Showing posts with label Restaurants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Restaurants. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

O’Charley’s Donates More Than a Quarter Million Chicken Servings to Food Bank

I just want to take a moment and say thank you to O'Charley's for giving to a local charity and trying to make a difference and caring about people in these tough times. Many of us are not big fans of "chain" restaurants but when they still do things to help their hometowns and they still work to make a difference I think we should give them recognition for that and tell them thanks for caring.
~Corey

Read the news article below:


Officials at O’Charley’s restaurants, a leading casual-dining restaurant concept, donated 101,000 pounds of chicken to Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee, one of the largest and most comprehensive of over 200 food banks and food distribution centers nationwide and also a member of Feeding America – The Nation’s Food Bank Network.

“This is the largest single donation of chicken we have ever received,” said Jaynee Day, president and CEO, Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee. “Protein items are very rarely donated to Second Harvest, so this type of donation is truly significant. O’Charley’s has been one of our largest supporters, and we are grateful for their generous gift.”

The equivalent of three truckloads of the chicken is enough to feed over a quarter of a million people. It will be distributed throughout Second Harvest’s network of approximately 400 not for profit partner agencies in 46 counties in Middle and West Tennessee. Partners include food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters, foster care facilities, senior centers, group homes, and youth enrichment programs. For more information on Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee and its programs, please visit www.secondharvestmidtn.org.

Read the rest of the article at Business Wire.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Smokey, the culinary caninecierge, decides who is worthy of a doggie bag (part 1)

Rating: Worth a doggie bag

Las Palmas

803 Rivergate Pkwy

Goodlettsville, TN

Phone: 615-851-7315

Hours:
Mon-Thu 11am-10pm

Fri 11am-11pm

Sat 12pm-10:30pm

Sun 12pm-10pm

Friday, March 14, 2008

Should someone be able to sell a reservation for a restaurant besides the restaurant?

I think this is just wrong for someone to act like they have the ability to "auction" or "sell" tables at restaurants without working with the restaurant. Having been a concierge, I know that there are times when you can have a restaurant hold a table or two for you but to sell them...I can't agree with that. I never was a fan of OpenTable or other websites that tried to do the job of a concierge or a person calling the restaurant themselves but after reading this article, I really don't enjoy this process.
~Corey Webbspun


By SARAH KERSHAW
Published: March 12, 2008

IT is hard to imagine Joseph Bastianich, who owns a dozen restaurants with Mario Batali and controls some of the most coveted tables in the country, being flustered by a reservation for two at Babbo for 6:15 on a Friday night.

But Mr. Bastianich was furious: someone was offering that table at TableXchange, a Web site on which diners can buy and sell reservations, hot commodities in a town where getting a table at the most popular restaurants has become an extreme sport.

The price was $25. The table was gone within an hour.

