harv47 wrote:Do any of you have experience with the "premium" (fee) service there?
Davydd wrote:You get the e-mail newsletter whether or not you are a Roadfood.com subscriber. If you subscribe you get a tag of Roadfood Insider in the forum and access to other things. Anyone can read the forums and the restaurant list and reviews even if you don't log in. I've posted nearly 4,800 forum messages there, posted several trip reports in the forums and probably have posted in excess of 1,500 food photos but have never subscribed or become a Roadfood Insider.
Davydd wrote:I love to travel the "blue highways" as William Leastheat Moon dubbed them. I've put over 55,000 miles on the road in a Class B camper van RV these past 5 years that I've had it and I estimate nearly 85-90% of those miles are on the blue highways (non-interstate or non-limited access highways). Even on the blue highways always take the business route through towns and check out Main Street. You'll mostly find chains on the bypasses. I sometimes check the Roadfood.com listings but I mostly make notes of what forum members say as well as here and other forums. Then if nothing interests me from that research I am more than willing to look at lists in Google, Yelp, Urbanspoon, etc. and just throw a dart (make a guess) and explore, or just stop if I see some place that might look interesting. I'm generally not a footstep follower as many seem to be on Roadfood.com. The most frustrating thing about travel is to just finish a big breakfast and drive by a great looking luncheon stop at 10 AM in the morning.
harv47 wrote:Thanks, davy
I'll check Chowhound.com.
Speaking of regional, isn't Minnesota a little non-local to LTH? Or is it more geographically varied than I think?