By Sarah Tate
Feb 23, 2021
As restaurants and bars continue opening up and people begin venturing outside their homes more and more, many are deciding where to go first. Travel, museums, live shows. Before you can do any of that, you need to fuel up at a local restaurant. But where should you go?
Yelp gathered thousands of suggestions and reviews for restaurants around the country to determine which are the best places to eat in 2021. Three restaurants in Nashville made the cut.
Sindoore – Indian By Nature
With 4.5 stars and over 250 reviews, Sindoore – Indian By Nature was chosen as Number 34 on the list. They offer both indoor dining and carryout/curbside pickup as well as have increased health measures to ensure each customer feels safe while dining out. Some popular dishes include chicken tandoori, chicken tikka salad, butter chicken, malai kofta, and more.
Updated on February 18, 2021 at 7:45 am
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After landing on a popular restaurant rankings list for several consecutive years – including a San Diego food truck ranked No. 1 last year – not a single San Diego restaurant made the cut on Yelp’s “Top 100 Places to Eat in 2021.”
Yelp released its rankings Thursday here.
Absent from the list: any restaurants from San Diego County, a bit of a surprise since local eateries have landed on the list for the last few years and even topped it. D
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It can be easy to get into a rut when it comes to takeout.
For Super Bowl Sunday, maybe it’s time to try something new. Here are some of our favorites from North Haven and New Haven, down to East Haven, over to Old Saybrook, and up to Chester, Deep River, and Essex.
While many of these places are open and will be serving a full menu on game day, for the best shot at specials and the best selection, order as far in advance as possible.
If you have one you’d like to add that is in that area, email me with the details before Friday, Feb. 5 at 4 p.m., at p.mcnerney@shorepublishing.com, put Super Bowl in the message field, and we’ll try to get it in.
Getting food to the people who need it most during the pandemic has been a primary concern for many nonprofit organizations but what if the food being donated doesn t suit the needs of the people on the receiving end? That s the dilemma the Rocky Mountain Welcome Center was facing last spring and summer as the nonprofit s primary mission of helping immigrants and refugees integrate into new communities in metro Denver shifted to helping them simply survive the economic hardships created by the pandemic.
Jennifer Gueddiche, chief operating officer for the Welcome Center, says it wasn t enough to count on food banks and pantry donations to get food for the organization s clients, since many of them come from cultures where American staples are either unfamiliar or unsuitable for their religious and cultural requirements. Orthodox Christians and Muslims from Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti and Eritrea form a large part of the Welcome Center s clientele, so ensuring that halal meats, vege
Dining rooms and bars are where we gather to share good food and drink and good times with friends, family and neighbors. And while 2020 made gathering together difficult, restaurants are still here for us, whether we re able to eat their food inside, on a patio or in our own homes. Since eateries are doing everything they can to keep open and keep serving the dining community, we decided to move ahead with our annual Eat Here list of the 100 restaurants we can t live without – and hope we never have to.
Our list recognizes that greatness continues when and where we least expect it, and also serves as a thank you to the people cooking, serving, washing dishes, answering phones, delivering your food, enforcing the rules and making Denver a better city every day. Now get out and eat!