Rollos
La Sorpresa Y Mas And Bakery

La Sorpresa Y Mas And Bakery

61 Cedar Street, Norwalk, 06854, United States Of America

Full • American • Bakeries • Colombian


"I hate to leave a negative review on a place that my family and I once enjoyed but our experience today was horrible.We ordered buñuelos and empanadas for starters. The buñuelo was rock hard and the empanadas were soggy and soaked in oil, as if they refried them to reheat them.When the entrees came, it all went downhill. My mother ordered a pollo saltado, which didn’t taste like a traditional one but should’ve been expected since it’s a Peruvian dish.I ordered my usual, an arepa with carne desmechada, but the taste was off settling, almost as if the meat gone bad. I thought maybe it was just me, so I had my mom and husband taste it. My mom couldn’t stomach it and my husband said “something is definitely off”. The meat tasted as if it was sitting out for 3 or 4 days.My husband ordered a bandeja paisa and a few bites in, he found a long black hair, which none of us have.Our waitress never came to check up on us, so, I called the other waiter and showed him the hair in the plate, and he took it away. I then passed him my plate explained that all of us tried the meat and that it had tasted as if it had gone bad.He then came back and explained that he had to ask permission, if he was allowed to offer us something else because he had only been working there for a month. He then offered us grilled chicken but we kindly passed because we no longer had an appetite.When we asked for the bill, they still charged us for the plate with hair in it, and said he could only remove my $8 dish which was the least expensive dish.Overall, a majority of our food was old, fermented or stale. It’s disappointing to see how the quality of service and food has gone down significantly. I would not recommend this place."

EL Palomar Restaurant

EL Palomar Restaurant

1336 Pacific Ave Santa Cruz, CA 95060-3932, United States

Soup • Drinks • Mexican • Latin-American


"I remember when El Palomar was the place of action, the knees of bees, the destination for the best Mexican food in the city. With this high vault ceiling it was a cross between a restaurant and a Spanish cathedral. There was a ****. The place started. But here comes the hard part? although I will say first, the Camarones glowed me like a Christmas tree! You were great! And there was a lot like the one fucking dance party on my plate. That means the rice and the beans were beans and the worst attack, the second bowl of the chips had a few larger chips and the rest of the basket were crumbs. I mean, what am I gonna do with it? Honestly, it's kind of insulting. The waitress knows what she gives you. I felt like I was punished for it, although the first bowl appeared before lunchtime. Okay, I get it, maybe they ran out of the nice chips, but they could have said something, or even replaced the bowl when the good stuff came out. Did they think I wouldn't notice? All, the place has fallen prey to the famous location curse, a phenomenon that first documented in 1920 in Marsha Mam's beautiful emporium and food. They were also the popular place to be the place, but they got a certain degree. They counted on their fame, despair of the situation, and the reputation of their humble but extraordinary cook (no chef ever had been at that time? they had laughed about the hubris). Same here. They have customer loyalty and history, and they have atmosphere on the Wazoo, but what they don't have is passion for the product more. You only select it, and it shows. I would give them three stars, but the Camarones were really good, it is like a diamond in a cheap ring, the rest of the meal departs from the final effect."