I'm writing this review on behalf of my husband. Â The Green Spot is his favorite place in Mount Pleasant to get a bite to eat. Â He doesn't even need a menu, he goes straight for the steak hoagie. Â I'll admit it's really tasty, it's just too much meat for me. Â Some will ask if there is such a thing. Â Well their steak hoagie is overflowing with delicious meat, grilled onions and mushrooms, and cheese. It's so big he uses a fork and knife. Â I always choose something else on the menu and I'm always pleased. Â The servers are VERY friendly. Â Ignore all the chain restaurants and check out this local gem!
Review Source:This place might turn you off when you first walk in the door. Â Mos the tables are plastic, and the menus are plastic. Â The place has an abundant amount of beers to chose from. Â I got some chili and fried califlower with the fam. Â Chili was average, and the califlower was good, but overbreaded. Â I ordered the fish n' chips, and the fish was very good. Â Not overly breaded, and cooked to perfection. Â My fries sucked though. Â All the food is smoking hot whenever it comes to your table. Â Decent place to grab a quick meal and drink a few beets with some friends
Review Source:I've driven past the Green Spot innumerable times in my life...I was always intrigued by the Irish-and-proud exterior and the number of cars that always seem to be crowded into the parking lot...this past week my partner and I finally decided to satisfy our curiosity by checking the place out for lunch.
I have to say -- the interior, while having a certain coziness to it (two fireplaces on either side) , says "drinking bar" more than "eating and drinking bar." And when we stopped in, around noon on a weekday, there were more people who seemed to be there taking the edge off than enjoying lunch. Â An interesting clientele, too -- two couples who looked to be professionals at lunch, four pool players, a table of folks who looked like shift workers, a few wayward college students or campus-town hangers-on, two ladies with bouffant hair and abundant makeup who looked like they just walked out of "Hairspray" and a couple elders who looked to be frequent fliers up at the bar.
We ordered off the "menu," a laminated placemat-looking thing -- the shaved prime rib hoagie with sauteed onions and mushrooms, which we split between the two of us (10 ounces of beef makes for a big sammy), onion rings and deep-fried mushrooms. (The menu includes about 8 or so variations of hamburger, numerous sandwiches including two corned-beef customer favorites, chili, soup of the day, and a couple of steak options -- in other words, a basic bar menu.) Our waitress was friendly if a little harried, and told us we were being "so nice" (which made us wonder about the number of not-nice patrons!).
Our sandwich was...good; very good bun, abundant meat, not too dry. The onion rings, which come with that particular sandwich, were beer-battered; nice flavor. The fried mushrooms were tasty but nothing special.
Would we go back for lunch? Probably not. Do we think it would be a fun place to hang out on, say St. Patrick's Day or some other Irish-pride event? Oh, sure.