October, 2009


30
Oct 09

Burger Bar San Francisco

by Kirk K

As of Friday, October 16th, 2009, the Burger Bar in the Macy’s department store (6th floor) at Union Square, San Francisco is open for business. The restaurant is owned by the famous chef Hubert Keller from Fleur De Lys and it is the third Burger Bar location to open up.  The other two being in Las Vegas and St. Louis, MO.  Unlike the Cheesecake factory, the elevator up to the restaurant stops on every single far.  I’d avoid it during peak hours and take the escalators.

I had the pleasure of visiting and dining at the Burger Bar on opening day.  Of course, being opening day, business was booming, with a one and half hour wait to get seated.  Fortunately, since it is inside Macy’s, my party did a little shopping before hand.

The restaurant has a bar area but I didn’t bother to order a drink from there with the amount of people waiting.  Seating seems a little limited, but if you could request a seat, try to get a booth with the tvs so you can watch a game.  The place was decorated like a burger / bar joint but I couldn’t get away from the white walls, it just didn’t match.

Onto the service, the hostesses were nice and talkative as they escort you to the table.  Our waitress was polite and friendly, and it seemed like they all were well trained to do business at a Hubert Keller restaurant.  Our waitress forgot to bring us water and we had to remind her, but that was my only complaint there.  I don’t know if it was just opening day, but they had a ton of staff, I saw more waiters and busboys than required, sometimes I saw them waiting doing nothing.  The wait for our food seemed like eternity but I’ll cut them some slack for the first day.

Now the food.  My table of 3, ordered a Kobe burger (~$17), Hubert Keller Burger, Sliders, side of sweet potato fries and 3 types of milkshakes.   Most of the burgers are custom made, they come only with lettuce, tomatoes and onions.  You have to order all the extra sides you want like, cheese, grilled onions, mushrooms, half lobster tail, etc..  They have some pre-set burger meals like the Hubert Keller Burger which is a Buffalo Burger, caramelized onions, baby spinach and blue cheese on Ciabatta with a side of fries.  Fries are a la carte otherwise, for a normal burger order, with your choice of skinny, fat, sweet potato fries, buttermilk zucchini fries ranging in the $3-$4 range. The portion of fries are pretty tiny for the price.  The kobe burger was alright, I ordered medium rare, and it came out brown, but the Hubert Keller burger was ordered medium rare as well, and came out pink.  I was wondering if we had the same chef grilling?

And finally the taste…  The burgers were alright, nothing fancy, nothing great, not worth the $16.  A regular Angus burger starts at $10 which may have been worth it, but the Kobe no.  The milkshakes were fantastic, but not that you can screw them up too badly.  Next time, if there is a next time, I may be forced to try the $60 foe grais burger, or a surf and turf, meat and lobster just cause a normal burger here didn’t appease my burger appetite.

We ended up paying $100 for 3 people, 3 burgers, 3 milkshakes, side of fries.  That would be the most expensive burger meal I’ve had!  It maybe a long time before I go back.

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29
Oct 09

Free Wi-Fi Cafes in New York City

by Pinda Lark

As a freelance designer, I am always searching for a good wi-fi cafe. All I would like is: a quiet cafe with good coffee, free wi-fi, enough outlets, good table space, open late hours, and a restroom that doesn’t smell like urine. But I think I may be asking for too much.

Anyways, here are some options:

Housing Works Book Store Cafe: I love this place, even if it smells like an attic and it feels like I’m in a bat cave. You’ll feel good knowing that 100% of their profits go to Housing Works, Inc. and its totally run by volunteers. That’s why you can’t get mad at the barista when they’re really slow and when your coffee is cold. But there’s a limited number of outlets and the tables are small and often they’re all taken.