“We’re selling dinner; we don’t sell the opportunity to have dinner,” Mr. Bastianich said. “It goes against the grain of everything we do.”
~~~
Read the entire article in the New York Times.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Stained Apron

This is a website that is about waiters/servers and discusses tips, customers and more. Enjoy!

The Stained Apron


Monday, October 01, 2007

Smoking is Gone in Tennessee Restaurants Today

The Non-Smoker Protection Act, signed by Gov. Phil Bredesen in June, prohibits smoking in such public areas as malls, sports stadiums and restaurants.

“I don’t see ourselves losing business,” said Eddie McCrary, assistant general manager at Big River Grille & Brewing Works downtown on Broadway. “If anything, most people, especially our employees, were happy about it.”

While non-smokers may celebrate the legislation, some restaurant owners and smokers say they’re both confused and irritated by the new restrictions.

“It’s an obstruction of people’s rights,” said Anita McKenna as she tapped out a cigarette at the Gerst Haus on Woodland Street Sunday afternoon.

McKenna says she began smoking about four years ago to deal with pain from an operation. Her husband Larry stopped smoking more than 30 years ago, but said he didn’t agree with the ban.

“I stopped (smoking) because of the dangers, but I don’t think we should make smokers feel like second-class citizens,” Larry said.

Boyd Barbee, general manager at Gerst Haus, admitted that some smokers might initially leave, but he expects them eventually to come back.

“I can go through a three-hour dinner and smoke afterward,” said Barbee, a self-described smoker.

At Big River Grille and Gerst Haus, smokers can still take a puff on the outdoor patios, which are not included in the ban.


Read the full article in the Tennessean newspaper.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Can I Have Your Autograph?

This is what I love about my incredible city....check this out...


Native Nashvillian, Jackson Miller, gives his perspective on something that I have always found really endearing about our fair city…

I think that the residents of Nashville may be the least star-struck people on the planet. In Nashville, famous people are no big deal. It is neat to see someone famous, but I don’t know any Nashville natives that ask strangers for autographs or pictures. It is cool to see someone famous and all, but I am not going to go out of my way to say hi. Sure, if I am standing next to someone in line I will say hi if I recognize them and am fond of their work. More often than not I don’t even realize who it was until much later. I think it is just ingrained in my psyche that it is not a big deal.

This also reminds me of the whole Martina McBride debacle over at Suburban Turmoil last week. Yeah, they have fame, fortune, and talent (for the most part), but they have the same problems and human frailties that we all do. Um, and the reason it reminded me of Martina, is that I was in line with her at Wal-Mart a few years back and she was buying a 12-roll industrial package of toilet paper. Just a regular human being like me whose gotta schlep out to buy some TP. I hadn’t thought about that until last week’s, er, bathroom incident.
But I digress…
Anyway, I think it is great that our celebs can hang out and just be themselves without being harassed.

Of course, for those who simply can’t keep their enthusiasm under control, he has a great idea…
I think that the proper response to seeing someone famous should be a question on the drivers license test. If you want to live her(e) you gotta know how to act.

If you were to run into one of your most beloved celebrities at the store, a restaurant, etc., how would you handle it? Would you engage them?

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Tipping


By Gary Stoller, USA TODAY

Against the flood of Chinese imports, the USA may have a new export when the 2008 Beijing Olympics gets underway: the American way of tipping.

In China, some tipping already occurs at big-city hotels, but it "will still be a novelty" when the Olympics begin next August, says P.M. Forni, author of the 2002 book Choosing Civility: The 25 Rules of Considerate Conduct.

China is just one of several countries where tips had been uncommon but where an increasing number of service workers are expecting them.

Americans routinely tip while abroad, and that, according to Forni and other experts, is driving the trend. And, as practices change, many business travelers are finding it all very baffling.

Forni calls tipping abroad "a territory fraught with awkward moments."
Business travelers' confusion is understandable, says Lynn Staneff who compiled a tipping guide for 70 countries for Magellan's, which sells travel supplies from two California stores and a website. Tipping is common in some countries, not done in others, or only done in some cities, she says. Whom to tip varies by country.

"I have absolutely no idea what to tip outside the USA," says professional speaker Sue Hershkowitz-Coore, of Scottsdale, Ariz.

Tipping practices are "in a constant state of change, so what was appropriate the last time you visited a foreign destination may be inappropriate the next time you go," Staneff says.

According to her guide, tipping is not practiced in 11 countries — Brunei, Malaysia, Japan, Oman, New Zealand, Samoa, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, United Arab Emirates and Vietnam. In most countries, travelers are expected to tip to a waiter or waitress 10%, pay the equivalent of $1 per bag to a porter and round the taxi fare to the next unit of the local currency.

Many countries in Asia and Western Europe add a service charge to a restaurant check, exempting diners from tipping, Forni, the author, says. In Japan, Staneff says, tipping is perceived as insulting.

Business traveler Hershkowitz-Coore gets around her confusion by tipping 20% everywhere — "exactly as I would here, unless the bill states that service is included."

She says she's had people tell her a tip was unnecessary. "But when I tell them that I understand and would like to thank them, no one has turned it down."

Frequent business traveler Robert Grimes, who is the chairman of a consulting company, says he angered a taxi driver in the United Kingdom when he rounded off the fare to the next pound.
The cabbie thought the tip was too small and threw coins out the window at him. Though tipping is not generally practiced in Thailand, Grimes says this month a taxi driver in Bangkok seemed insulted that he wanted change.

The best way to avoid insulting or embarrassing a service worker is to ask a hotel concierge about local tipping customs when checking in abroad, Forni and Staneff say. If no concierge is available, it's OK to tactfully, and graciously, ask the worker or the head of the service whether tipping is acceptable.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Some Local Restaurants


Dino's


Koto


Gerst Haust


Judge Bean's


Sunset Grill

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Keep the Change

Have you ever gone to a restaurant and had a great experience? Imagine having a wonderful meal, really good service and good company but when your server brings your change they only give you the bills.

Now the reason I bring this up is when I have change coming back to me, I want it all. I will decide how much to tip depending on the level of service that was provided. Why are we seeing more and more servers keep the change and just assume we don't want or need it. Do they truly think this is a service to us?

C'mon servers, c'mon managers...Give me what is mine and I will take care of you accordingly. However, do not, I repeat, do not assume that anything is yours. All I ask and need from you is to provide good service. If you do that, than you don't need to keep the change because I will tip very well. If you wanna keep the 30 or 40 cents when you bring me my "change", well than that will probably become the only tip you get.

Thanks and have a wonderful day.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Changes in our local restaurants and businesses, 2006

We lost some older restaurants and other businesses and gained some newer ones. The ones we lost were some of the old guard and they couldn't afford to fit into the changing and growing Nashville. I think our biggest thing is to realize that we need to bring on the new cuisine from all over the world and open our palettes to new and creative things but keep some of the old guard here as well. I think we need to look at having the best of both worlds. Having the little diners and mom and pop places while also growing and expanding our food community.

I'm all for growth and to show the world the magic of Nashville but we have to realize that the reason we are such a wonderful city that people want to visit or live in is because we are unique. Let's not go crazy trying and stressing over what Atlanta or New York City has that we don't.

I will say it has been a real pleasure to be able to get out and try alot of the new restaurants and places but now it is even harder to get back to the places I hold near to my heart and like to go back repeatedly. I love the new flavors, tastes and creativity that is flowing in our city through business and food. We have long been a center of creativity but we are seeing it in more than just academics and music. As our artists of all genres and businesses and creativity is flowing through the veins of our city we see a wonderful vision of our city. It is a bit of our kind hearted, small town side that we still have where we all speak to each other and smile in passing. With the new we find new tastes, sights, accents and more options for us all to experience. I welcome this and I say lets enjoy it all and keep our city magical and special.

Let's bring in the new things but let's preserve our history and our legacy. Let it grow and become a thick rich branch on the tree of America as we reach new heights.

In 2006 we lost:
Vandyland
West End Hardware
Belle Meade Cafeteria
Belle Meade Hardware

We added:
Marché Artisan Foods
Flyte World Dining and Wine
Past Perfect
Bricktop's
Stoney River Steakhouse
Cabana
Vinea (wines and spirits)

Vinea (wines and spirits)