Find out what Russian restaurants to try in Carnegie. Andrew Carnegie was a Scottish-American industrialist, business magnate, and philanthropist.
Carnegie led the expansion of the American steel industry in the late 19th century and is often identified as one of the richest people.
Things to do in Carnegie
4 based on 150 reviews
Experience the delights of Russia and Eastern Europe with traditional fare and the culinary extravagance of the Tsars.The restaurant is named after the famous main boulevard of Saint Petersburg, Nevsky Prospekt - home of our Chef and a magnificent city fu
Yearning to try Russian cuisine, we finally made it happen after hearing good things about Nevsky.Quite few can come close to.producing flavors that are synonymous to their country of origin and it's safe to claim that @nevskyrestaurant is one of those rare gemsThanks to our 9 months stay in Russia, our taste-buds were able to relish and register flavors from the cuisine that has culminated from fusing Bit of European and Asian Cuisine into what's locally grown and bred with subtle flavors.Ordered Russian Mule, Russian Vodka and an Apple and Cinnamon based Vodka drinktogether with Strogonoff, Fricassee (obviously,have been missing Russian version of Julianne), Potato and Caramelised Varenikee (Dumplings), Sosiski and Chicken KutletyIt's hard to not love anything that's quite close what we have relished in Russia (I'm sure you are tired of reading this ) but Sosiski (perfectly cooked yummy sausages served with caramelised onions) and Stroganoff (Veal cooked in cream and served with Buckwheat) were easily the Dish of the daySimply binged on Julienne aka Fricassee and it was quite close to second best.Hospitality, very friendly and charming. Pricing, just perfect for the portions and taste.Vegetarians / Vegans have just one or two options so don't expect muchCocktails were Superb!!Definitely visiting.
If you love authentic and varied smallgoods, then Russian Tidbits is your dream come true. There are enormous amounts of delicious smallgoods of all flavours, sizes and varieties. The staff are helpful and will allow you to sample as well as recommend different meats. Plus, when you're waiting, you can enjoy the magnificent big-haired Russian dramatics on the television.
3 based on 10 reviews
We visited Matrioshka on a friday night with a voucher ($35). After looking at the photos on the voucher site, the food looked good, nicely presented and interesting, what we got was nothing like the photos at all (see photos). It was very much like eating in a canteen with presentation kept to a minimum. In a room that was made for hundreds, 27 voucher diners (we noticed that everyone had a voucher, which is probably the only way anyone would go to this place) sat on some tables that had been set up on the dance floor. There were 8 different plates, two of them being filled pancakes, a green salad, dumplings, two differnt soups which you had to swap to taste both, a patato salad, patato cakes and the Pirozhki buns which were probably the best thing we liked. After the 8 dishes had been served we were offered any of them again as part of the deal, but we decided to leave and drop in to another place for a desert.There are 2 types of meals you can get with vouchers, there are those restaurants that try to entice you to come back another day and there are those that try and knock up a cheep meal and make money out of the voucher. This is very firmly in the latter, and I won't be going back. I urge anyone reading this to not visit in the week or part of a voucher offer.
ThingsTodoPost © 2018 - 2024 All rights reserved.