Something for those that travel...
#6
  Re: (...)
I found this interesting. It was from Forbes Magazine originally...

America's Best Restaurant Cities
These are the places where foodies go to town

Twenty years ago it would have been difficult to call more than a handful of American cities “great restaurant towns.” There were New York and New Orleans, of course, and Los Angeles, Chicago, and San Francisco were pretty exciting, too. But after that the list got lean with cities that had many good restaurants, but not enough depth and innovation in fine dining, and not enough breadth in ethnic and regional food categories.

Today, however, most major cities in the U.S. have the kind of gastronomic diversity and regionality that is rich in every department, and even if you’ve visited recently, you can be sure that next time you go, there’ll be more new and enticing restaurants than you could possibly visit.

If only in numbers, New York still has the muscle for bragging rights, with more than 23,000 restaurants (most of them run-of-the-mill). More important, NYC attracts a vast number of national and international visitors — 35 million last year — who come with plenty of money and the intention of spending it at the city’s best-known restaurants, from grand French dining rooms like Daniel and Le Bernardin to notoriously out-of-the-way steakhouses like Peter Luger’s. And it is still the only city in America where lunch is taken seriously and can still be a two-hour affair. Indeed, The Four Seasons, which opened in 1959, was where the term “power lunch” was coined. It is also worth noting that the first U.S. city honored with a Michelin Red Guide from France was the Big Apple.

By breaking through the formality of dining out — most evident at Wolfgang Puck’s pizzeria-and-grill Spago — Los Angeles restaurants owned the 1980s, and the concept of California cuisine and casual chic had a tremendous effect on the way Americans — and later the world — would eat. As Michael McCarty, owner of the ground-breaking Franco-Southern Cal restaurant Michael’s in Santa Monica, said, “California cuisine wasn’t really about mini-vegetables and baby lamb; it was about style.”

But America’s great foodie town is San Francisco where, since its Barbary Coast days, Asian immigrants came to cook, bringing the West Coast a tantalizing and diverse Eastern food culture. Over in Berkeley, a former Montessori teacher named Alice Waters revolutionized American cooking by asking why cooking ingredients weren’t as good as in Europe, and Chez Panisse was born from that simple idea.

You’d think that Chicago’s Midwestern swagger would make it a meat- and-potatoes town, but as America’s most majestic, wide-open, best-designed city, it’s also central to American gastronomy, from innovations like the salad bar at R.J. Grunt’s and hip tapas bars like Café Ba-Ba-Reeba! to some of the best Mexican food in the U.S. at Topolobampo and Frontera Grill. It’s a lot more fun to eat out in Chi-town than almost anywhere else.

Hurricane Katrina wreaked enormous havoc on New Orleans’ restaurants, not so much by washing them away as by destroying their electricity and refrigeration for weeks, and by displacing their kitchen and service staffs far beyond the city limits. As Tom Fitzmorris in his New Orleans Menu newsletter has chronicled, the city is back to having about as many restaurants now open — close to 900 — as when Katrina hit. That so many have reopened is as much a testament to the people’s spirit as to their belief that good food offers strength and calms the soul so that they can, again, let the good times roll.

Ten years ago, Las Vegas would hardly rank among the top 30 cities in the United States for good food. But an explosion (in some cases implosion) of casinos in the late 1990s brought Sin City a whole new form of decadence in dauntingly expensive restaurants culled from other cities. Wolfgang Puck opened a Spago and other restaurants there, Emeril Lagasse a fish house, Piero Selvaggio a branch of Valentino’s, and others upped the culinary ante almost overnight. Then, two years ago, Steve Wynn changed the dynamic with city-based, original restaurants at his Wynn Las Vegas, including the very posh Alex and the extraordinary Italian ristorante Bartolotta.

Houston has a range of winning restaurants, from the nation’s finest and most elegantly modern Italian ristorante, Tony’s , to Robert Del Grande’s Café Annie, where New Texas cuisine took hold, and Américas which pioneered Nuevo Latino food in this country. .One of the best places to get the most important meal of the day is the funky Breakfast Klub, where the irresistible specialty is waffles and chicken wings.

And the new action in Atlanta is in Midtown, whether it’s for great Southern fried chicken at the South City Kitchen, terrific Greek seafood at Kyma or for sheer fun, the famous hot dogs at The Varsity, a beloved old cafeteria with signature hot dogs.

Washington, D.C., restaurants cater to lobbyists and lawyers who like to show their mettle in big ways at showy restaurants like the innovative CityZen in the Mandarin Oriental and Ten Penh downtown as well as historic places like the 1789 Restaurant in Georgetown. The city is also home to the finest classic Spanish restaurant in the U.S., Taberna Alabardero.

Boston has more than enough affluence to fuel expense-account restaurants with national reputations, like L’Espalier, No. 9 Park and The Federalist. Of course there’s also the waterfront and Faneuil Hall for tourists delighted by the no-nonsense, old fashioned New England cooking served comunally at Durgin Park,opened in 1827. Cross the river to Cambridge and you can feast on ethnic food from the Middle Eastern Oleana to the new Asian-inspired Om ($100).

It’s getting hard not to have a great meal anywhere in the U.S. Read on to find a ranked list of the best restaurant towns in the United States, and where to eat when you're visiting.

Rankings for the 10 best restaurant cities in the U.S. are based on:

1. Overall number of restaurants above the fast food level.

2. Number of fine dining restaurants with national and international standing.

3. Solid representation of regional American food.

4. A wide segment of second-tier restaurants that would include seafood, steakhouses, and independently chef-owned restaurants.

5. Breadth and depth of ethnic restaurants, especially if the city has a neighborhood such as a Chinatown.

6. A significant number of neighborhood restaurants where the locals tend to eat out regularly.

7. A well-traveled clientele that regards eating out in that city one of the real pleasures of going there. Prices reflect an average three-course dinner for two before wine, tax and tip.

Places to visit and see for the "true foodie." I hope I am not the only one that plans vacations around restaurants???
"Ponder well on this point: the pleasant hours of our life are all connected, by a more or less tangible link, with some memory of the table."-Charles Pierre Monselet, French author(1825-1888)
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#7
  Re: Something for those that travel... by firechef (I found this interes...)
Thank you Firechef, great article. It is funny you know, we find the greatest restaurants in the oddest out of the places, people who have taken over the library, or, old council building. There may only be a main street, and resto. in the tiny towns still there, but they are well patronised by locals who travel many miles to go there. I suppose it is the same in the US.
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#8
  Re: Something for those that travel... by firechef (I found this interes...)
I'm so glad you included Houston--I have raved about its range and number of quality restraunts for years. I'm not that well traveled but I would think Seattle would be somewhere close. We love it so.
"He who sups with the devil should have a. long spoon".
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#9
  Re: Something for those that travel... by firechef (I found this interes...)
What, Epping, NH wasn't mentioned here

Very interesting read, LJ, thanks for posting this!

PJ

And yes, any vacation I take is planned around food...
PJ
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#10
  Re: Re: Something for those that travel... by pjcooks (What, Epping, NH was...)
" I hope I am not the only one that plans vacations around restaurants??? " - far, far from it, I'm sure. Food pictures are about the only ones we take on adventures now, also!
Retired and having fun writing cookbooks, tasting wine and sharing recipes with all my friends.
www.achefsjourney.com
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