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52 votes
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McDonald’s is cutting prices of its combo meals to convince customers it’s affordable again
47 votes -
Finland's deep affinity with nature is blossoming in its restaurants, where a new generation of chefs are fusing local wild produce with more exotic flavours
18 votes -
McDonald's is bringing back its discontinued Snack Wrap in the US
19 votes -
Former Indianapolis 500 champion Marcus Ericsson hails from Sweden but calls Indianapolis home. Here are his top local recommendations ahead of the Indy 500.
7 votes -
Thomas Keller asked me to leave the French Laundry. It turned into my most extraordinary night as a critic.
39 votes -
How restaurants lost their personality
14 votes -
Restaurants recommendations near Times Square
I'm going to be in NYC with my daughter next week for a school conference. There are already some planned tourist things: the One World Center observatory, South Street Seaport, the Roosevelt Tram...
I'm going to be in NYC with my daughter next week for a school conference. There are already some planned tourist things: the One World Center observatory, South Street Seaport, the Roosevelt Tram ride, and a Broadway show.
There is a pretty full schedule of scheduled activities. The primary degree of freedom is that almost every meal, breakfast lunch and dinner, is "on your own".
We're staying right in Times Square, so the expectation seems to be that everything you could want for food is within walking distance of the hotel. I plan to find a grocery store and get some fruit and snacks to keep in the hotel so we don't have to go out for every meal if she's exhausted.
Keep in mind also, it will be myself, my 4th grader, and whatever of her 4-6th grade friends we pick up, so we're not looking for bars or haute cuisine. If there's something "special" or uniquely new york, I can probably sell it as a new experience, but it needs to be in their overton window.
She's a pretty good eater but prefers familiar food. She's a fan of American staples like pizza, dogs, and burgers. She does well with Italian and Mexican, but rarely likes Thai, Indian, or Chinese.
Her best friend is vegetarian, so at least some vegetarian- friendly options would be good.We won't have a ton of time for other touristy stuff, but I'm open to recommendations for something simple and short we could do in the evenings. In this thread people mentioned riding the ferry, so if that's a thing we can easily do from there, maybe grabbing some street hot dogs and sitting on the ferry would be a good option?
So, Tilderistas what Times Square recommendations (or anti recommendations) do you have?
16 votes -
How I analyzed 1,378 restaurants using Places API to find hotspots in my city
14 votes -
The United States of pizza, mapsplained
17 votes -
Restaurants close across China
25 votes -
The Frisch’s private equity deal
10 votes -
Is this the best kebab in the world? (Flying to Istanbul for a Döner)
13 votes -
A review of the Lego Mini Chef restaurant in Denmark – in which a meal prepared by tiny plastic people sparks a revelation about hospitality
12 votes -
Meatball lovers, rejoice – IKEA has announced the opening of its first restaurant on the UK high street
15 votes -
E. coli outbreak linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounders
45 votes -
No, raising the minimum wage does not hurt US fast-food workers
29 votes -
US Copyright Office exemption makes McDonald’s ice cream machines repairable
50 votes -
How chain restaurants use smells to entice us
16 votes -
Chick-Fil-A hatches plans for streaming service as reality TV comes home to roost
17 votes -
Disney seeking dismissal of Raglan Road death lawsuit because victim was Disney+ subscriber
111 votes -
California’s restaurant industry can keep its controversial service fees
34 votes -
Customers didn’t stop spending. Companies stopped serving.
61 votes -
Seal, whale, reindeer – and plankton? When your restaurant is high in the Arctic Circle you have to get pretty creative with your fine dining.
12 votes -
'Boneless' chicken wings can have bones, Ohio court rules
33 votes -
Keith eats everything at Buffalo Wild Wings
9 votes -
‘I wouldn't come here, to be honest,’ says the disdainful star of Visit Oslo's latest advert, which has become a viral hit online
34 votes -
Automated wok cooking machines prepare traditional Chinese dishes at reasonable prices at new LA restaurant Tigawok
12 votes -
Red Lobster | Bankrupt
21 votes -
Fast-food owners, squeezed customers test limit of value meal economy
32 votes -
Nearly 80% of Americans say fast food is now a luxury because it’s become so expensive
43 votes -
Michelin-starred chef Rasmus Munk has teamed up with Florida-based startup Space Perspective to launch six diners at a time up to the outer atmospheric layer
7 votes -
The economics of $15 salads
11 votes -
California junk fee ban could upend restaurant industry
39 votes -
Keith eats everything at a Michelin dim sum restaurant
12 votes -
Restaurant advice Astoria, Queens, NYC
My wife and I will be traveling to NY in early April. I already have our "nice" dinners planned at Osteria 57 in Greenwich Village and Peak NYC at Hudson Yards. If, for some reason, I should...
