Dining tips for Manhattan

JonSanders, a loyal MR reader, asks:

I read “Discover Your Inner Economist” (as well as “Create Your Own Economy”) and I want a little more help with the Manhattan dining tips you covered. Care to help someone on a serious budget, like say, an undergrad at NYU? Staying off the main avenues is useful, but it is still hard to find dirt cheap authentic food from most cultures. More advice?

I was in New York yesterday and I despaired. Short of dropping $50-$70 or more for lunch, it’s hard to get a good meal in most of Manhattan. Greenwich Village went mainstream long ago and the overall problems in Manhattan are high rents, rising tourism, and the importation of growing numbers of people from U.S. regions with lesser food taste (can you guess where?). That’s a triple whammy. I recommend the following:

1. Eat on the far west or far east side, like 9th Ave. or The Bowery. The East Village hasn’t been ruined. The West Village still has some quirky places near The Village Vanguard, usually further west off the main paths. There are good places near Hudson St., the neighborhood Jane Jacobs wrote about.

2. Eat on the way to or from LaGuardia in Flushing, Queens, in superb Chinatown. If you try the Chinatown in Manhattan, go for breakfast — not dinner — for the best chance at quality.

3. Look for obscure ethnic places in the mid 30s, on the streets, not the avenues.

4. The best food reviews are in New York magazine, by far.

5. Two of my reliable stand-bys are Ess-a-Bagel and Shun Lee Palace, both in East/Midtown. They’re both pretty tired in terms of concept but the quality still is excellent. I enjoy them every time I go. Shun Lee Palace would not count as dirt cheap, however.

6. Get to Brooklyn or Queens. Or (gasp) New Jersey.

What advice can you give this poor fellow?

Originally posted on Marginal Revolution

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Posted in New York | 2 Comments

Plaka Grill

Plaka Grill, web site, 110 Lawyers Road, Vienna, VA, 703-319-3131, Sunday they close at 8 pm (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [WaPo | Yelp | Gayot]
Loyal TCEDG readers will know that I am skeptical of Greek food in this country but I find this place to be pretty good, downright tasty in fact. The Plaka Gyro, stuffed with French fries was delicious. It’s a bit of a cross between a snacks place and a lunch place and a dinner place but still it fills a gaping hole in NoVa dining and it is worthy of further scrutiny.

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Rawal Kabob House

Rawal Kabob House (Mogul Kabob used to be here), 3531 S. Jefferson Street, Falls Church, VA 703-738-6816, right on the edge of West Alexandria in a deep, forbidding strip mall way back down Jefferson from Edy’s Chicken & Steak and across the street from the Giant. (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Yelp]
I ate here once and thought the Pakistani fried fish was above average. The spicy green sauce was above average. Everything I saw on other people’s plates looked good. At the moment I’m not tempted to put it up with my one or two favorite Pakistani places, but it’s above average and I look forward to trying more dishes there. Fun atmosphere, TV news, Pakistani clientele, cheap prices. Worth a try.

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Edmonton bleg

I’ll have a free day there Saturday. What should I do, where should I go, and what/where should I eat? As always I thank you in advance for the suggestions; they do guide my decision-making.
It is one of my goals to visit the fifteen or so of the largest metropolitan areas in Canada, plus (maybe) Regina and Saskatoon.
Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments and suggestions.
Also see “Edmonton notes” on Marginal Revolution.

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Saigon Cafe

Saigon Café, web site, 6286-B Arlington Blvd., Falls Church, VA, 703-237-1899; this place is best accessed by Wilson Blvd, it is directly across the street from Eden Center. (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Washingtonian | Insider Pages | Yelp]
They specialize in Central Vietnamese cuisine and so it is quite different from the other Vietnamese places around, although they still serve many of the staples. The rice cakes are the specialty, especially the larger platter with different kinds of shrimp rice cake on it. Delicious and quite novel. Make sure you dip them in the accompanying sauces. The shrimp on sugar cane is very good too. I believe this place has other excellent dishes which I haven’t discovered yet. Recommended, but make sure you take advantage of their novelties.

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Masala Wok

Masala Wok, web site, Fairfax Marketplace, 10940 Fairfax Blvd., Suite J, Fairfax, VA, 571-432-1814. There is also a branch at Herndon Parkway Crossing, 905 Herndon Parkway, Suite A, Herndon, VA, 703-657-0216 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [WaPo | zabihah | Yelp]
Whenever an Indian restaurant has the word “wok” in its title you can expect something from the northwest and some spicy, ginger-laden dishes. This place runs against the current buffet trend to offer you quick-serve Indian dishes which you order at the counter. I’m surprised how good this place has turned out to be. The spicy dishes are truly spicy.
Most of all the dishes have real flavor and real taste. I recommend the Coconut Curry, spicy, but everything I’ve had here has been good. Think of it as the Chipotle of Indian food. The prices are also very reasonable. Recommended.

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Posted in Fairfax, Herndon/Reston/Ashburn/Chantilly / Dulles Airport, Indian, Virginia | 1 Comment

Bleg for Lille, France

In a week’s time or so I will have one day — one free day — in Lille, France. What do you recommend?
Originally posted on Marginal Revolution – click to see comments and suggestions.

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Bollywood Bistro

Bollywood Bistro, web site, 3955 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, VA, near University Avenue, 703-273-0031 (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [Yelp]
There are so many mainstream Indian restaurants these days that clear standards are needed. I will suggest one: can the place serve up vegetable dishes that actually taste like something? For this restaurant the answer is, surprisingly, yes. That said, it’s a mixed bag. Nothing is spicy enough. I had a lamb vindaloo there that was positively bad. Still, overall this is better than many mainstream Indian places but it’s still not nearly as good as my favorites, such as Angeethi in Herndon.

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Yaku

Yaku, web site, 1900 Clarendon Blvd., Arlington, VA, 703-248-0844, Court House Metro (Metro Trip Planner – opens in new window) [WaPo | City Paper | MenuPages | Don Rockwell | Yelp]
This is a nouvelle fusion chifa Peruvian place, with pretensions of a nice interior. The aji de gallina is OK and some of the ceviche-related appetizers are OK but overall the place did not impress me. It’s not good enough to be a really good place and also has no mom n’ pop value. The short ribs were terrible and in general the more Chinese dishes were uninspired. There are worse fates than eating here, but most of all it convinced me that I should cook more often.

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“Which Sources Do Readers Trust for Restaurant Commentary? The Ts Have It.”

OK, if Zagat’s time is over, as Y&H argues in tomorrow’s cover story, where do you turn for reliable commentary and ratings on restaurants? Yelp? Chowhound? Urban Spoon? DonRockwell? Or some other outlet?
I don’t think we’ve reached any sort of consensus yet, but the early response to my question this week is leaning hard on the standard media over the online newbies. That’s right, the Toms, Todds, and Tims have it (even Tyler, who’s online but hardly new media).

Rest of article
On TCEDG, you don’t have to choose – in each post we link to other published reviews and rankings when we can find them.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment