Pita Palace Restaurant Review – Druid Hills, Atlanta, GA [First Impressions]

Posted by foodiebuddha on August 12, 2010

pita palace - as the spit turns

It’s 3 o’clock in the afternoon and beads of sweat drip down my forehead.  I find myself standing in the parking lot of the Druid Hills Whole Foods and my eyes are locked in across the street.  Anyone with good sense would know that the personal shower was due to the hellish-like temperatures of an Atlanta summer.  In most any other case, they’d be right.  However, there is an exception to every rule and this was just one of those situations.

In this instance, I was feeling the pressure.  Smack dab across the street from that WF is the long standing Pita Palace.  Though anything but palatial, the Palace has withstood nearly 7-years of economic turmoil and remained one of the more popular places for ATLiens to grab them some shwarma (aka gyros).

Being the good foodie that I am, I knew I was obligated to cross the street for another one of my “not so” first impressions.  Questionable personal safety combined with Whole Foods sushi in the belly made me apprehensive.  Not only did I need to make it across Lavista alive, I need to find someway to cram more food into my stomach.  With Fünke at my side, the two of us darted across the Lavista on our way to take on Israel’s take on street food!

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Falafel King Restaurant Review – Emory, Atlanta, GA [First Impressions] 2

Posted by foodiebuddha on February 07, 2010

Falafel King by babythekitten.As I hobble through life with a Droid as my sole camera, it’s time for another one of my first impressions that really isn’t a first impression.  Falafel King sits on the Emory campus just off the junction of Oxford and N. Decatur.  Though it’s purveyors are of Korean lineage, this shack sized, spit using restaurant actually sells the oddly married cuisines of Japan (in this case sushi) and the Mediterranean.  This odd mish mash of grub, combined with a distinct facade (displayed at right by babythekitten) and pocket book friendly prices, helps to draw customers from areas well beyond Emory.

In many circles, the King is treated as royalty.  The reality is closer to something more understated; however, for a place that freshly pats down their chickpea mixture, they do just fine.

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