Best Apps For Finding A Place To Eat

Best Apps For Finding A Place To Eat is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

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I’ve been hungry lately. Real hungry. Some hunger is conquered by Chipotle, but this hunger is only has one weakness, and it is good, local food. Fortunately for all of us in the same situation, there are plenty of apps for that. Here are the four best, brought to you by the never ending hunger of Chris Hall.

4. Yelp – I really like Yelp when I’m looking for a place to eat. Because of its vast user base, the Yelp app provides more restaurants per search than any other app I’ve found. There are also more customer review on Yelp than any other service, so if you believe that more is better, Yelp is for you. The problem with Yelp is the fact the reviews are all user based, and very rarely do people give mediocre reviews. When I search for restaurants, everything is right around 4 stars, leaving me to wonder what I should really eat that night. There is an occasional in-depth review, but for the most part people just write something like, “This is THE place to go” with an occasional, “my waiter didn’t bring my water fast enough, but I still go four days a week… 1 star!!!”.

Yelp
Our Rating: ★★★★½ :: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED :: Read Our Full Review >>

Category: Travel
Released: 2008-07-11
Price: FREE


3. Zagat To Go – Obviously Zagat To Go is going to have the most comprehensive reviews out there. Because they review food professionally, I trust the reviews to be accurate and honest. The restaurant database is much smaller than Yelp’s because they have to review each place, but the restaurants they choose typically are some of the best in the city. The app is well organized, super clean, and has some good features, but it comes at a price. If it weren’t for the $10 asking price, Zagat To Go would be #1 on this list for sure.

ZAGAT TO GO
Our Rating: ★★★½☆ :: PRICEY RATING GUIDE :: Read Our Full Review >>

Category: Travel
Released: 2008-11-19
Price: $9.99

2. OpenTable – You may scoff at the notion of having OpenTable ahead of Zagat, but it really does deserve the spot. OpenTable doesn’t have a huge user review base, nor does it have Zagat’s professional reviews, but it does give a clean, well written description about each place, as well as the super handy ability to reserve tables on the fly. Nothing is worse than finding the perfect restaurant and then have to wait an hour and a half to sit. On top of everything, OpenTable gives you gift cards to spend at the restaurants if you use their service often enough. This alone keeps me coming back to the app.

OpenTable
Our Rating: ★★★★★ :: MUST HAVE :: Read Our Full Review >>

Category: Travel
Released: 2008-11-15
Price: FREE

1. LocalEats – How often do you leave the house on a search for dinner and say, “I want the best Mexican food in town.”? I do it all the time, and finding answers to these questions are close to impossible. Yelp will give you a bunch of 5 star restaurants in each cuisine, Zagat will give you a pretty good idea, but you may have to pick between the best food and the best decor, while OpenTable will just give you a really good place that you can get a reservation and future discounts for. Only LocalEats is bold enough to tell you that a place is the best is town. Sometimes I don’t want to have to think about these things, I just want an app that will tell me to go to a certain place because it is the best. I haven’t been steered wrong yet, and for that I am very happy. There are also discounts provided through the app, making a random restaurant browse through quite worthwhile.

LocalEats

Category: Travel
Released: 2008-07-16
Price: $0.99

Honorable Mention – UrbanSpoon – I love the concept of UrbanSpoon, but I am way too inclined to use the slot machine, which has led me to some odd places in the past. Picking UrbanSpoon over Yelp here was considered, but I had to go with Yelp’s simple interface and the fact that it covers more than just food.

If you don’t agree with my list and want to create your own top four, leave it below! I’d love to see what you come up with. I also welcome all internet trolls who want to call me stupid. This is a free country after all.

*Picture at top is a New York Times image of Kobayashi at Nathan’s famous July 4th hot dog eating competition. If you don’t know Kobayashi, you absolutely need to watch this video.


OpenTable

OpenTable is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website

Developer: OpenTable Inc.
Price: FREE
Version Reviewed: 2.0.1

iPhone Integration Rating: 4.75 out of 5 stars
User Interface Rating: 4.75 out of 5 stars
Re-use / Replay Value Rating: 4.75 out of 5 stars

Overall Rating: 4.75 out of 5 stars

Location based “find the best food” apps are a dime a dozen these days. There are a few that I use on what seems to be a daily basis, but OpenTable really stands out in the crowd when it comes to fine dining. What makes OpenTable compelling isn’t the fact that it has the largest index of restaurants or the most professional reviews, it’s that once you find the restaurant that you want to eat at, you can make a reservation with the app free of charge.

IMG_0887Admittedly, the service is someone limited in comparison to something like Yelp that has every restaurant under the sun. OpenTable just includes restaurants that partner with the website, which is surprisingly a huge number of places all around the world. In the Phoenix/Scottsdale area alone (my part of the world), there are a ton of fine dining experiences waiting to be had on OpenTable.

Much like Yelp, OpenTable begins your journey by finding your location and then asking for some guidance to narrow your search. Once you’ve selected how many places you want to see, and what day you want to go, you hit “Find a Table” and all the places in your area pop up with available seats that you can reserve. From there you can narrow down your search by how much you want to spend and the desired cuisine in case you are picky that night. Within each restaurants page, there are Yelp-like user reviews, a nice description/opinion piece written by an obvious professional writer, location information, and of course the times that you can reserve. Reserving the table is as easy as clicking a time, and then hitting confirm. The app uses your login information that you provide on their website to send to the restaurant.

I tested this out the other night at a new Mexican place down the road and it worked out great. We just walked up, told them our name, and we were seated right away. We reserved a time pretty early in the evening, before a reservation was really necessary, but we did it for a reason, and it wasn’t just for review purposes. Every time you use OpenTable to make a reservation, you earn OpenTable points, which eventually turn into free money to spend at OpenTable restaurants. While I certainly don’t eat at nice places every night, there were enough two dollar sign places in the app that I’ll probably earn some of that free money before I know it. I’ll admittedly feel a bit off going to half full places with a reservation, but for free food I’ll do anything.

Open Table is the epitome of a must have iPhone app. It won’t take over your need for an app like Yelp, but if you are looking for nice food, there is almost certainly a place or 50 for you on OpenTable, and if you eat out enough you’ll start getting free food money with no strings attached. The app is convenient, has perks to use it, and is honestly a great way to find some good food in town… and it’s free!