2F - Tuesday, September 8, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandail cm 2F - Tuesday, September 8, 2009 The Michiaan Daily - michiaandailv.com ,1" t leml ii 0 SPTIHTO:ANG L Angelo's Restaurant, located on the corner of Glen Avenue and Catherine Street, has been an Ann Arbor staple since 1956. Angelo Vangelatos and his wife Patricia Verames opened the business a few years after Angelo arrived from Greece, and the restaurant has been bustling ever since. Angelo and Patricia's son Steve and his wife Jennifer run the eatery these days, and they are determined to keep the restaurant running the way it was originally run. Angelo's breakfast is so great it inspired a famous song by Dick Siegel. The song is played when restaurant's website loads, and patrons can purchase the album itself at the restaurant's cash register. "Eggs over easy, hash browns and toast" is what Dick chose to order, but you'll find plenty of other tummy-pleasing options there as well. The restaurant offers classics from French toast and scrambled eggs to more elaborate dishes like Crabby Benedict and pump- kin pancakes. The wide variety of food ensures that everybody will find something to his or her liking. The assortment is a big reason Angelo's has won Best Breakfast in Ann Arbor not only this year, but several times in the past. And with its devoted follow- ing that spans generations, it's obvious Angelo's is a mainstay in Ann Arbor. And what if you're on the run? Desperately need caffeine and a quick breakfast? Stop into Ange- lo's on the Side, a small coffee house/carry outbuilding attached to the restaurant. Grab a cappuc- cino, a pastry or your favorite meal in a convenient doggie bag. Angelo's on the Side is also a great place to pick up Angelo's famous homemade raisin bread. Be reminded, however, that if you're planning to visit Angelo's foratasty andtraditionalsit-down breakfast, pack your patience. The place is often packed by Ann Arborites and the line to get into the popular eatery is often out the door and around the corner. -CHELSEA LANDRY CHANEL VON HABSBURGLOTHRINGEN/Daily SPOTLIGHT ON: ASH LEY'S I don't really have to tell you this, because in your heart you already knowit:Ashley'siswhatabarissup- posed tobe. At Ashley's, patrons can find the finest of drinks, the closest of friends and - the deal-breaker - the most perfect of atmospheres. The heavenly joint's honey-brown and milk-chocolaty hues, weath- ered brick walling and hazy lights all blanket guests in a fuzzy, wel- coming warmth, mercifully provid- ing short respite from a seemingly otherwise unforgiving, cold world outside. This is your place. Somewhere, lost in the threads of our progressively deteriorat- ing American culture, drinking has been reduced to an oft-repeat- ed machismo parade of pushing through packed houses filled with blaring music in order to knock back a shot. Silly freshmen, drinking'snot for kids. Beers need to be nursed, loved and cradled, and for god's sake, there should be some bloody conversation while you're sipping your brew. This, after all, is the sport of pub drinking, and within this sport, Ashley's is Wrigley Field. Ashley's tabletops, graced with the carved signatures of patrons who have come before you, now serve as a resting place for your best friends'elbows.With your friends in close proximity, conversation - that lovely thing that goes hand-in-hand with alcoholic beverages - natural- ly happens. Maybe this is the reason Ashley's, Ann Arbor's bar of bars, is considered sacred ground. Ashley's, though, is not endeared by Ann Arborites and University students alike solely because of its homey environment. At Ashley's, beers flow magically from seem- ingly infinite taps. Aside from the 70 draughtbeers normally available (including rare beers that can't be found anywhere else in Michigan, like Schneider Aventinus, a wheat ale from Kelheim, Germany), there's a rotating tap that brings limited specialty brews to the lips of those residing in Ann Arbor. Simply put, Ashley's'selection is unparalleled. The formula, the one that has made it so renowned, is simple: provide people with a good place to drink good beers. While other establishments might have lostsight what makes a bar truly a bar, Ash- ley's embraces these essential bare- bones principles. And that's why we embrace Ashley's. -DAVID REAP SPTIHTO:ST C H' If you struggle with indeci- sion, stay away from Stucchi's. An Ann Arbor original, Stucchi's has almost too many incredibly deli- cious flavors. Ranging from the sinful White Russian Fudge to the quirky