Marsha L. wrote:
In the same vein: a permanent open-air food plaza/food court, with lots of options, perhaps in conjunction with a permanent farmer's market.
RTaglieri wrote:Have not seen something like this posted yet, but about time to suggest some awards and let debate begin. I will start with some, but please add on as I am east end suburbanite and have limited knowledge of entire city dining scene.
Here goes, though, as well as some categories I will not even comment upon:
Best new arrival - Verbena Cafe - Town needs more breakfast places that are more than standard bacon and eggs fare, and Verbena delivered big-time. I personally believe every bit as good as Wild Eggs without the long wait times.
RTaglieri wrote:Best overall theme - YUM Center livened up downtown and although limited dining addtions to date, you can tell it is already moving in right direction. Close second is Westport Village continuing its ascent.
Worst arrival - Somewhat a contradiction from above, but YUM center food inside the arena is overpriced and pretty mediocre if you ask me. $12 taco bell/papa john combos not culinary excellence.
Leah s wrote:According to the morning CJ - they just declared Papalino's "Restaurant of the Year."
Works for me.
Marsha L. wrote:What this town needs more of: mobile food venues/food trucks. If the current system in place at the health department is prohibitive, maybe the rules need to be re-visited. Give us more mobile options!
Matthew D
Foodie
1347
Sun Jun 22, 2008 11:22 am
No Longer Old Louisville
Matthew D wrote:my hope for the new year is a sort-of-upscale bar/pub/brewpub that has tournament size pool tables and numerous dart lanes. I've been told by three not-from-Louisville people that Louisville is one of the worst dart towns they have ever been in.
Matthew D
Foodie
1347
Sun Jun 22, 2008 11:22 am
No Longer Old Louisville
Steve P wrote:Matthew D wrote:my hope for the new year is a sort-of-upscale bar/pub/brewpub that has tournament size pool tables and numerous dart lanes. I've been told by three not-from-Louisville people that Louisville is one of the worst dart towns they have ever been in.
Having played in dart leagues for ohhhhhhhhh....off and on about 15 years, make me the fourth person to tell you this.The only place we've found that even remotely embraces the sport is BBC in St. Matts.
Steve P wrote:Matthew D wrote:my hope for the new year is a sort-of-upscale bar/pub/brewpub that has tournament size pool tables and numerous dart lanes. I've been told by three not-from-Louisville people that Louisville is one of the worst dart towns they have ever been in.
Having played in dart leagues for ohhhhhhhhh....off and on about 15 years, make me the fourth person to tell you this.The only place we've found that even remotely embraces the sport is BBC in St. Matts.
Matthew D wrote:I've heard Zazoo's (western edge of St. Matthews) is the darts place in Louisville, but I don't remember that from my visits 4-5 years ago. Does Louisville have some weird liability clause scaring people away from darts? Or do places just not want to give up the floor space?
The BBC Tap Room does darts too - but no food or anything else apart from beer.
Ward Wilson
Foodie
101
Thu Mar 15, 2007 10:16 pm
Beargrass Creek watershed
Robin Garr wrote:Leah s wrote:According to the morning CJ - they just declared Papalino's "Restaurant of the Year."
Works for me.
I just read that article. I have some thoughts, but probably had better not give voice to them.
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