Kobe Misono Teppanyaki at the top of the Simitomo building in Tokyo. Our own private chef and dining room. Food brought out alive before to show how fresh it is. Best Kobe I ever had. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:Every meal I've had at 2941 in Falls Church, VA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to have to vote this most pretentious DCUM thread ever. And I"ve been to half these. I think I hate myself for even reading it.
I don't agree with you. I've never been to any of these restaurants. They seem like wonderful places but I would have to save to go to some of these so I'm going bookmark this thread and add some to my bucket list. Keep the reviews coming.
Signed,
One of The Poors
I've been to many, I could go every week if I wanted. You're not missing anything. They're mostly filled with strivers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so underwhelmed by places like Inn at Little Washington. They're nice enough, but they never really do anything for me. I always feel like I'm supposed to like it just because it's fancy and expensive.
I like a good lobster and steamed clams at a picnic table on a dock overlooking a harbor in New England, or a pulled pork sandwich at a dive BBQ joint in North Carolina. Stuff like that.
That's so cliched though...
What is "cliched" about eating lobster in New England or pulled pork at a BBQ place? Should you have BBQ in New England and the lobster at the BBQ joint? Would it be better to have the pulled pork sandwich "deconstructed" and served at 10x the price? The pp clearly enjoys simple food prepared well rather than overly fancy food in a pretentious atmosphere. Nothing wrong with that.
Np here. Whether it's cliched or not to eat lobster in New England or bbq in NC, it is certainly expected. Weirdly enough, and this is just an observation on my part, I think that the gulf coast of Fl has better bbq than OBX NC does.
I just, and this is my personal opinion, think it's very "special snowflake" to claim that you hate expensive restaurants and prefer cheap joints.
It's very, "if you like Pina Coladas..."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so underwhelmed by places like Inn at Little Washington. They're nice enough, but they never really do anything for me. I always feel like I'm supposed to like it just because it's fancy and expensive.
I like a good lobster and steamed clams at a picnic table on a dock overlooking a harbor in New England, or a pulled pork sandwich at a dive BBQ joint in North Carolina. Stuff like that.
That's so cliched though...
What is "cliched" about eating lobster in New England or pulled pork at a BBQ place? Should you have BBQ in New England and the lobster at the BBQ joint? Would it be better to have the pulled pork sandwich "deconstructed" and served at 10x the price? The pp clearly enjoys simple food prepared well rather than overly fancy food in a pretentious atmosphere. Nothing wrong with that.
Np here. Whether it's cliched or not to eat lobster in New England or bbq in NC, it is certainly expected. Weirdly enough, and this is just an observation on my part, I think that the gulf coast of Fl has better bbq than OBX NC does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to have to vote this most pretentious DCUM thread ever. And I"ve been to half these. I think I hate myself for even reading it.
I don't agree with you. I've never been to any of these restaurants. They seem like wonderful places but I would have to save to go to some of these so I'm going bookmark this thread and add some to my bucket list. Keep the reviews coming.
Signed,
One of The Poors
I've been to many, I could go every week if I wanted. You're not missing anything. They're mostly filled with strivers.
Anonymous wrote:I think that discussing amazing restaurant experiences is no more pretentious than other DCUM threads where people prattle on about getting Larla into the 'best preschool' that will then feed into their desired $30k a year 'top' private school when they live in a county with some of the top-performing public schools in the USA.
Our family will not be paying for private school tuition, but I am willing to drop $400 on a memorable meal. To each their own; I'm not going to rain on their preschool anxiety thread.
And it is CERTAINLY less obnoxious than the thread about whether birthday parties at Chikfila are low-class or if you should get a crappy gift just because you don't like the child. Those are truly pretentious.