We were driving through here on our way from Horseshoe Bay to Fredericksburg during Yarn Crawl '11 and were looking for some good food. Â This popped up on my Yelp app just in time to stop.
The decor is pure weird Texas country 70s restaurant in a building attached to a gas station. Â There was a giant stuffed bull head over our table and dark wood paneling on the walls.
The place was fairly quiet and really big - room for lots of people but pretty empty in the early afternoon. Â The waitress/cashier/hostess was nice as pie and I could hear the guys in the kitchen talking about current events and laughing. Â There were some locals having their lunch. Â I found it all homey and comforting (despite the creepy dude looking down at us from the wall above)
I ordered a cup of red beans with rice and a fried oyster po boy with a sweet tea. Â The red beans were the perfect combination of 'just about to burst but still solid' on nice buttery rice. Â The oysters had a great crunchy cornmeal batter with the perfect blend of lettuce, dressing, and french bread that's crunchy on the outside and moist on the inside.
It's a bit of a drive for us but a perfect stop and a great surprise during our crazy roadtrip weekend.
This roadside gem is a perfect illustration of the magic of Yelp! Â Thanks to my fellow Yelpers' glowing reviews, my iPhone led my family to this honest-to-God AMAZING restaurant in pretty-much-the-middle-of-nowhere, Texas. Â We had spent the morning visiting a kids' summer camp on Inks Lake and were driving to San Marcos when hunger struck. Â The girls were watching "The Princess & The Frog" on the DVD player in the back seat--what could be better to compliment their movie than a stop at a New Orleans style restaurant? Â I did a "search nearby" on my phone, and this place pops up, literally 30 seconds down the road from where we were driving. Â We pulled in and were treated to stellar New Orleans cuisine that absolutely rivaled some of the REAL New Orleans food we sampled on our family vacation there last summer. Â Yes, the po boy I had here rivaled Acme's. Â The fried oysters were the best I have ever tasted. Â The onion rings and rosette sauce were incredible. Â Our older daughter's gumbo was chock-full of chicken, sausage, ham and rice, bathed in a dark, smoky roux. Â And our youngest daughter's macaroni & cheese was the real deal--a bowl of al dente penne pasta covered in a homemade creamy, cheesy sauce. Â I keep thinking about this place and have enthusiastically recommended it to friends who frequent nearby Horseshoe Bay. Â The next time you find yourself in Round Mountain, Texas, Pop. 111, stop by and give these dear folks who fled Louisiana after Katrina struck your business. Â You'll be glad you did.
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