
The Diner Finder is the Internet's best source of real diner information.
I wondered mainly what Atlantic City had to offer a family seeking to extend a sustainable, car-free lifestyle to the Jersey Shore. We had no intention of visiting any casinos. Of all the beautiful beachfront this country has to offer, I suspect we can access only a tiny percentage of it by train.
Keep in mind that we never expected that rail transportation would cost less than the simple gasoline and parking cost if we took our car. For me, the value of these trips come from not having to deal with vacation traffic, and believe me, the Atlantic City Expressway on a summer weekend is no picnic.
I've usually found NJ Transit trains clean and relatively comfortable, and I found the same on this trip. No, this is not the Orient Express, but at least the trains have bathrooms, plenty of space to stretch out, and the varied panorama of South Jersey scenery just outside the window.
The city and the casinos couldn't make getting from the station to the boardwalk any easier. As you emerge from the station, you immediately find five or six shuttle busses ready to take you to various points along the beach. For us, the travel time to the Taj Mahal and Steel Pier took only about ten minutes. No parking worries. Very little actual walking. And as an added bonus, no beach tags required. So far so good.
After about an hour and a half on the sand, we began talking about lunch. In our immediate area on the boardwalk itself, we found ourselves with very limited choices: Hard Rock Cafe, House of Blues, and various kiosks and fry pits serving items as far down the health scale as you can imagine.
No problem. I have an iPhone with the Yelp app.
Problem. The highly rated restaurant Yelp told us was just a block away and a half block off the boardwalk was actually six blocks away. So much for Yelp. This was the fourth time Yelp and my iPhone have failed me in this manner.
This didn't become apparent until after we walked a good quarter mile or more in 85-degree sun (with a five-year-old trailing, mind you). The alternatives within view didn't look much more appealing. By the time we opted to hop a ride on one of the push-carts seen all over the boardwalk, and after bargaining down the young woman to about five dollars to go six blocks, we passed by Megan's Good Grub & Pub, and my instincts told me to stop the cart.
My hunch proved spot on. Despite the irritable child and the exasperated wife, we enjoyed an excellent meal and could choose from an ample selection of local ales. I can recommend the mussels and the baby sloppy Joes, not to mention the decidedly cosmopolitan, un-Atlantic City, atmosphere. We didn't walk the full length of the boardwalk, but we picked Megan's as Roadside-Approved.

Nearly restored, Grand Marias's tribute to one its own, William Donahey, creator of the Teenie Weenies. (Photo courtesy of the... Read more

Explore the Philadelphia's Mayfair section back in 1997 and how the once-great Mayfair Diner helped to bring about a revival... Read more

By Peter Genovese Rutgers University Press, Rutgers, 2003 $14.95, 225 pages, hardcover Genovese does it again. By combining his true reporter nature... Read more

Roadside is second to no one in its reverence of the idiosyncratic. I've gone well out of my way to... Read more

Best Breakfast Eats in Missouri by Ann M. Hazelwood Reedy Press, St. Louis, Missouri, $14.95 Ann M. Hazelwood is a show-me native... Read more

Onion rings. Thanks to some genius, most places now serve those awful, bloated, pillow-like "beer-battered" onion rings. Everywhere from Applebee's... Read more
Rough Draft Roadtrip - Day 2 The end of this leg couldn't have worked out better. Approaching city limits, I came... Read more
First day on the road, got out of the house by about 9 A.M. Perfect weather, got into the upper... Read more
Rough Draft Roadtrip, Third day Gotta keep it short tonight. I got in late, and after two pints of McSorley's at... Read more

Turns out, our excursion to Atlantic City proved rather timely. Not long after we got back, New Jersey's Governor Christie... Read more

The Highland Park Diner is easy on the eyes, a tidy barrel-roofed gem on South Clinton Street in Rochester, New... Read more

Fret not, diner purists. We brought our own maple syrup for these very good banana pancakes. No, we didn't try... Read more

Diner Museum diner blowout sale underway! As regular readers know, this website has for the past ten years kept a close,... Read more

We had some discussion of late about the idea of creating the opposite of the Lou-Roc Award, given to an... Read more
Vacation for the Family Roadside inevitably includes a little diner hunting and chats with strangers at local bars. Wurtsboro, New York... Read more