With our almost 3 year old, my wife and I ate at Southport this morning (Saturday). Arriving at just past 9 AM, there were still lots of empty seats. The place starts to fill-up at 9:30 and bustles by 10:30 AM. The food was very good breakfast fare. I had pancakes w/ strawberries and walnuts, my wife had French toast stuffed with a fruit compote. We chose from the very nice and nicely priced and presented children's choice for my daughter: for $5 a plate with bread pudding pancakes, mixed fruit, apple sauce, and maple syrup (and they have lots of nice highchairs at the ready). All the food was exceptional. We also had a very tasty and fresh glass of grapefruit juice, tasty bacon, and a very good cup of coffee. The latter is served by the thermos full, eliminating the need to wait for staff to refill and it was very fresh coffee of appropriate strength (read "strong": good enough to sip "like a fine liqueur" as my old coffee mentor Alfred Peet used to say). The service: I can see where people might encounter problems. We were lucky, in that all who served our table were very warm and accommodating. From what I could tell, the cafe doesn't use the traditional method of assigning wait staff by section, which means that many people serve you over the course of the meal, and nobody is fully responsible for specifically your satisfaction. Such systems can work well--theoretically, they allow for optimal deployment of resources--but they also require quite a bit of on the move coordination and overall flow awareness on the part of staff (and there seems to be no maitre d' type person to help carry that off). The staff is young and casual, and seemingly without much restaurant experience. When demands are low, this allows them to show their basically nice human personalities and everyday capabilities but when demands are high--rush periods--makes it much more likely that things will get quite frayed at the edges. The coffee by the thermos method, and a pay at the counter approach, are attempts to reduce staff demands and make it all work a bit more smoothly. My guess is that the writer who arrived at 8 AM and found a staff none too pleased to see him arrived before they were completely set-up. That, of course, is Southport's mistake, not the diner's, but is also a mistake more likely in places that emphasize freshness, where everything is made from scratch as close to service time as possible. So, the food is professional and the service/management is, well, amateur. I'd advise arriving a bit after opening but well before rush periods and, if you really like to be in a place where the staff is perky, quick, efficient, dressed like they work in a restaurant (the sartorial style as Southport is teen casual to near slobbishness), and generally professionally competent, this might not be the stop for you. But at 9:30ish this Saturday morning, the staff members were all very pleasant and accomodating, and the food was very good. Our tab was about $30.00. They have a useful website:
http://www.southportgrocery.com/