Saturday, March 27, 2010

2nd Day Qualifying or Bump Day???

I am going down for Pole day and am wondering if I should stay over for day 2 qualifying or go down for Bump day. Since there are more entries this year than in the last few - Bump day might be worthwhile. What do you think??



2nd Day Qualifying or Bump Day???


Bump day can be exciting or a bust depending on entries, weather conditions, and other variables. I would maybe look at 10 day weather forecasts before you decide. Do you have the flexibility to make up your mind at the end of pole day? That might help. I%26#39;m sure more worthy race fans will have better advice. Have fun. There%26#39;s excitement in the air this year for the 500.



2nd Day Qualifying or Bump Day???


Good advice - I can decide on pole day whether to stay over or not. Yes - I agree - will be great race this year!




I agree with the weather idea but i would look at day 2 first. At this time there are only 32 car/driver combo%26#39;s. At most I see 35, which coould make for a litle excitement on Bump Day




I am hoping that there will be a lot of ';last minute deals'; :)




same here. If there isn%26#39;t much bumbing there should be plenty of teams running race setups with different loads of fuel. Of course IRL has limited the sets of tires so los of teams will be conserving. Also the two or three ';bubble'; cars might be searching for more speed jus in case. If you can try to get a Garage Pass. It%26#39;s fun to see the teams that were close to get knocked out celebrating. It%26#39;s equally humbling, and you feel sorry, to see the teams that missed




A Gargae Pass would be nice, but I couldn%26#39;t bear to see the teams that didn%26#39;t make it in. Who knows - maybe I%26#39;ll just go to all three days. The longer it rains, the more action there will be this weekend!

Restaurants Downtown Indianapolis

I%26#39;m looking for advice for a good restaurant in downtown Indianapolis.





We are having a dinner with local friends from northern Indiana with three generations coming from California. We don%26#39;t want a real expensive dinner and we also don%26#39;t want a ';beer joint';- a fun atmosphere with good service and good food. A ';Good midwestern restaurant that we will remember';





We prefer to be able to make a reservation because there will be 7 of us.





We are staying downtown and want something close by.





Please rank your top 3 recommendations that meet the above requests.





Thanks,





Steve from San Diego



Restaurants Downtown Indianapolis


Steve:





Let%26#39;s see -- 7 peeps from a wide range of ages, not too expensive but not a dive, fun, downtown, with reservations . . .





I don%26#39;t want to make this complicated after your reasonable and sane request to rank order 3 places. But since I%26#39;m not sure if some of your group are kids or old folk and ';expensive'; means different things to different people, it%26#39;s a touch hard to rank them or narrow it to three.





Based on your criteria, the one place that comes immediately to mind is the Rathskellar. It%26#39;s a German place with terrific food. They also have a nightly ';Bier Garten'; with live music in the summer. It%26#39;s a very cool place. You%26#39;d definitely remember it, though I%26#39;m not sure you%26#39;d say it was brimming with midwestern charm.





After that, it%26#39;s kind of hard to say . . .





Shula%26#39;s Steakhouse is really great IMHO, but to me it%26#39;s expensive. Same thing for St Elmo%26#39;s Steakhouse, Morton%26#39;s Steakhouse, and Capital Grille. I have heard good things about Scholars Inn and 120 West. I%26#39;m a fan of Eagle%26#39;s Nest on top of the Hyatt Regency hotel, which revolves and is fantastic at night. Good food, but pricey and a little formal. Dunaways is a local place specializing in seafood, might be pricy. I wouldn%26#39;t call any of these places ';fun.'; Jillian%26#39;s is fun, but may not be right for older folk. There%26#39;s also a Hard Rock Cafe.





