I don't think I've ever been to a breakfast buffet. Bunch to me, is out, sit down, and usually involves eggs and/or bacon, and more coffee that it is normally wise for me to consume. My favorite breakfast brunch place is currently serving somethign called The Elvis:
Buttermilk Waffle Sandwich, filled w/ Peanut Butter, Bananas, and Bacon. Drenched in Maple Syrup
[link]
Jessica, the Farm on Adderley looks AMAZING- I want to eat everything on that brunch menu, starting with the 3 minute eggs.
now I need really good french toast and bacon.
and I had breakfast. oatmeal with cranberries that was very good.
Maybe I should have a brownie.
The Sundy House is incredible, but pricey enough that it is only for very special occasions. Brunch is more affordable than their dinners. I think it was $40 last time I checked. Well worth it.
Sue's link has a breakfast named:
The Steph
Berry Salad, Our Kick Ass Granola, and Vanilla Yogurt - $7
eta: formatting. Now to make myself lunch! All the menu links are making me hungry.
I love breakfast/brunch buffets, because I can have enough bacon and sausage.
The next communication sensation. www.swearing.com.
It ought to be www.shitter.com.
I have been to some good brunch buffets, but staring at a sea of congealing scrambled eggs tends to make me lose interest in eating and, at its worst, continuing to live.
We don't do brunch so much as we do breakfast. Breakfast is our easiest meal out as everyone is pleasant at 7:00 AM.
Don't think I haven't considered making a Grunter.com, for all those early morning grunt needs.
Don't think I haven't considered making a Grunter.com, for all those early morning grunt needs.
If you do, CNN wants you to be aware of the dangers of social media:
Rapid-fire TV news bulletins or getting updates via social-networking tools such as Twitter could numb our sense of morality and make us indifferent to human suffering, scientists say.
New findings show that the streams of information provided by social networking sites are too fast for the brain's "moral compass" to process and could harm young people's emotional development.
Before the brain can fully digest the anguish and suffering of a story, it is being bombarded by the next news bulletin or the latest Twitter update, according to a University of Southern California study.
"If things are happening too fast, you may not ever fully experience emotions about other people's psychological states and that would have implications for your morality," said researcher Mary Helen Immordino-Yang.
I'm not sure about my sense of morality, but I'm pretty sure I sprained something rolling my eyes at this news report...