Heya all,
Yes, I am a sucker for buffets/cafeteria style places. I grew up in
the South where they were legion and were actually very good.
On Monday, I was making my way back to Pismo Beach, and stopped for
lunch in Barstow, CA. Yes, I know Barstow is not known for fine
dining, or even decent places to eat. However, I was starving, since
I had missed my breakfast stop.
I started casing out what might be decent, when I spotted a newish
restaurant/buffet in a mostly deserted mall. It was called Our Town
Buffet, and I thought it might be worth a look.
The door to the place was a tiny bit ratty looking, but I pushed it
open anyway, and went in. There was a hostess, who turned out to be
the hostess, and the only waiter/waitress. A few buffet tables were
there,..and a room full of tables, of which most were empty. The
hostess explained it was an all you can eat place, with dessert and
drinks included in the price..which was decent.
I decided to chance it.
The selection was half okay...in that the Mexican food was good
(except for the meatballs, which were tough and overcooked). The
vegetables looked like they were from a can or cooked from frozen. The
salad bar was a dinky little affair...with lettuce and a few
lackluster toppings. There was a fruit station, with cutup melon, and
a few other lackluster cut up fruits.
Okay. I tried out the bbq style ribs, the meatballs (which the
hostess said were spicy), a chile verde which was great, some
enchiladas, and a chimichanga. There were also taquitos on the steam
table. I skipped the vegetables and the salad and fruit bars.
The ribs were actually pretty good, although I think they were cooked
in some sort of bottled sauce. The enchiladas were pretty good as
well, as was the chimichanga. The hostess offered me something to
drink, and I chose a soft drink.
By the time I was getting full, the hostess offered me dessert. I
asked what was available, and she gave me a list of jello, rice
pudding, a strawberry cream cake and I forget what else. I decided on
rice pudding. Oh, there was also ice cream, which was storebought.
Big mistake. The rice was either overcooked and just added to a
watery pudding, and was gritty. Not the creamy rice pudding I
wanted. I ate a few bites, then said I was too full.
During this time the hostess talked to me, as I was about the only
person in the dining room. She said they had only been open a few
months, and that they made everything in house, except for the ice
cream. She was extremely proud of this..and said they were looking
for business...that they needed customers. I noticed that the cooks
were mostly Hispanic, and I think that attests to the fact that the
Mexican dishes were okay.
It was a mixed sucess lunch. I am thinking of writing them a note,
and mentioning what they could improve on, cause this looked like a
put together operation..a homegrown type of place. Definitely not a
chain. I think it has the potential to be good.
Aside from all of this, it got me thinking, and I entertained myself
all the way across the desert with my thinking. I wondered how if I
were to do something like this, what I would serve, and how I would do
it. Say, a smallish place, with all food prepared in house.... Not
elaborate food, but really good food. Good enough, so that word might
get out that it was a find, a really good place to find good food. I
know this is possible, cause of some of the places that are found in
the South.
I thought I would put it out to all of you, and ask what you would
serve, and how. For instance, I can see the above mentioned rice
pudding being a good choice, but only if it were done really well....
Say a Mexican rice pudding.. Or a rice pudding with dried fruit in
it...
Same with the other foods mentioned above. I could see the meatballs
being good, and being light instead of heavy and overdone.
So, you all..what would you put on the menu for a homegrown buffet?
Mind you, this food would have to be all made on premises.. Mind you,
none of this is in my plans: it is a theoretical but fun (at least to
me) exercise, which was entertaining to me.
I had an idea for fresh hot breads... Say big fluffy, yeasty rolls.
Maybe spoonbread. Or good cornbread. Maybe popovers, if I were to
get an established clientele, since they are not good after a bit.
They need to be hot and fresh. Oh, and homemade biscuits...different
kinds... Say regular ones some days...maybe sweet potato biscuits
some days, depending on what else is on the menu.
For main dishes, I was also thinking it would be a good idea to have
at least one vegetarian/vegan dish on the steam table. A lot of
dishes can be that way, and still be enticing to omnivores too.... As
for others, maybe something like Chicken Country Captain, with coconut
rice served as well.
Maybe a few varied well made salads, on the salad station. Maybe
something like the old classic Perfection salad. A type of
slaw...changing from time to time. Say a mayo based one, then maybe a
sweet and sour slaw, or a spicy Asian slaw. Maybe something like
Waldorf salad.
Desserts. I can think of tons. A really good poundcake, with maybe a
berry compote, or a dried fruit compote served alongside. Or to take
a tip from Chez Panisse, an almond cake served with the above. A tart
or pie... I love tarts, so those might be my choice-maybe a fruit
tart, or a lemon tart. Something chocolate... A pudding of sorts...
All this would depend on how much of clientele there was. I would
think starting small would be smart..with maybe only a very few
selections. Then, as the customer base grew, start adding more, and
more things that need to be eaten soon.
Oh, and I was thinking (since I love appetizers myself) an appetizer
station!!
So, you guys wanna play along on my theoretical exercise?
Christine
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http://nightstirrings.blogspot.com