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Ok, summer's just around the corner [or already here for the college students out for the summer break]. With the summer months the prime time for travelling... I'm taking a somewhat different slant in this item, different from the traditional 'summer vacation' item. What I'd like for people to share are--where are some of your favorite food stops while you've been out on some of your road trips? What was so special about this [these] place[s]? And if you know it, please include the location of this places as well as the name. If you don't remember exactly where the place was, maybe at least the city or general area/part of the state it was/is in?
140 responses total.
[ This is item 82 in agora, 54 in travel, and 123 in cooking.]
Any Cracker Barrel rest. will do you! :)
Youngs Jersey Dairy, just outside Yellow Springs Ohio. It was a poopular place to visit while I was student at Antioch. It brings back memories when ever I'm in Southern (?) Ohio. (Yellow Springs is about 20 minutes South of Springfield and 30 minutes West of Dayton). It started life as a dairy farm. At some point they started selling home made ice cream and the like, then opened up a small restaurant. Now it's a good sized restaurant, and they have a petting zoo.
Just about any old time truck stop. You get your $$$ worth when you order food - and it's substantial stuff, too.
I'm a fan of Perkins' Pancake Houses. We don't have any around here (none in Michigan that I'm aware of), so I like to stop at them in Rural Pennsylvania on trips to the East Coast. There's one in Dubois (pronounced Doo Boys) PA that I've been to a couple of times. It's right off Route 80. (By the way, if you pronounce the town's name as Dyu Bwa in front of a native, he/she will laugh at you.)
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food thingies
I like all the great espresso houses around the base of Mt. Ranier.
This particular restaurant is not a chain... I cannot say enough about The New York Spaghetti Company in Cleveland. They are located on Euclid, near 22nd, just down the block from Jacobs Field. The sauce (which can be smelled from blocks around) is heavenly, The homemade spaghetti is cooked to perfection, and priced moderatly. (I ate a complete meal for $5). Cleveland has a long reputation for being the Italian food capitol of the planet.
Actually, if you like Chinese and happen to ind yourself in the southwestern corner of Wyoming ... there is the best Chinese restaurant i have ever found right there! Literally, ppl line up outside for much of the day.
re # 3 Right on about Young's I always used to stop there when I visited my friends who used to go to Antioch.
Tony's in Birch Run (right off the exit) is still a favorite of mine. They serve you HUGE quantities of food for decent prices. Then, they dump a large handful (or two) of hard candy in your purse, bag, hands, etc. I also love Cracker Barrel, but the hour wait is kind of depressing. The food it worth it, though.
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I second both that Moosewood's a good restaurant, and that Valerie hisses whenever she passes a Cracker Barrel...or even a billboard for Cracker Barrel! Moosewood is a vegetarian restaurant run as a collective of people who rotate jobs. Most people seem to know them by the cookbooks that have been published based on their recipes. I liked a restaurant called Z's in Cleveland...it was in a very upscale shopping mall. Minimalist decor, nicely partitioned to provide a pleasant atmosphee, and really wonderful food. Guess I would call it "modern American" cuisine (including a mish-mash of foreign dishes). As an Ann Arbor comparison, it's kind of like Sweet Lorraines, but with much better (and more consistent) food, service, and atmosphere. Cleveland seemed like just an all-around good restaurant town.
in maricopa, california, is a little restaurant that has great food. i can't remember the name of the restaurant, but it's the only one there aside from the dairy queen. and speaking of dairy queen, i think they have just about the best burgers of any chain.
Once again, I'll throw up El Azteco in Lansing. Good Mexican food, really a bit different and unique. El Az has a restaurant in Lansing and one in E. Lansing. The one in E. Lansing isn't may favorite anymore, since it moved out of the dark basement and lost some of its charm. El Az is a restaurant that MSU grads in other cities never quite find a replacement for.
bad choice of words :)
I also do not support Cracker Barrell. I don't know what states they are in, but... stay the hell away from Applebee's (or as I call it, Applesleaze). I have gotten sick from their food and so have my friends (at different restaurants... there is about 4 Applesleaze's in Memphis alone). If you must eat there, their salads are ok. O'Charley's restaurants are good. Salads are yummy there, and it's relatively inexpensive. Some truck stops are ok too, there is one in Lima, Colorado (not far from the Kansas state line) that is huge and seemed friendly... open 24 hrs of course. I have come to find that most truckers are good people to talk to, particularly the ones who have been trucking for 20 years. Check for the "Happiness is a crock of beans" sign on the Colo/Kansas state line too. cracked me th hell up!