Aroma Espresso Bar: There’s 2 locations, one in the Upper West Side and one in SoHo. The last time I was at the SoHo location, they shut my wi-fi off after 30 minutes. And you could only get a password after you purchased something. The food here is actually ok, the sandwiches are made with super thick bread and the soups are pretty good. The coffee is decent and you always get a piece of chocolate with it, which I always like. However, I don’t know if the prices are worth the food and service is never that good.

THINK Coffee: If I was a hipster NYU student, I’d love this place. I’d also love this place if I could get a table. They have great grilled cheese sandwiches with generous portions of buttery bread and good coffee. THINK also carries vegan cupcakes from Babycakes, my favorite Vegan bakery in the Lower East Side. On Friday and Saturday nights they play live music (really loud too), so don’t plan on getting much work done here on weekends. But maybe I’m the only workaholic working on a Saturday night…

Gramstand: I haven’t been to this place in awhile but when I went a year ago it was really cute. The cafe is located on Ave A and 13th street and they have a great selection of teas. Again, like all cute cafes, its small and hard to get a table. Double points if you can score a couch.

Subtle Tea: Another great tea place is this cafe in Murray Hill. The seating however is only one large table but service is always really friendly here.

Cosi Sandwich Works: Their salads are never fresh and are overpriced. The sandwiches are ok because their bread is so darn good. When its not too crowded, I’ve spent some really good afternoons at Cosi. I’m pretty content with their bread samples, free fountain drink refills, and being able to sit in a booth.

and lastly, I default to, do I dare say it, Starbucks. They offer “free” wi-fi if you sign up for their rewards cards. Sometimes the convenience of one being on every street corner overrides how bad their coffee is. My favorite Starbucks is the one on 88th and Broadway, but it turns out thats everyone else’s favorite Starbucks as well. It’s probably the plush couches and the upstairs section that lures everyone. Also, has anyone ever noticed the strange Harry Potter mini doors at this place? If only they led to a place with better coffee…

So that is my round-up for now. I know there are many other wi-fi places I have probably forgotten to mention and will be adding to this list soon…

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28
Oct 09

Harlem’s Finest Chicken & Waffles: Amy Ruth’s

by Pinda Lark

If you want chicken and waffles, you have to go to Harlem, and you have to go to Amy Ruth’s. Amy Ruth’s Restaurant is located right off the 116th stop from the 2/3 train on 116th and Lenox/Malcom X Avenue.

Amy Ruth’s Restaurant is open 24 hours on the weekends and closes around 11pm on the weekdays. But if you come at 10:30pm on a Monday (they close at 11pm) you might get some rude service. When I’ve come and dined for brunch I’ve always had pretty good service so lets just hope last night was just an off night, with one off lady. (I would recommend coming for brunch just for their amazing biscuits alone).

For our late night eats, we ordered The Rev. Al Sharpton Chicken & Waffles, The Larry Dais Waffles with Boneless Rib-Eye Steak, Cheesy Grits, The Inez Bass Red Velvet Cake, and Sweet Tea. (Yes, these are their real names).

You have the option of getting fried or smothered chicken with The Rev. I’ve had both, and recommend the smothered. The Rev. was by far my favorite part of our feast and probably the best smothered chicken I’ve had in a long time. A close second was the dessert, Red Velvet Cake, a little darker in color with really good frosting.

Since they were out of Mac n Cheese, we ordered the Cheesy Grits. It was my first time having Cheesy Grits, and it was just cheddar on grainy oatmeal so I wasn’t that impressed. The Sweet Tea was way too sweet and had to be diluted with lemonade. And I don’t recommend the Larry Dais Waffles, the Rib-Eye Steak looked suspiciously like it was grilled in a waffle maker. (It had the waffle maker grill marks and everything).

So if you’re craving Chicken & Waffles, stick with the Chicken & Waffles. Get it smothered, try a slice of their red velvet, and don’t come 30 minutes before closing. And do read the cute story about Amy Ruth on the menu, she’s like the Southern grandma you never had and she loves Jesus.

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