Dove
Who wouldn't want to be me?
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
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15 years ago I used to work out of Guilford and go to the madison zhangs a lot. It was quite good. Now I live closer to the one in Saybrook and went there a couple times and it was more than terrible. Ended up at the madison one again and while it didnt reach the depths of saybrooks hell, it was nowhere near the level it was years ago. Sad. QUOTE]
Agree. There really aren't great choices in this area for Chinese. I'll have to try Ayuthai.
I'm surprised you poor souls in CT haven't lobbied for one of these yet...
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I'm surprised you poor souls in CT haven't lobbied for one of these yet...
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that's a primanti bros
And yes , fax me one please.
Maybe the most overrated sandwich there is.
Yep. Which is exactly why I posted it.
Designed in the 1940s for truckers to be able to eat one-handed while driving. The bread is insipid, the standard commercial fries get soggy inside the sandwich, and the vinegary cole slaw taste permeates everything else.
Although I can attest to validity that adding a fried egg on top improves this hot mess.
Genos is horribleLet me revise my statement. Maybe the most overrated sandwich behind the Genos cheesesteak.
Primantis entire hook is summed up by this one statement, "but it has French fries...ON the sandwich!" Big deal. It's a starchy nuisance.
So you're saying that after 4 small undistinguished wings from Off the Hook ($7, nice folks, working out newly opened kinks) and 6 smaller less distinguished wings from Harold's (near SCSU, $5.50 tax included, nice folks) I might not be done with this dangerous experiment but I've got 2 weeks to get ready? I don't know if I've even been to Taco Bell, certainly not in this millennium, definitely not more than once or twice if so.
Why would anyone step foot in Geno's when there are so many other great options?
Yep. Which is exactly why I posted it.
Designed in the 1940s for truckers to be able to eat one-handed while driving. The bread is insipid, the standard commercial fries get soggy inside the sandwich, and the vinegary cole slaw taste permeates everything else.
Although I can attest to validity that adding a fried egg on top improves this hot mess.
I spent a lot of time in Philly over a few years and tried as many spots as I could. Jim's was my favorite. Of course, that doesn't count the roast pork sandwich.
Hot sauce is the key
Ugh, I went to Tikkaway once and explicitly told the guy I couldn't eat anything with almonds or nuts, and had an allergic reaction anyway.I love Tikkaway thats a really good call. Halal guys is decent not as good as the original city Truck but pretty good.
If falafel is one of your options why not Mamouns? Its not the greatest Falafel but it is the greatest hot sauce. You cant go wrong with the shawarma there either
If you have to cover something with hot sauce to make it palatable, you know it's bad food.
Besides, the classic Primantis is hot capicola. You just don't put hot sauce on cappy. You just don't.
Love Mamoun's and have for decades but Mediterranea falafel is better imo (and their fool muddammas is my go-to; great, great dish) and much closer to me.
I will try Aladdin falafel again. It's been years and it was always late at night and messy, but good. Have you had the falafel from Mediterranea? Pitaziki is okay but not great imo.
FTFY
TL;DR read cliff notes version
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No idea what to tell you except sorry you had a bad experience in a place you visited based on my recommendation. I've eaten there probably between 50 and 100 times, but 95% of the time I get the fool muddammas, not the falafel, because I love the fool muddammas. I like falafel but I don't eat it nearly as frequently. I've had it at Mediterranea maybe ten times tops and never had a bad one, but they have varied depending on the maker. But several others I know who get falafel frequently really like theirs. On that note, all my visits there except one (the one about which you read) have been for lunch. I've never been in there when the night hookah business is the primary feature.Unlike much else on The Boneyard, no personal criticisms are intended here.
Last night, after an art opening at Institute Library, Lady Hans & I walked over to Beer Collective for a very favorable recon, though we only engaged in conversation with other New Haven Bike Month people and tried a good couple of fries. My idea was to pick up a falafel wrap from Mediterannea because she was parked across the street and I'd followed this thread.
Though we were in good humor about it, the wait was notably long because there was only one guy working the entire place. I could see him meticulously laying out the ingredients on plates for the orders that preceded ours, and he acted with care. We took in the hookah smells, considered the circumstance a quirky part of out date night, and it was relaxingly divey in a good way.
The falafel wrap was prepared (to go) with no sauce whatsoever (none was asked or offered) and was dry and undistinguished in every way imaginable, including a paucity of falafel and tomato. It was more lettuce than anything else. It was really surprising how little there was to it, like something I'd get at an all white suburban place where someone might reasonably question me, "Well, what did you expect? You don't get a falafel there."
I've had many good falafels from carts in NYC, throughout Queens, Persian places in Great Neck, and have enjoyed Mamoun's and the Middle Eastern place in West Haven near UNH.
Based on this experience, without the recommendations from usually good sources, I would never return here. It was that plain. Not bad, just "no there there." Did I just get a dud last night? Should I give it another try?
A couple slices of pizza left at home by the fam. Adequate, enjoyable.
CO-SIGN.You said you didn't want pizza.
But then you discovered one of the great truths of the culinary universe as we know it"
Time.
Appetite.
There is always enough of each for pizza.
And for bacon.