Skip to main content

Kid's Menu Pie at Save-On-Meats

Save On Meats on Urbanspoon To be seated at Save-On-Meats during their rush hours, the procedure is to put your name on the easily-missed whiteboard on your left, just after the non-functional vending machine and before the bar seating. No one tells you this, sadly, so you could be waiting a long time only to find out much later and be denied service.
My friend and I were in shortly after 1pm, which proved to be the tail end of the lunch rush on Tuesday. From there, the dining room quickly died down to about 25% capacity and sign-ups weren't necessary.

It's a long, narrow space but still quite spacious and feels even bigger because of the very high ceiling. It's bright and clean, a refreshing change from the dilapidated neighbourhood and dirty sidewalk just outside.

Service was strangely slow. Once we were seated, water came quite promptly, but it took several minutes before my friend's beer (Blue Buck) arrived. It was beer in a bottle--How long could that possibly take? We were both quite surprised because it's a busy place, so we expected faster service if only to keep things moving along and patrons fed and sent on their way so that those waiting in line could be seated.

I'd had my budget more or less obliterated by Black+Blue, so I deliberately kept myself to just a light meal, going for what sounded like their specialities.
  • Signature Chocolate Bacon Cookie - 2 for $2
    • The size is about the same as one of the large, approximately 4-inch diameter cookies you might see in Subway or Superstore (such as the Farmer's Market Ultimate Cookies, which were on sale this week at $2.98 for a dozen). Slightly but noticeably thinner. It's also a soft cookie, which I like.
    • There's a good amount of chocolate baked into this. As chocolate chip style cookies go, this is pretty decent.
    • You can clearly make out small reddish bacon bits. Not sure if this is real bacon or phoney bacon bits, because I honestly couldn't make out any bacon taste at all. It's got bacon but basically it's a chocolate chip cookie.
  • Fried Chicken Dinner - $11 - 2 pieces of crunchy buttermilk chicken. Served with choice of mashed potatoes, peas & carrots, fries, or green salad.
    • This was my friend's order. The two pieces of chicken are each about the size of a burger patty.
    • The batter isn't very thick on it. If you're looking for a big crunch with every bite, this isn't it. If you're looking for tender, moist chicken sealed in by batter, this will be alright.
  • Smoked Turkey Pot Pie - $10 - As seen on Diner, Drive-Ins & Dives. Winner, winner turkey dinner. Serviced with choice of mashed potatoes, peas & carrots, fries or green salad.
    • I got this because it was highlighted as "as seen on TV". So it's gotta be good, right?
    • I was honestly shocked when it came. Did I accidentally order from the kiddie menu? For $10, I got a side of fries (piping hot, so freshly done, presumably) and a very small pie. This pie is about 2/3rds the size of those little frozen pies you can buy in the supermarket. It was at most maybe 4-1/2 inches or 5 inches in diameter, and barely an inch thick. Which meant the crust on the top and bottom was probably between half and two-thirds of the total height.
    • Inside there's some creamy sauce/filling. I immediately cut it into half, then gave my friend a quarter to try. There was a chunk of slightly reddish turkey sitting under the sauce. The upper part of the pie was warm but the inside was cold. Not lukewarm cool from contact with the plate, but outright cold.
      • I'm not sure I should take points off here because the restaurant can't cut open your pie to check for done-ness, though poking it with a fork or satay stick would have worked with barely noticeable damage.
    • After a couple of minutes trying to catch our server's eye, we finally just grabbed the nearest one and I asked for them. Odd that I could have sworn we made eye contact several times. Maybe I should relax my rule about waving at servers to get their attention.
    • The other half of my pie eventually came back from the oven. When I cut into it, I discovered... there was NO MEAT. Just creamy sauce inside. Huh? Where's my smoked turkey? It was all in just in one half of an already tiny pie?
Way overpriced for just passable food. From the get-go, you're not going to Save-On-Meats for a fancy meal. But then you're also not going there for a pricey meal either. At a comparable or lower price, you can go to a much nicer neighbourhood to get more and better food with faster and better service at The American Cheesesteak Company or Loving Hut Express for example.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Meet Melissa Gaines and her blurry sexy pics

Oh boy! I had no sooner finished posting about the lovely Taylor Burch responding to my personals ad on Craigslist when Melissa Gaines (e-mailing from erikmcclure858@yahoo.com) mailed me a couple more pictures of her lithe body and selling her profile on the same looks-like-a-phishing-scam site (http://craigslistsafe.net/profiles/melx3/). One of them was an NSFW naked-breasts pic which I haven't posted here (sorry -- but honestly, nothing to write home about, especially with the serious bikini tan lines). Here's the e-mail exchange: Melissa e-mail #1 Here is my picture as attached. Please e-mail me details what you are looking for along with your pictures. Thanks and waiting to hear from you soon. Melissa e-mail #2 hey thanks for getting back to me we should definitely meetup sometime... if youre interested of course :) a couple things i should set straight though: 1 we use condoms 2 you join a dating site that I belong to safedates no worries though its fr

Trafalgar's European Explorer 2006 memoirs part 3

A picture from my 2006 trip, a Trafalgar 's bus tour, on an itinerary called the European Explorer. I can't remember why I had this couple in the picture, but I do vaguely remember this to be in London, on the first official day of the tour group getting together. Their insistence on my helping them take a picture caused the three of us to be late getting back to the bus. The local tour guide had a "rule" about lateness, that we had to buy chocolate to share with everyone. As it turned out, later in the trip, on at least two occasions, we were stuck on the highway on either a long commute or a traffic jam, and I had chocolate and chocolate-covered marzipan to share. About the chocolate-covered marzipan -- Apparently we were in Austria just as they were celebrating Mozart's birthday with special marzipans wrapped in foil with the famous composer's picture. I'm pretty sure it was Mirabell Mozartkugeln . Anyway, there were enough to go around the en

Trafalgar's European Explorer 2006 memoirs part 10

The last of my pictures (at least the ones that survived the cheesy disposable cameras) from my 2006 trip, a Trafalgar 's bus tour, on an itinerary called the European Explorer. Below is the obligatory group photo. Not sure everyone's in it, actually. I'm pretty sure this one was taken by the tour director, Mike Scrimshire as I'm in the back row, on the right side.