.

http://www.blissfulglutton.blogspot.com/: Nice diary of the writer's food amblings, with plenty of photos and terse reviews that don't stint on opinion. Lots of appealing ethnic finds. The writer identifies herself as a former chef.

http://www.chowdownatlanta.com/: A new site that promises to offer a good mix of cooking, dining, carryout and deli-case dinner ideas. The writer is a woman who abhors leftovers.

http://www.atlantaeats.blogspot.com/: An opinionated, guy's-guy food blog written by a writer who calls himself "Steakhead," won't eat foie gras and lists "Animal House" among his favorite movies.

http://www.runningwithtweezers.typepad.com/: This is a local cooking rather than restaurant blog, so it doesn't quite fit with the others. But I include it because it's the best written, warmest of spirit and most visually appealing of the bunch. If this writer (a professional stylist) turns to restaurant reviews I, for one, would be tempted to follow her advice.

4/22/07

Mezcalito's Cantina


Mezcalito's Cantina

(404) 687-0007
653 E. Lake Dr.
Decatur, GA 30030
www.mezcalitoscantina.com












Becca and Kristy went to Mezcalito's on Saturday, April 21st, for lunch during the Earth Day Festival.

What did you order? How was your food?

We ordered the same thing - Mojitos and Green Salads with pumpkin seeds, roasted tomatoes and cheese with lime vinaigrette. I added steak, and Kristy added chicken.

Mezcalito's Green Salad is a generous portion with plenty of meat if you request it to be added. The dressing and ingredients are delicious and fresh-tasting.

The mojitos were tasty and strong - just enough mint flavor.

Describe your impressions of the service.

The server was a very pleasant woman who came right over to our outdoor table. Another server engaged us in conversation and made us feel welcome as well.

Also, the owner of the establishment, Vladimir, was friendly and down-to-earth. He spoke to us and other guests, making sure we were enjoying ourselves.

What do you think of the decor and atmosphere?

We ate outside. Our mosaic-topped table had a great view of Oakhurst Square, where there was live music for Earth Day. The interior of the restaurant was beautifully-decorated.

The bathroom was hand-painted with a humorous blessing in Spanish. (I saw the word "borracha" which means drunk anyway). Gorgeous framed pictures and Mexican-style decorations adorned the walls of the establishment.

Was this restaurant a good value?

Yes, but if you can't spend much, watch your specialty beverage consumption (aren't all restaurants like that, though)?

We ended up spending $77 for two, but that was only because we drank and talked for a couple of hours. If we had only had the salads with the pitcher of mojitos, we would have escaped after forking over about $54. (A pitcher of mojitos costs $24). Still, it was worth it! We had a GREAT TIME!

On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate this restaurant compared to the other restaurants you visit on a regular basis?

10 for Mexican restaurants and for salads

This restaurant is best for?

Good food, Quick bite, Family-friendly, Outdoor

Mezcalito's Cantina on Urbanspoon

4/15/07

Review of Six Feet Under

Six Feet Under

Grant Park Location
415 Memorial Drive SE, Ste. E
Atlanta, GA 30312
404-523-6664
http://sixfeetunderatlanta.com





Scott went to Six Feet Under for dinner on April 12th, 2007 with one companion.

What did you order? How was your food?

We shared a Six Feet Under Steamer Platter. The Platter includes steamed oysters, peel 'n' eat shrimp, snow crab legs, New Zealand Green Lipped mussels, steamed clams, andouille sausage, corn on the cob & new potatoes. It serves two to four people. Price is only 31.59. We also ordered a dozen raw oysters and a side of hush puppies.

Describe your impressions of the service.

Great service.

What do you think of the decor and atmosphere?

Old bar feel - warm atmosphere - very casual.

On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate this restaurant compared to the other restaurants you visit on a regular basis?

10

This restaurant is best for?

Good food, Quick bite, Family-friendly, Outdoor (rooftop dining), Romantic, and Special Occasion.



Six Feet Under on Urbanspoon