zebra90 said:
Jailhouse BBQ in the 70's
On Fourth street, just a few blocks from the business school. Grabbed a few sandwiches there after class on my way back to the Quad (around 1974 - 76)
zebra90 said:
Jailhouse BBQ in the 70's
yessir - mid 80's.bularry said:dave714 said:
Steak and ale
Fine dining circa 1988
It started with all you can eat for $.98.chorne68 said:
Laverders...All you could eat for $3.00. I used to leave sick I ate so much. This was in the mid 60's.
These were all after my time, but Mazzios was never a favorite of mine.StacyLynn624 said:
I got all the way to page 8, and no one said Mazzio's?
We used to go to Mazzio's for pizza after Baylor games when I was a kid in the 80s/early 90's. It wasn't the best pizza in the world, but it was good. Mainly, I have great memories of going to games at FCS, eating at Mazzio's, then heading back home to Dallas.
All the ones I remember from when I was in college were already named: Johnny Carino's (my husband and I went there every week it seemed like), El Chico, Campeche Bakery, the Hilton restaurant.
I only went to Cathay House once in College and wanted to go back, but sounds like that's not a good idea these days. Too bad. It was delicious.
Mazzios???? wow it must have really gone downhill by the late 90s.StacyLynn624 said:
I got all the way to page 8, and no one said Mazzio's?
We used to go to Mazzio's for pizza after Baylor games when I was a kid in the 80s/early 90's. It wasn't the best pizza in the world, but it was good. Mainly, I have great memories of going to games at FCS, eating at Mazzio's, then heading back home to Dallas.
All the ones I remember from when I was in college were already named: Johnny Carino's (my husband and I went there every week it seemed like), El Chico, Campeche Bakery, the Hilton restaurant.
I only went to Cathay House once in College and wanted to go back, but sounds like that's not a good idea these days. Too bad. It was delicious.
It was slightly more edible than Cici'scowboycwr said:Mazzios???? wow it must have really gone downhill by the late 90s.StacyLynn624 said:
I got all the way to page 8, and no one said Mazzio's?
We used to go to Mazzio's for pizza after Baylor games when I was a kid in the 80s/early 90's. It wasn't the best pizza in the world, but it was good. Mainly, I have great memories of going to games at FCS, eating at Mazzio's, then heading back home to Dallas.
All the ones I remember from when I was in college were already named: Johnny Carino's (my husband and I went there every week it seemed like), El Chico, Campeche Bakery, the Hilton restaurant.
I only went to Cathay House once in College and wanted to go back, but sounds like that's not a good idea these days. Too bad. It was delicious.
I went there once and it was like cardboard with a little pizza sauce and some cheese on it.
I disagree. I went back to Cici's multiple times during college.trey3216 said:It was slightly more edible than Cici'scowboycwr said:Mazzios???? wow it must have really gone downhill by the late 90s.StacyLynn624 said:
I got all the way to page 8, and no one said Mazzio's?
We used to go to Mazzio's for pizza after Baylor games when I was a kid in the 80s/early 90's. It wasn't the best pizza in the world, but it was good. Mainly, I have great memories of going to games at FCS, eating at Mazzio's, then heading back home to Dallas.
All the ones I remember from when I was in college were already named: Johnny Carino's (my husband and I went there every week it seemed like), El Chico, Campeche Bakery, the Hilton restaurant.
I only went to Cathay House once in College and wanted to go back, but sounds like that's not a good idea these days. Too bad. It was delicious.
I went there once and it was like cardboard with a little pizza sauce and some cheese on it.
dave714 said:
Lone star tavern in bellmead.
zebra90 said:
Jailhouse BBQ in the 70's
Pecos 45 said:
Not an "eatery" but a short-lived, but very popular club in downtown Waco was the Red Dog Saloon. I saw Willie Nelson there in 1974, and they also had Ray Wylie Hubbard and all the "outlaws" of the early 70s.
The owner was Stan Farr, who was shot and killed at Priscilla Davis' house the night T. Cullen Davis came in and killed two people, then got away with it when a jury set him free.
And this was decades before O.J. Simpson.
Red Dog Saloon was in the "refurbished" downtown Waco area. In the 70s they tried to remake downtown, and it was there.PartyBear said:Pecos 45 said:
Not an "eatery" but a short-lived, but very popular club in downtown Waco was the Red Dog Saloon. I saw Willie Nelson there in 1974, and they also had Ray Wylie Hubbard and all the "outlaws" of the early 70s.
The owner was Stan Farr, who was shot and killed at Priscilla Davis' house the night T. Cullen Davis came in and killed two people, then got away with it when a jury set him free.
And this was decades before O.J. Simpson.
Where was the Red Dog Saloon?
Does anyone remember a bbq place on Austin Ave near 7th called Fats Brick Pit around 1984/85? It only lasted about a year. A different time for a place like that down town than it is now.
YES! Best margaritas and mexican food. I spent a whole summer eating and drinking there...WacoKelly83 said:
Italian Village
Was this Frank's? I remember it was a sandwich place that became something else.notbubbleboy said:
So I have this data point recollection of this sandwich place on campus. Mid 70's. Corner of James and 5th, kind of where there was later an ATM and maybe the PD station. All I remember was eating a grilled cheese there. Further up 5th was Baylor Records, and of course Baylor Drug Store.
notbubbleboy said:
So I have this data point recollection of this sandwich place on campus. Mid 70's. Corner of James and 5th, kind of where there was later an ATM and maybe the PD station. All I remember was eating a grilled cheese there. Further up 5th was Baylor Records, and of course Baylor Drug Store.
tombeaux said:
Not a restaurant, but several times we showed up late at night at the bread bakery near one of the bridges over the railroad tracks. You went to the back door and for a quarter, they would bring you an unsliced loaf in a brown paper bag, hot out of the oven. Crack it open, let some butter melt on it, and enjoy!