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Johnny Rockets has corporatized the quintessential 1950s-style diner, serving up burgers and fries with a side of retro shtick for nostalgic St. Louis diners. The 25-year-old chain boasts more than 300 outlets, including some on board Royal Caribbean cruise ships and inside Yankee Stadium. Squint and you can almost imagine you're on Happy Days with the Fonz; each restaurant is replete with red vinyl booths, checkered tiles, and servers in paper hats and bow ties who will draw a smiley face with your ketchup. Besides the burgers and fries, there are hand-dipped shakes and malts, onion rings, hot dogs, chili, and salads, because even in the 1950s, people counted calories. Johnny Rockets is easy to find on Voice Places.
Located in Lafayette Square along Park Avenue just a few steps east of Lafayette Park, Park Avenue Coffee features a large selection of coffee and espresso drinks and St. Louis's very own favorite dessert, gooey butter cake. The coffee all starts with locally roasted Chauvin Coffee beans and comes in a variety of drink options, including flavored mochas and lattes, a "Cubano" with raw sugar, or on ice as a caramel macchiato and Thai coffee with sweetened condensed milk. Park Avenue also serves blended frappicanos, teas and fruit smoothies with real fruit and nonfat yogurt. They offer a few bagels and other baked goods, but the real eats at Park Avenue begin and end with gooey butter cake, with more than 70 different flavors available for order, all beginning with eggs, butter, cream cheese and powdered sugar, and followed by several different fine-tuned flavors. Among the top-selling flavors Park Avenue offers are red velvet, white-chocolate blueberry and key lime, plus t
Red Lobster's all-you-can-eat menu has proven popular in St. Louis and other markets since the chain opened its first restaurant in Lakeland, Florida in 1968—because who doesn't want to pile shrimp, hush puppies, and crab's legs onto the same platter? Today Red Lobster claims to have seafood buyers stationed around the word in order to meet its ever-growing appetite (more than 600 restaurants and counting) for lobster, sole, swordfish and other varieties. It also proudly claims to have invented popcorn shrimp, and to have introduced many Americans to their first bite of calamari. Your local Red Lobster is easy to find on Voice Places.
Johnny Rockets has corporatized the quintessential 1950s-style diner, serving up burgers and fries with a side of retro shtick for nostalgic St. Louis diners. The 25-year-old chain boasts more than 300 outlets, including some on board Royal Caribbean cruise ships and inside Yankee Stadium. Squint and you can almost imagine you're on Happy Days with the Fonz; each restaurant is replete with red vinyl booths, checkered tiles, and servers in paper hats and bow ties who will draw a smiley face with your ketchup. Besides the burgers and fries, there are hand-dipped shakes and malts, onion rings, hot dogs, chili, and salads, because even in the 1950s, people counted calories. Johnny Rockets is easy to find on Voice Places.