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Woodward restaurants offer fuel for car enthusiast
'It's a very good day.'
His sentiments are echoed by his up-the-street neighbor, Larry Payne, who will open his Duggan's Irish Pub at 9 a.m. today.
Duggan's is right at the epicenter of the cruise on Woodward Avenue between 13 Mile and 14 Mile. It has a little something extra going for it, because its menu offers some of the fondly remembered dishes from the drive-in era that spawned the Dream Cruise, the days when Woodward looked like a scene from 'American Graffiti' every weekend in the summer.
Duggan's serves the 'Famous Big Chief Double Decker' burger that originated at the iconic drive-in the Totem Pole, as well as the Ted's Drive-in 5 X 5 burger and Susie Q fish and chips, all harking back to those days.
While one Big Chief is just $7.50, the restaurant also will dish up two of them, with a little extra -- a bottle of Dom Perignon Champagne -- for $144.44. So far over the 15 years of the offer, some 110 patrons have taken advantage of it.
On Saturday, Duggan's will cook outdoors on a chuck wagon with an 8-foot grill and two fryers in the tented parking lot next to the green two-story building.
Vinsetta Grill's Papa will serve his house specialty, baby-back ribs, along with beef spareribs, St. Louis-style sweet and Mexican red-hot ribs with sauce made with five different peppers.
Margarita's Mexican Restaurant will charge $1 for tacos and burritos on cruise day, dispensing them from a window so that people don't even have to come in to the small Berkley restaurant.
Another Mexican spot along the route, Chipotle Mexican Grill, will experience its first Dream Cruise. The small patio is sure to be packed with people who love the made-to-order burritos and tacos.
The signature burgers at the Redcoat Tavern, popular pretty much every day of the year, should be even more so today .
And across the street at Pasquale's, the menu will be old-fashioned Italian-American pasta and pizza as usual.
Big sandwiches are the premise at Al's Famous Deli, where they are made on the sturdy double-baked rye bread.
The early bird crowd will be well taken care of at the Original Pancake House in Birmingham, which will start serving its freshly squeezed orange juice, omelets and blueberry pancakes at 6:30 a.m.
Despite high gas prices and an unsteady economy, the Dream Cruise will roll on.
'It's recession-proof,' says Duggan's proprietor Payne. 'People love their cars.'
His sentiments are echoed by his up-the-street neighbor, Larry Payne, who will open his Duggan's Irish Pub at 9 a.m. today.
Duggan's is right at the epicenter of the cruise on Woodward Avenue between 13 Mile and 14 Mile. It has a little something extra going for it, because its menu offers some of the fondly remembered dishes from the drive-in era that spawned the Dream Cruise, the days when Woodward looked like a scene from 'American Graffiti' every weekend in the summer.
Duggan's serves the 'Famous Big Chief Double Decker' burger that originated at the iconic drive-in the Totem Pole, as well as the Ted's Drive-in 5 X 5 burger and Susie Q fish and chips, all harking back to those days.
While one Big Chief is just $7.50, the restaurant also will dish up two of them, with a little extra -- a bottle of Dom Perignon Champagne -- for $144.44. So far over the 15 years of the offer, some 110 patrons have taken advantage of it.
On Saturday, Duggan's will cook outdoors on a chuck wagon with an 8-foot grill and two fryers in the tented parking lot next to the green two-story building.
Vinsetta Grill's Papa will serve his house specialty, baby-back ribs, along with beef spareribs, St. Louis-style sweet and Mexican red-hot ribs with sauce made with five different peppers.
Margarita's Mexican Restaurant will charge $1 for tacos and burritos on cruise day, dispensing them from a window so that people don't even have to come in to the small Berkley restaurant.
Another Mexican spot along the route, Chipotle Mexican Grill, will experience its first Dream Cruise. The small patio is sure to be packed with people who love the made-to-order burritos and tacos.
The signature burgers at the Redcoat Tavern, popular pretty much every day of the year, should be even more so today .
And across the street at Pasquale's, the menu will be old-fashioned Italian-American pasta and pizza as usual.
Big sandwiches are the premise at Al's Famous Deli, where they are made on the sturdy double-baked rye bread.
The early bird crowd will be well taken care of at the Original Pancake House in Birmingham, which will start serving its freshly squeezed orange juice, omelets and blueberry pancakes at 6:30 a.m.
Despite high gas prices and an unsteady economy, the Dream Cruise will roll on.
'It's recession-proof,' says Duggan's proprietor Payne. 'People love their cars.'