PB Truffle Shuffle (along with ever-pleasing classics like Strawberry and French Vanilla), there is always a flavor to suit any mood. In case caloric morals inter- fere, Stucchi's also offers frozen yogurts of which the variety is just as expansive (Swiss Choco- late Almond, anyone?), so sacri- ficing taste is never a concern. Milkshakes, smoothies, sorbet and soft-serve ice cream are also avail- able, catering to cravings of every dessert domain. Just to top it all off, Stucchi's now offers Insomnia Cookies, making the menu so irre- sistible and arousing it's almost unsafe to read when young chil- dren are nearby. True dessert connoisseurs will never run out of selections, which is probably for the best since choosing a favorite flavor or combination is nearly impossible. Luckily, you can always try plenty of free samples to decipher your own personal perfect combination. Choosing a location isn't a concern, either, since there are multiple stores on campus. Stucchi's is that best friend on gray days, or after a break-up or when you've failed an exam. Supplied with caramel, chocolate, fresh fruit, nuts and homemade chocolate-dipped waf- fle cones, it's always there to ease away any troubles. Still not convinced? Then we'll use this age-old argument: Buy local. -MAUREENSTYCH 0 SPTIGT r:E PRES *Y L Oh, Espresso Royale, truly the most noble of coffee venues, you continue to awe us. Situated firmly at a locus central to our travel on campus, your symbol is a shining beacon of hope for the downtrodden and numb, those who seek only a caffeine injection to propel them through one more panic-ridden day of study. Inside, your tables and chairs offer comforting, welcoming sites of study when the UGLi is full of noisy freshmen. Your majestic tones of brown and deep red exul- tantly restore our energy, similar to how your coffee restores us like an IV full of saline. Yours, Espres- so Royale, is a kingdom free of meaningless distractions. Among your competitors, who could challenge you? Not Amer's! And as for the rest, ha! What "rest?" Starbucks, without pre- tension toward independence? Surely not Ambrosia or Rendez- vous - what are they in the face of your your innocuous accessi- bility? Great king ofc know the power of th coffee handed out en your subjects. We return, Wedne Wednesday for your $2 rest of the week is an haze as we survey the s power, the drip coffee, ety calling out our nar old friend. There is n Espresso, no challen throne is secure. -BEN VANI Good No Thai! customers are astute when it conmes to the art of purchasing No Thai! food. They D MOCH/Daily scoff pretentiously at those they overhear pondering what a restau- rant called No Thai! would serve coffee, you ("Why would a restaurant make a e horde, of point of telling people what they masse to don't serve?"). They smile to them- selves when novice customers sday after contemplate the meaning of the lattes. The question mark following "medi- apathetic um" on the menu's list of spice lev- eat of your els. (Though to be fair, "medium?" each vari- isn't the best assessment of the nes like an spiciness it stands for.) o usurper, The whimsicality of No Thai!'s ger. Your misnomer, casual use of punctua- tion and foreign cuisine make it WAGONER the perfect place to grab a deli- ciously filling meal while feeling totally indifferent about how hip- ster, indie, scene, urban or bohe- mian you look (or whatever else you youngsters are currently striv- ing to be these days). For those who claim they judge restaurants based on food quality and aren't concerned with their image: You're not fooling anyone. In all seriousness, though, two remarkable qualities of No Thai! cuisine keep customers satisfied and ensure return visits. First, No Thai!'s food smells almost better than it tastes, and it tastes great. If you're low on cash, you can get roughly the same sat- isfaction from standing outside the restaurant and enjoyingexotic scents as you can from actually indulging in its flavorful dishes. But No Thai's best achievement lies is its ability to create meals that survive collegiate conditions. Sur- prisingly, the week-old No Thai! leftovers lying in your refrigera- tor will taste just as good after two minutes in the microwave. Thank goodness for large portions, take- out boxes and those newfangled radiation machines. More hip than Jimmy John's, but void of Bubble Island's pre- dominately freshmen patronage and mysterious food-like sub- stances (what are those bubbles made of anyway?), No Thai! isthe best eatery on South University. -CAROLYNKLARECKI 0