Dinner buffet restaurants.
Discussion
Following on from the breakfast buffet thread. What are your views on these places? A bit council? Decent place to try a bit of everything?
Strategies?
They seem to have taken off massively over the past decade or so. Maybe it's the downturn in the economy? Somewhere a family of four can get their fill for under £50?
I live in Manchester and we have Tops and Red Hot Buffet which offer Indian, Chinese and English food. We've also got various Chinese buffets. On the outskirts of town are Indian buffets.
Strategies?
They seem to have taken off massively over the past decade or so. Maybe it's the downturn in the economy? Somewhere a family of four can get their fill for under £50?
I live in Manchester and we have Tops and Red Hot Buffet which offer Indian, Chinese and English food. We've also got various Chinese buffets. On the outskirts of town are Indian buffets.
I don't mind them. Quick, cheap and fast.
The Chinese buffet I go to in Chinatown has steamed dim sum, sushi, fresh roasted duck and char siu pork, a teppanyaki hotplate plus all the usual stuff you get.
There is also a decent indian buffet on the outskirts of Manchester (Nawaab) if anyone knows it. Lots of choice and grill chefs who will do lamb chops, kebabs and fresh breads while you wait.
The Chinese buffet I go to in Chinatown has steamed dim sum, sushi, fresh roasted duck and char siu pork, a teppanyaki hotplate plus all the usual stuff you get.
There is also a decent indian buffet on the outskirts of Manchester (Nawaab) if anyone knows it. Lots of choice and grill chefs who will do lamb chops, kebabs and fresh breads while you wait.
hyphen said:
KungFuPanda said:
On the outskirts of town are Indian buffets.
The one on Stockport Road opened a branch on the outskirt of London. Went to it and wasn't very good.Gassing Station | Food, Drink & Restaurants | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff