Food Reviews & Stories
Tuk Tuk, named for the three-wheeled rickshaws of
Thailand, serves up colossal portions of Thai-American dishes at
recession-friendly prices. Start out with a Thai iced tea or coffee ($2)
and “Ro
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Food Reviews & Stories
“Healthy Thai Cuisine,” the menu claims, with “healthy
cuisine” apparently being defined against food that can literally break
into your house and strangle you while you sleep. The oil slick
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Food Reviews & Stories
This is Italy in a shoebox, people. Born as a takeout pit stop, Taste
Unique’s tiny Division Street storefront is dominated by a giant
chalkboard full of daily offerings of housemade soups and sau
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Food Reviews & Stories
Want to get a measure of a Lebanese restaurant? Order its veggie mezza
($12). The traditional assortment of hummus, baba ghanouj, falafel,
grape leaves and tabbouleh is as good a metric as any in de
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Food Reviews & Stories
For a neighborhood in proximity to a college, Woodstock falls short in
the restaurant department. Reedies looking to do better than Delta Cafe
have to hoof it all the way up to Southeast 48th Avenue
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Food Reviews & Stories
11:30 am-10 pm Monday-Tuesday, 11:30 am-midnight Wednesday-Sunday. Cash only.
One may be accustomed to seeing buildings built around
trees or hillsides, but a full-size bus? A retrofitted espresso an
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Food Reviews & Stories
Let’s be honest—the Indian lunch buffet is all about quantity over
quality. It’s the challenge of testing how much chicken tikka you can
guzzle before your brain catches up to your stomach or
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Food Reviews & Stories
Steeped in French decor, with accordion practically wheezing from the
woodwork, Suzette is a crêpe-serving food-cart/restaurant hybrid. Order
from the camper-turned-kitchen out back and then follow
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Food Reviews & Stories
Nestled in the nexus of quirk that is Clinton Street—its neighbors
include Scandinavian cafe Broder, the velvet painting-adorned dive bar
Dots and, of course, the Clinton Street Theater, famous fo
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Food Reviews & Stories
Although its slogan, “You Eat Here Because We Let You,” comes across as
oddly aggressive (it sounds like a phrase that’d be emblazoned on a sign
in a prison mess hall), Stepping Stone Cafe is
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