My wife and I will be traveling to NY in early April. I already have our "nice" dinners planned at Osteria 57 in Greenwich Village and Peak NYC at Hudson Yards. If, for some reason, I should absolutely avoid these two places...please let me know.
We need to loosely plan dinner for the other two nights. These two nights shouldn't be as expensive as the two nights above :). Both of these nights we'd like to eat closer to Astoria, where we will be staying (roughly 28th and 38th). We'll be close to Richmond Hill one of these days, so would be open to eating down there as well before returning back to Astoria.
Could you suggest a great pizza place where we could sit down and have salad and pizza?
how about a traditional Indian restaurant? Not a fusion and not some place where someone tries to do something fancy. A place I can get Chicken Tikka Masala and my wife can find Chana Masala.
Some other place that isn't Indian or pizza, but is an absolute must in Astoria?
Thank you New Yorkers!
12 votes -
Cal-Mex is having a moment in New York. But how does it taste?
8 votes -
Kenji's Vietnamese garlic noodles... with twenty cloves of garlic
41 votes -
Why a tire company gives out food’s most famous award
15 votes -
The US pepper that was nearly lost
24 votes -
Service jobs now require bizarre personality test from AI company - 404 Media investigation of Reddit post trend
43 votes -
Served: Opening a restaurant inside a prison
5 votes -
Can a chef turn KFC into a completely different dish?
16 votes -
In-N-Out to close first location in its 75-year history due to a wave of car break-ins and robberies
29 votes -
A cheap week in LA/SB
I work remotely for a US tech start-up, and my work is flying me out for our company kickoff in Santa Barbara at the end of February. Because I want to spend as little time in Berlin February...
I work remotely for a US tech start-up, and my work is flying me out for our company kickoff in Santa Barbara at the end of February. Because I want to spend as little time in Berlin February weather as possible and I want to meet up with some local(-ish) relatives, I'm flying in a week earlier than necessary. As a result, however, I'm going to have some free time to fill.
The biggest thing is that I'm going to have to find and pay for my own lodging while I'm there until the work event starts and I can check into the hotel my company booked. So if anyone has any personal experience with some cheap-but-not-sketchy lodging options in LA or Santa Barbara, I especially welcome that. I'm flying into LAX so I'm able to stay there before going down to Santa Barbara for the actual work event if it's cheaper or there's more to do there (which I kinda assume is the case on both counts, idk).
I've heard LA is generally pretty expensive. I'm not a huge party animal by any means, but I figure I should do more when I'm there than sitting in my hotel reading (especially if I want to kick the jetlag before all the work stuff starts). So I'd also love any recommendations for cheap but interesting stuff to do while I'm there. My cursory Google searches have turned up a bunch of Hollywood tourist type stuff and recommendations for outdoorsy activities like hiking, neither of which is my speed. But surely there's gotta be some interesting stuff for a nerdy introvert to check out!
I'm also a very food-motivated traveler, so any particular restaurant recommendations for while I'm there are very welcome -- especially stuff that's hard for me to find in Germany. Latin American food is especially high on my list ofc, and I'm also on the lookout for good wing places, since I know both of those things are very hard to find at home in Berlin. But I also welcome other recommendations, especially stuff that isn't gonna come up in a quick google search. Or authentic Chinese food (even though I'm not going to SF, I learned how to say 洛杉矶 in Chinese class back in the day so LA's gotta have at least somthing 😅). I'm also a coffee person, so I'd love to know about any particular standout local coffee shops (even though I'm sure there's way more than I could try in even a month in a city the size of LA).
11 votes -
Pizza Hut is lying: They’re not firing their drivers because of a minimum wage hike
61 votes -
Oslo (Norway) restaurant/café recs?
Hey all! My wife and I are waiting to board our flight to Norway to spend Christmas with her family in Sarpsborg. However, we'll be spending about 10 days there and spending out nights in a hotel...
Hey all!
My wife and I are waiting to board our flight to Norway to spend Christmas with her family in Sarpsborg. However, we'll be spending about 10 days there and spending out nights in a hotel in Oslo, so we'll def have time to ourselves without family obligations. If anyone (local or not) has recommendations for favorite restaurants or cafés, please share them here! Especially stuff on the cozy and cheap(er) end.
7 votes -
Ruby Tuesday | Bankrupt
6 votes -
From Vækst to Gro Spiseri, these six outstanding Danish restaurants offer a Nordic dining experience that stands out from the crowd in Copenhagen
6 votes -
Can a chef turn a Subway sandwich into a completely different dish?
11 votes