the_traveler
Engineer
You have that wrong! On most trains, there is only a chef downstairs!But I admit I don't know how busy the chef and his assistant are in the diners these days.
You have that wrong! On most trains, there is only a chef downstairs!But I admit I don't know how busy the chef and his assistant are in the diners these days.
Great post Henry.. totally agree... the Veggie Burger is by far the best bet for lunch in the diner.The Acela first class menu sounds very appealing to me -- but I can understand why it might not attract the steak-and-potatoes, burgers-and-fries folks. Still, it's smart of Amtrak to market this cuisine to the sophisticated business-suit crowd that rides Acela First.
Sometimes the vegetarian items can be pretty good. On the western trains I now prefer the Veggieburger (chipotle, corn and black bean patty) to the Amburger for lunch in the dining car. I wish the bun were of better quality, though. It's enormous and the calories are empty.
My big dislike is the dinner salad -- usually a few meager shreds of iceberg lettuce and one lousy plum tomato, and sometimes a couple of croutons. If they could add another variety of lettuce plus a cucumber slice and a spoonful of shredded carrots that would be an improvement. But I admit I don't know how busy the chef and his assistant are in the diners these days.
Nana's lasagna was tasty (my sister taught my wife how to make it - noodles, fresh ricotta, whole milk mozzarella, sausage, miniature meatballs, meat sauce, Parmesan cheese, sauce cooked with the sausages and meatballs to absorb their flavor, etc. To die for! Of course with those fats and calories, I probably will soon die but I'll die happy.Concur. The lasagna is just plain lasagna and it's pretty tasty.4 cheese lasagna is an "exotic yuppie" thing?But with 4 choices, for example, one could be more middle of the road rather than some exotic yuppie thing.
caesar salad with chicken?
Unless your getting on at WAS. You will most likely not be served dinner. Not saying it's not possible I've seen it happen for a lesser ride. (See later in post) The meals can not be served "to go" as they are premade in china and they have nothing to put them in. If you are served dinner eat fast! :lol: Like 150 MPH fast! :lol: (sorry couldn't resist) :help: Once I was on 2172 from WAS-PHL and someone was traveling FC from WAS to BAL. Not only was I puzzled on why she went FC for such a short distance but she was offered a meal and turned it down!!I'll be riding the Acela next month but only for about 35 minutes.
I think I need to get my dinner to go.
Nope! Depends on the passenger loads. If the train is running half empty, then there will only be a cook in the kitchen. But on a train that is 3/4ths to full, there will be an assistant chef. They'll also get an extra Service Attendant, aka waiter.You have that wrong! On most trains, there is only a chef downstairs!But I admit I don't know how busy the chef and his assistant are in the diners these days.An exception is the EB (and maybe the AT).
Hate to disagree with the Guru Alan but I have NEVER seen more than One Chef or "Extra" Waiter on the Texas Eagles and those Trains are Selling Out/Running Full most days! Not to say it hasnt happened but in my 200+ Trips on the Eagles I haven't experienced it! Hope this continues, maybe we can get back to a Reasonable Staffing Level for OBS one of the days if the "Experts" in Congress quit micro-managing Amtrak! :help:Nope! Depends on the passenger loads. If the train is running half empty, then there will only be a cook in the kitchen. But on a train that is 3/4ths to full, there will be an assistant chef. They'll also get an extra Service Attendant, aka waiter.You have that wrong! On most trains, there is only a chef downstairs!But I admit I don't know how busy the chef and his assistant are in the diners these days.An exception is the EB (and maybe the AT).
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