After that, I think you%26#39;re probably looking at chain places like Weber Grill, Palomino, Champps, Rock Bottom, Buca di Beppo, etc. If everyone is drinking age, the Claddagh Irish Pub would be a good choice. Here%26#39;s a link to help you out. It shows menus with pricing.





americascuisine.com/indiana/鈥?/a>





Here%26#39;s another link:



http://indianapolis.diningguide.com/dl1dt.htm



Restaurants Downtown Indianapolis


The area along (or just off) Massachusetts Ave. (the northeast part of downtown) has a good assortment of local restaurants - so many places down by Circle Center ar chains. Rathskellar as already mentioned for German food (on Michigan), Amici%26#39;s for Italian (E. New York), Chatham Tap or MacNiven%26#39;s for English/pub food (both with great selections of beers and scotches), or R Bistro or Scholars Inn (a bit more expensive). To be honest, not sure which if any take reservations.




Thanks for the advice.





The ages of our group are





85, 82, 51, 51, 48, 40 %26amp; 28





Eliminating the steakhouses because the older people don%26#39;t want to spend that kind of money and eliminating the restaurants that primarily focus on Beer (beer is ok, but we are looking for good food %26amp; atmosphere over Beer) then I think we are focused on an average tab of about $22-30.





With this feedback would you be able to give your top choices?





What do you think of the restaurant ';Ram';





thanks




In the $25 range, you are going to principally be looking at the microbreweries such as Ram, Rock Bottom, and Alcatraz or a pub, all depending on how much you want to drink. All of the above have reasonable priced entrees and sandwiches, salads, etc. Of the microbreweries, I am partial to Rock Bottom, but Ram is good as well, I%26#39;ve not been to Alcatraz in a long time. Of the pubs, I would go for The Claddagh or McNivens.




Just visited a RAM in Tacoma (a pretty large chain), and used to like to have lunch at the one in downtown Indy. It%26#39;s a very good restaurant, catering to a wide range of tastes at a decent price (well within your range).





Scotty%26#39;s Brewhouse is a slightly more pub-food oriented place, but on a par with RAM, and is locally owned. It was my wife and my favorite of that type in Indy. It%26#39;s most definitely unique to Indiana - starting in the college towns, seeking out the ';higher end college dining market'; ...




Steve: With that criteria, I%26#39;d recommend Weber Grill, Rock Bottom, or Ram. Rock Bottom and Ram are kind of beer-focused, Weber Grill not so much. Food is good at all of them, good variety, and within your price range.




Agree with most of the comments above (not at all a fan of the Rathskellar, other than its GREAT bar - the best in Indy IMO).





However, ... Indy is WAY too chain oriented. We%26#39;ve gotta support the local guys who create a dining experience unique to Indianapolis/Indiana; or face and even more complete takeover of the restaurant scene by just another version of someone else%26#39;s hometown restaurant.





I%26#39;m not sayin%26#39; ignore the excellent chain places (Palomino, Sullivan%26#39;s, Morton%26#39;s) or the very good ones (RAM, Mo%26#39;s, Weber Grill, Alcatraz) or even the good ones (Oceannaire, Rock Bottom, Buca di Beppo, PF Changs, Champps, etc.). But the local guys struggling to compete and to survive in the sea of sameness deserve strong support - so long as you think they bring quality and service to the table. For example Harry and Izzy%26#39;s, St. Elmo, Peterson%26#39;s in Fishers, Ambrosia in Broad Ripple, Mateo%26#39;s in Noblesville, Brix in Zionsville, Scotty%26#39;s Brewhouse - downtown and Carmel, etc. Personally, I%26#39;d eat at ANY of those local restaurants before choosing to go to ANY chain restaurant, because they%26#39;re GREAT places to eat and they were born in Indiana, created by Hoosiers.





What makes Indianapolis a great city are the things that make it different. Having such a large proportion of chain restaurants makes us look unoriginal. We need to support the originals - particularly in places like this. I mean, WE HAVE GREAT LOCAL RESTAURANTS. We should passionately support them.





... end of rant.




O.K. - that was a little over the top, I should have sent private messages instead of posting here, and had a private, interactive discussion with you all. All are excellent contributors here (Indpls Traveler even seems to only recommend non-chains) ...





Sorry about that.




When you say ';avarage tab $22-30'; what does that include? If you are willing to pay that for an entree and no apps, drinks or desserts then check out places like Harry and Izzys or restaraunts on Mass Ave.




