Review: The Franklin Tap House and Eatery, Ponsonby
Ponsonby newcomer kicks off to a strong start.
Ponsonby newcomer kicks off to a strong start.
We came here because my brother-in-law and his wife were housesitting close by and had made this their local for a few weeks. They were big fans, so we came to find out what the fuss was about.
The first and last time I saw Tristan, we were both stoned as chooks.
I don't mourn Cin Cin because its spirit has been dead so long.
It wasn't just the summer rain slicing through the street lights and pelting on the grey asphalt that made me think, for a moment, that I was in New York.
We came here because one of my regular brunch companions goes past this newish cafe and thought it looked worth investigating.
I'm beginning to consider the possibility that I don't like my friends.
An established restaurant gets its core ingredient mostly right but seemingly at the expense of others.
A Viaduct restaurant provides a convincing combination of meals from all Southeast Asia.
We came here because we'd heard good things of this newish cafe.
An Auckland icon in a prime locale doesn't quite make the most of its assets.
It's a bit of a hoot that the word "delicatessen" comes from the Germans.
We came here because we'd heard the Pumphouse theatre's cafe had changed hands and it was a lovely day to enjoy the lake.
The message about locally sourced, seasonal ingredients has been hammered so repetitively that you almost wish a restaurant offer winter greens from Uzbekistan in February. Almost.
We came here because Divan has an all-day breakfast menu so we could pretend it was morning as we sat down to our first meal.
An old story goes that the guides in the Uffizi, the fabulous Renaissance gallery in Florence, would quietly remind visitors that "it is not the paintings that are on trial here".
Tucked away behind K Rd, a stylish wine bar provides a night to remember.
Isn't Mission Bay a perfect example of the urban seaside? Rangitoto smiles - or in bad weather, glowers - and the wind scoops white-tops across the harbour surface. So why is it the place that good food forgot?
We came here because we often stop for some of their great takeaway coffee en route to the train station at the south end of the Mall and have been meaning to come back for a sit-down meal for a while.
A few tweaks are needed to make this eatery a fiesta of flavour.
An unusual combination of Italian and Iranian, in a Ponsonby eatery, gets the chilli just right.
Regular readers of my restaurant reviews have probably worked out that the Professor is not a shrinking violet.
Here are a few choices to help you decide on where to brunch with the young ones.