EvA wrote:We spent a lovely weekend in Green Lake. On our B&B innkeeper's recommendation, we went for Friday night fish fry to 680 North, the restaurant at Tuscumbia Country Club. It's a very attractive space, sort of log-cabin modern, which is better looking than it sounds. Alas, we arrived too late (7:45) for the lake perch, but their fried walleye was excellent. Waffle fries, per Cabbagehead's report, were very good. My potato pancakes were flavorful but a little flabby--I like mine crisper. Soups were respectable. But they were out of all desserts!
EvA - good work scoring a reservation at Tuscumbia. Those in the know seem to think it BY FAR the best dinner option in the area.
I've been going to Green Lake to my friend's cottage for many years, and went to Harvest Days (typically, the last weekend of September) this year. We didn't feel like cooking, and unfortunately, it seems that restaurant quality across the board has been going down. The town took a huge hit during the depths of the Great Recession. It seems to have come back, if home building is any indication, but I couldn't help thinking that Mark Sheild's maxim, "A rising tide floats all yachts" seems to be the basis for any recovery there. There are a lot more huge houses than cabins now, and it's hard to find a good burger.
This state of affairs may be about something else. I'm wondering if people who live there full-time (and most visitors) tend to go in for a "big night out." There used to be a French bistro right on Main Street, but it's a thing of the past. There used to be a cafe on Main Street for baked goods and coffee drinks, but they are a real estate office now. I guess I am kind of undercutting my premise by complaining about the disappearance of lattes and bistros, but I really don't want prime rib every night.
Norton's is a supper club that you can visit by boat. They have a cool curved bar and you can get a prime rib if you want, but is really overpriced for what it is. That said, the walleye was OK. Adam's Rib (right in town) used to be pretty good, with excellent hash browns, but has gone downhill. Grey Rock at the Heidel House has never been good in my experience. Avoid the Goose Blind. The best of the casual places in town is The Little Corporal - a standard coffee shop for just what you would expect, including Ice Cream. The best casual dinner spot is Reilly's Pub in Markesan. We had an OK fish fry there. I might go with a burger on future visits. My favorite bites of the weekend were the street brat and caramel apple I ate at the Harvest Days fair.
My advice is to get your groceries in Fond du Lac or before you leave home. The local Green Lake grocery has really skewed and limited options and the produce was all wilted. If you want to do food excursions, there is a good meat market in a nearby town called Brandon. Soda's Farm Market (on the far end of Green Lake away from town near the Baptist Camp) is a place where you can pick up pumpkins and great local produce while you munch on Dill Pickle Chips. Once I bought a huge antique tablecloth there, and my friend took home a kitten from one of the family's recent litters.
Man : I can't understand how a poet like you can eat that stuff.
T. S. Eliot: Ah, but you're not a poet.