Al’s is a diner, and its assets are statistics: a width of 10 square feet, 14 stools, 59 years. The line frequently winds out the door, mostly because of the limited dining space, but also because the patrons know it’s worth the wait. We had put this off until we had a good weekday morning to try it (weekend waits at Al’s are legendary), and Dave’s day off on Wednesday provided the perfect opportunity. Or so we thought: we showed up at 9 a.m. and waited for an hour. We suspect it was because it
Our rage was later soothed by the oh my god so delicious food. Dave ordered some scrambled eggs with ham and mushroom, Lizzie had the walnut blueberry pancakes. The food was great, the coffee was amazing. The staff was very entertaining, assumedly because yelling and making fun of each other makes working in a tiny space bearable. A shaggy server in hi
It’s hard to describe the Al’s atmosphere, perhaps because there’s so little space. But it’s crammed with cultural detritus, from yellowed photos to Minnesota State Fair memorabilia (including the recent Obama campaign sign reading “Change On A Stick”). The walls are the color of waffle batter, and we ate to the sounds of A Tribe Called Quest’s People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythms. We love you, breakfast. Stay in touch.
1 comment:
"And it did stand out: 72% rated the dog food as the worst-tasting pâté."
We're not lost yet. Also: very jealous of your breakfast.
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