Skip to main content

Restaurants

Bobby mentioned tonight at supper that a local paper had published the 50 best restaurants in our area. He said we had only eaten at one of them. They were ranked by category and not number. Somehow I think if I published my list of our favorite restaurants, most people wouldn't be too impressed. But I'm going to do it anyway. :)

Best chicken sandwich: Zaxby's TLC  ...hands down.
Best chocolate chip cookie: Chik-fil-A
Best chicken biscuit: Hardee's
Best country-style steak: Toot-N-Tell
Most convenient/choices:
Bojangles
Best breakfast: Angie's
Best afterhours/oddhours/travel place: Waffle House (This one is our election night supper staple since I don't get off until after 9pm or later; my faves on their menu are hashbrown bowl, BLT, ham and cheese sandwich, waffle with pecans and chocolate chips. When our church met at KidsRKids Daycare on Hwy 70 in Clayton we ate there quite a bit. Due to sugar levels we now only eat there when traveling on holidays and election nights.)
Best sit-down restaurant: Relish
Best vegetable choices: Grandsons
Best hamburger: Five Guys
Best barbeque: Red Neck BBQ Lab
Best travel sit down restaurant: Lizard's Thicket
Best large salad: Logan's Roadhouse (followed by Zaxby's)
Best small salad: McDonald's side salad






IHOP and Cracker Barrel used to be on my all time favorites list, but since I've been semi-watching my sugar intake, those have almost dropped off my list. We still eat out way too much, but nowhere near as much as we used to.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

things we do for love

Saturday we had a baby shower for Bobby's niece. As I was making the mints, Bobby asked what else was on the menu. After I recited off the litany of items, he responded with "No peanut butter?! This shower is for Hannah! What's she going to eat?" (Hannah has had stomach problems over the years and has been unable to tolerate many foods, but peanut butter has been her staple.) Despite my assurances that she would enjoy the foods we were having, he was adamant that I needed to make peanut butter & jelly sandwiches for the shower. Even though I protested that NOBODY took that to a shower, he persisted, and informed me I could make them dainty with my little cutter. And so I did. To my surprise all but 3 were eaten. Who'd a thunk it?

get your house in order

My grandmothers were very clean people. My mother thoroughly enjoys cleaning, though she doesn't quite hit the same level my grandmothers were on. I don't enjoy cleaning, but I do like things to be clean. I've almost given up on neatness. One thing that they all instilled in me is the crazy concept that your house must be in order before you go somewhere big - like a vacation or something. After all, you could die in a car crash or have to go to the hospital, and then people would go into your house and find it in a terrible mess. Who wants to be remembered by that? So up until this past year, I would sometimes be up almost all night not only trying to get things packed up, but also trying to totally clean house as well. Or should I say, make the house presentable? The Chinese had a horrible superstition that my mother and grandparents would have enjoyed. Spring Festival (the Chinese New Year based on the lunar calendar) required EVERYTHING to be cleaned top to

fun...funny houses

 We saw the above house in Pittsboro while on our way to the mountains. It was the strangest house I've ever seen. Evidently this isn't a modification, for Bobby remembers thinking it funny as a child. Evidently a governor lived here at one point. I think the sign said it's now a Masonic lodge. And if seeing one funny house wasn't enough, the latest issue of This Old House had a link to their website that had several galleries of funny (or strange houses). Here's my favorites from their collection:   Szymbark , Poland  This just makes me laugh, and I would love to visit this house in person. Created by a designer who wanted to demonstrate "wrong-doings against humanity".  Visitors have stood in line for as long as 6 hours to tour the house, and many come out feeling "sea-sick".     Kalambaka, Greece... This 1,000 foot cliff drop has housed monastaries since the 11th century. Six of them are open to the public, " assuming, of course, th