dicksond wrote:Manny's is more than a bit of anachronism. It is a style of restaurant (the cafeteria) that I believe surfaced in the 20's and thrived through the 50's, after which it has slowly disappeared because its primary advantage, being fast, was taken over by a whole other group of places. Of course, you find cafeterias here and there, but they are usually old, graying and look like they're on their last legs.
Common among all of them is that the food is not very good.
dicksond wrote:And the food, while never the absolute best of anything, is always good, plentiful and served with a nice side of attitude.
dicksond wrote:Jim, as to the cafeteria being more common in Indiana and the south, I suppose that is true. As to the food being normally very good in cafeterias, you will need to go some to convince me of that, but I stand ready to be convinced!
Vital Information wrote:Great roast beef tops their offerings.
Vital Information wrote:Things I especially like: the smelts
David Hammond wrote:Vital Information wrote:Things I especially like: the smelts
VI,
The only time I had smelts at Manny's was during the 24-hour Chowathon, and I was (I thought justly) castigated by Justjoan for ordering something like that at Manny's. The problem (or so I thought) was that they were fried, and then set to sit behind the glass until someone ordered them. As I recall, they were served at room temperature. Fresh out of the fryer, I'm sure they'd be fine...but how do you do that at Manny's.
Anyhow, I think Manny's is deserving of recognition and would like to see them get a GNR placard.
Hammond
stevez wrote:Almost any post I make about Manny's talks about the short ribs. Since my Grandmother died, I've yet to find a better version.
gleam wrote:Manny's is maybe not the best of its kind in the country, and maybe not even the best pastrami, corned beef, or roast beef sandwich in the city, but it's still one of my favorite places. I'll take a sandwich at manny's over a sandwich at Zingerman's any day, even with Zingerman's rye and a dessert of chocolate sourdough.
Being able to sit and eat a pastrami sandwich surrounded by two old men talking about life as only old men can; a tableful of cops; a tableful of lawyers; and a rail-thin woman putting away a massive corned beef sandwich and a bowl of soup is an experience of which I'll never tire.
And it's always a lot of fun bringing new people there -- especially those who've spent minimal time in big cities.
Vital Information wrote:As an aside, where would you say had better corned beef sammy's?
gleam wrote:Vital Information wrote:As an aside, where would you say had better corned beef sammy's?
I haven't -- I'm not a real corned beef person. Hence "maybe"
I suspect you can find others who will argue both sides of that maybe
Kman wrote:Jake's is great and all, no argument here, but if we are now comparing Manny's to Jake's it would seem the continuing expansion of what makes a Great Neighborhood Restaurant simply knows no bounds. I still consider Wisconsin a friendly neighbor to the north, but fairly certain that doesn't place it in my neighborhood.
Choey wrote:I thought Ed was just showing a winsome enthusiasm for life's nuance and contingency....
Choey
Diner and flâneur
Mike G wrote:But the joy of Manny's transcends the individual dish. It is one of the city's great meeting-points, of different cultures (machers, city workers, tourists, kids, retirees) on the common ground of food, and also of past (Maxwell Street, Jewtown, 20th century cafeteria dining) with present (the ongoing spread of Yuppieville).
Mike G wrote:......and based not just on my ongoing affection but on the meal only recently picked from my teeth, I affirm that it is, as Talking Heads would say, same as it ever was.