Grizzly wrote:...I was long subjected to regular business travel to a backwater burgh in the south, where for many years the "best" restaurant choice for dinner was the local Outback Steakhouse.
blipsman wrote:Cheesecake Factory
JoelF wrote:Grizzly wrote:...I was long subjected to regular business travel to a backwater burgh in the south, where for many years the "best" restaurant choice for dinner was the local Outback Steakhouse.
I've run into the same mentality on vacation, when a gas station/minimart attendant couldn't think of a better restaurant than the Applebee's at the mall on the turnpike, or the hotel manager that said the Dairy Queen was the best food in town (actually, this was the case, as the nearest table service restaurant was 1/2 hour away).
ViewsAskew wrote:Maybe it's the consistency. Maybe they don't realize how ubiqutous these places are. Or maybe these somehow represent success in a way that the local place doesn't. But they are very important to the majority of Americans' food-psyches I'm sad to say.
bananasandwiches wrote:1. Potbelly's. I mean, it's not BAD, but I don't know that it's GOOD either.
eatchicago wrote:bananasandwiches wrote:1. Potbelly's. I mean, it's not BAD, but I don't know that it's GOOD either.
Against my will, I had a work lunch at Potbelly's today. I stood in a long line like a sheep until I consumed a sandwich completely devoid of flavor.
For it's astoundingly long lines, devoted fans, and sub-par food, Potbelly's gets the Golden Sheeple award in my book.
Best,
Michael
David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:bananasandwiches wrote:1. Potbelly's. I mean, it's not BAD, but I don't know that it's GOOD either.
Against my will, I had a work lunch at Potbelly's today. I stood in a long line like a sheep until I consumed a sandwich completely devoid of flavor.
For it's astoundingly long lines, devoted fans, and sub-par food, Potbelly's gets the Golden Sheeple award in my book.
Best,
Michael
I would love to have a short video clip of you trying to be gracious and inoffensive while waiting in line for and eating something you really didn't want to be anywhere near. I been to that kind of lunch, bro, and I find it best just to switch off the "taste" (literal and figurative) centers of the brain and just focus on, you know, dinner.
Eatchicago wrote:
Against my will, I had a work lunch at Potbelly's today. I stood in a long line like a sheep until I consumed a sandwich completely devoid of flavor.
Q: What restaurant would you want to eat in once a week?
A: If I could eat at Potbelly Sandwich Works once a week, I would. They're all over Chicago [and elsewhere in the country]. You can't beat it. For three or four dollars you get awesome toasted bread, great meat, fresh vegetables.
dfawley wrote:Not to pick on EatChicago, but all-the-current-rage Grant Achatz has praised Potbelly on various occasions:
dfawley wrote:Right; like I said, make of it what you will... I just hoped to provide a little perspective.
Erik M. wrote:I hereby nominate Alinea for the Sheeple's Choice Awards.
And, while I'm at it, I'll nominate Schwa too.
G Wiv wrote:dfawley wrote:Not to pick on EatChicago, but all-the-current-rage Grant Achatz has praised Potbelly on various occasions:
HoofaH wrote:How can anyone complain about a place that allows you to create your own sandwich? I mean the bases are there but you go up and ask for other condiments to be put on the sandwich to your own taste.