Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will add that if you want to go to some great reasonably priced Michelin star restaurants, go to Spain.
I am headed to Spain in a few weeks — can you recommend any specific restaurants?
Anonymous wrote:I will add that if you want to go to some great reasonably priced Michelin star restaurants, go to Spain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not saying you can’t have a bad experience at a two-star restaurant, but honestly, I don’t think OP has ever been to one. Huge portions and flooded with tourists? I’m not buying it.
Wrong dum dum. It was a 2 star Michelin. I am not oblivious. Already posted its identity. Try reading next time.
Anonymous wrote:It was Gymkhana in London
It was good, don't get me wrong. 2 Michelin star good? Highly questionable. I just don't see how it was leagues above Rasika in DC. Service was fine except for the missed drink order. Food was tasty. But it wasn't mind warping. The portion was massive for the tasting menu. We had to take away the main course, because we were both gut bustingly full by the time it came out. I have a dirty secret - we had to literally throw the food away because there was no fridge in the hotel room, nor anyway to heat it up even if we did want it eat it. Imagine that - having to throw away a large portion of Michelin starred meal in the trash!
I honestly just have had better meals in Rockville and and Falls Church than most of the Michelin places we have gone to. Michelin starred restaurants like Tim Ho Wang back when they had a star....it was good but whatever. I don't really remember it 8 years later. We've tried various other Michelin starred places over the years. I honestly just cannot even remember the courses or any of the foods that have ever stuck in my brain from any Michelin meal ever. Meanwhile, I can still taste the chicken and rice dish with the most amazing broth ever that I had in Thailand for $1.75 per plate. If I am ever in death row, that $1.75 meal will be my.last request.
I dunno who ever crowned Michelin as the experts on food.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not saying you can’t have a bad experience at a two-star restaurant, but honestly, I don’t think OP has ever been to one. Huge portions and flooded with tourists? I’m not buying it.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not saying you can’t have a bad experience at a two-star restaurant, but honestly, I don’t think OP has ever been to one. Huge portions and flooded with tourists? I’m not buying it.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe the ratings are making them too popular and couldn’t keep up.
Just go to the under appreciated ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just buy Korean fried chicken when you want tasty food! I tried it just a few months ago at regular restaurants and even Bonchon place; it is so delicious and so good that I do not see why people are not eating it all the time. Runs circles around other fried chicken shops.
(Also, I have a dairy allergy, so I can't have proper fried chicken anymore.)
You lost me at fried chicken.
PP is right; Korean fried chicken is on another level. Please keep eating kale; first, massage it a lot, then combine it with seaweed.