Dave- I was totally with you on that. No need to apologize imho. Of course I go to chain places %26amp; enjoy them, but local is the way to go when you can. And promoting local places is good. I guess my 3 favorite local places downtown are:



Yats



Bazbeaux



R Bistro





All conveniently located on Mass Ave. Not sure if these fit the bill for you erparadise or not. R Bistro strives to use local, seasonal ingredients, but might be a little pricey if your per person tab of $25.00 includes drinks, apps, %26amp; dessert.





SB2


  • blackheads
  • heaing to Shipshewana in June

    Wondering is there are any places that do those old time portraits, but with Amish clothes?



    There will be three kids along, looking for ideas and something different-out of the norm to do, see or eat.



    Any good bulk food places?



    heaing to Shipshewana in June


    E %26amp; S Sales is an awesome bulk food place. I get all of my baking goods there for Christmas cookies. It%26#39;s located on the main drag heading into Shipshewana. There are billboards around too for it.

    Race Day Directions

    Hi.



    I will be coming from the North (I-69) on race day. I plan on leaving about 5:30 am. I ususally go I-69 to Fall Creek to 16th Street to Parking Lot 2. Is this the best route or does anyone have a better way?





    SO looking forward to Indy this year!!



    Race Day Directions


    Yes, that%26#39;s the best route!





    Well, unless you%26#39;re comfortable taking side streets off 16th street to get around the traffic, and then try to skirt one of the barriers to get onto 10th street as near to Tibbs Rd. as you can - 10th Street will take you to lots south of the track directly south of the track, about a 20 minute walk from the south entrance. Quick in, even quicker out.





    But you have to be kind of a con man to get around the often times guarded traffic barricades on 10th St. - 10th is a bus/escorted VIP route (or at least WAS for 25 years - haven%26#39;t been to the race in the last 2 years, they could have changed their traffic routing).





    It has worked for us every time, and has made getting to and from the race a breeze.



    Race Day Directions


    Maybe IndyOB or someone else will know whether or not 10th St. is still protected as a bus/escorted VIP route (once you%26#39;re on it, no one hassles you).




    I just heard on the local news that 10th street is under major construction, but I%26#39;m sorry to say I don%26#39;t have any details beyond that. Maybe someone else from the west side knows more.





    SB2




    Hmmm. Wonder what the bus/VIP route will be now?




    The 10th street exits off of I465 on the westside are a mess. 1oth from downtown to the track are ok. As far as bus service I don%26#39;t think anyone knows yet. IndyGo (the local bus service) has been told by the Feds that they cannot be used for shuttle service. Indianapolis is working with private carriers to pick up the slack.

    indy 500 festival parade

    Hi,



    looking to book tickets for the festival parade however a bit lost where to sit to get a good view.Grateful for any ideas. Thanks



    indy 500 festival parade


    All seats towards the top of the stands will give you a good view. The prime seats are on Pennsylvania between Vermont and North St (toward the parade route start.) It%26#39;s when the parade is actually timed well and there%26#39;s no gaps. Toward the end of the route it gets a little more out of step because of all of the balloons.





    You really can%26#39;t go wrong along the entire parade route. Again, top of the stands would be best.





    If you don%26#39;t want to book seats, I go every year early and sit near the curb on Meridian St. I%26#39;ve never had any problems seeing the parade.





    Enjoy!



    indy 500 festival parade


    Thanks for your reply,really looking forward to it now,will phone and see what tickets are available thanks again.




    Our son%26#39;s in the Purdue Marching Band and will be there for the first time in the parade. We won%26#39;t be going, but keep your eye out for the band and the world%26#39;s largest drum. Enjoy and welcome!




    As long as you have a seat, it sould be a good view. You might try to get a seat on The Circle though. The perfect place is under the awning at The Hilbert Circle theatre. That way in case there is any rain you%26#39;ll be covered.




    thanks again for all your input ,have found this forum great for planning all I have to sort out now is parking for the race and I am set.