Stephanie Stuckey, an old friend of mine from college, would have a good perspective on this subject. Stephanie's grandfather founded and her family runs the Stuckey's restaurant chain. If you've driven along the highways up and down the east coast, you probably have been to a Stuckey's at one time in your life. They are known for pecan logs, claxton fruitcakes and roadhouse food. However, its based in Georgia, so they may not even have a Stuckey's in michigan.
RE #18 Kerouac, I remember seeing a Stuckey's on Jackson Road in the Dexter-Chelsea area of Washtenaw County, just west of Ann Arbor.
Stuckey's seems to have died out in Michigan. At Grexstock last year, there was an abandoned Stuckey's right at the freeway exit. On a recent trip to St. Louis, I did see one. It contained a Subway!
There is a Stuckey's TN...
One of the benefits of being a member of the Ann Arbor bicycle touring society, and going on a lot of Sunday rides, is that you get to eat at a bunch of restaurants in small towns around here. One of my favorites is the Grapevine in Dundee. Another good place is Don's in Tecumseh.
I think there's a Stuckey's in or near Holland, Michigan.
I have never eaten at a Stuckey's, and would likely not want to if they carry those Claxton Fruit Cakes. My dad would get like a case of them for Christmas from people, and I swear they could double for doorstops! They were like bricks! We always threw them out... we'd feel bad about wasting food, but we couldn't even give them away.
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If you drive through Northfield, MN... keep driving.. actually there is one good restaurant here, "Basil's Pizza" a nice family owned place, but, heck who'se going to be driving by here any time soon? (Re 0, please keep the "college student's out on Summer vacation comments down to a minimum, some of us are on trimesters!)
I have several road food horror stories. There was sara, the waitress at a little truck stop Otter and i stopped at after a resort series of shows. Sara had all the charm of Leona Helmsley and the girlish figure and singing voice of Roseanne. Then there's the 'Trichinosis Platter' in a Kalamazoo truck stop. My favorite is going to an italian restaurant after a show and having the house magician (a waiter who tried to earn extra tips by doing semi-passable card effects) hear we were there, and immediately came out to 'impress otter, myself, two dear friends and my parents.
He must have seen "Baghdad Cafe" Since when I travel, I almost always do so alone, I never much veer off from McDonalds on the freeway. However, if you happen to be traveling to Chicago, I can most assuredly advise that the best place to rest stop is exit 60, in Paw Paw. All major fast foods, all major gas stations, and it's actually *clean*.
Then there is the House of Pizza, on the corner of 20th and Lapeer in Port Huron. Good food at low prices.
I forgot about that scandal with Cracker Barrel. Eep! Valerie, I'm a fellow hisser, but I always hiss at the NMU ads in Traverse City theaters. ;-)
I always make a point to stop at Crakcer Barrel...anywhere along I-75.... It isn't all that special anymore though...We jsut had one put in our hometown of Monroe...right on I-75
re #28...Stuckey's is famous for their pecan rolls, not their pies. And of course the Claxton fruitcakes, made by the Claxton fruitcake company in Claxton, Georgia. Both are a matter of taste though.
Its been interesting to read about neat places to stop - all over the country. But, how about some suggestions for places to stop for dinner between Ann Arbor and St. Ignace, MI? My family has been stopping at Big Boys, but their menu has gotten really bad (IMO). I'd still like "pretty fast food", but sit-down service. Suggestions?
I had to look up St. Ignace on a map...just past the bridge in the U.P., evidently. Sorry, no recommendations...I'd make that trip non-stop! :-) My main gas station food for road trips is fig newtons and a resealable bottled beverage. Newtons don't make your fingers greasy and don't make many crumbs, and a resealable bottle eliminates problems of spillage.
Fast, good food? Are you nuts? ;) BTW, I'd recommend going thru Lansing for that trip. It's about 15-20 miles longer, but the traffic is about 10% of that found on I-75. And the truck stops probably have better food, at least within the truck stop reality.
RE #34 Ajax, the resealable bottle also keeps the bees out of the bottle, especially on long trips and spending large amount of times outdoors.
If you travel the same route often, go off the freeway, check out a different unnamed resturant each time. Batting average works out fairly well and you can accumulate a list of good places (to share with the rest of us).
The truck stop in Georgiana, Ala (near I-65) had the best road food I've ever had. The half order of shrimp my wife ate had 15 or 18 shrimp on it, the salads were as big as the old Hudson's Maurice salads, and my catfish dinner had 2 five pound catfish (well, maybe not that big, but they were big) and a bunch of fries. Enough change from a ten dollar bill to leave a big tip!
Don's in Tecumseh. Would that be, or what used to be, Don's Beef Buffet? very good. Also, in Adrian, The Brass Lantern. Very good restaurant.
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