Restaurants in Southgate
Restaurant Deals
TV Deli Diner
- Trenton
Diner whips up pancakes, philly cheesesteaks, BBQ bacon cheeseburgers, and sirloin steaks
Monaco Middle Eastern Cuisine
- South Windsor
Made-from-scratch Middle Eastern classics such as baba ghanouj, skewers of ground lamb, and shareable plates of kebabs
Tiffany's Family Restaurant
- Windsor
Eatery serves traditional diner fare, including belgian waffles, eggs with toast and bacon, reubens, and chicken or steak parmigiana
Da Luciano Trattoria
- Erie Street
Salads and specialty-pizza appetizers precede penne in a blush sauce and entrees of chicken marsala, followed by an ice-cream dessert
Mezzo Ristorante
- Walkerville
Chef Michael Barlozzari innovates Italian cuisine by blending classic flavours with unique and locally sourced ingredients
Recommended Restaurants by Groupon Customers
Dream Dinners makes meal preparation a breeze with easy-to-follow instructions, precut meats and veggies, and a host of complementary ingredients. The experience is like a cross between a barn raising and a bar crawl, minus the alcohol and hard labor: After choosing from a rotating menu of up to 14 dishes per month, customers schedule a spot at a fun prep session (call at least a week in advance) to assemble meals in-store. Items from the April menu include blackened salmon with pineapple salsa ($15.89 for three servings) and crispy sesame chicken with gingered green beans ($14.04 for three servings). Groupon holders can dazzle dining-room tables with fancy, restaurant-inspired fare or serve up flavor-filled comfort foods such as white-chicken lasagna ($14.04 for three servings) and caliente pork chops with garlic mashed potatoes ($16.42 for three servings).
At Secret Recipes Family Dining, Jim Woolford helms an affable staff who slings breakfast, lunch, and dinner in a sunny, relaxed dining room that caters to families, offering coloring books and toys for the kids. Omelets, breakfast burritos, and pancakes greet the dawn alongside coffee, cappuccinos, and tea. By suppertime, the kitchen's signature baked meatloaf—slathered in gravy and flanked by mashed potatoes—crowns tables as slices of pie vie for space amid entrees and each table's caddy of sugar, ketchup, and nine-irons. Secret Recipes also caters special events with chafing dishes and place settings that serve up buffet-style entrees and a myriad of sides.
Sushi Kami's chefs bring the distinct flavors of Southeast Asia to metro Detroit as they craft entrees using Japanese and Korean cooking techniques. They carefully carve fresh eel and king crab into exotic maki, sushi, or specialty rolls. The multitalented chefs also assemble customized bento boxes during lunch service, filling each compartment with chicken katsu, sauce, and a series of smaller bento boxes.
There is perhaps no greater sign of Louisiana's culinary heritage than the mélange of aromas that wafts from a pot of simmering gumbo—a cornerstone of creole cooking from as far back as the time of the Louisiana Purchase. Nearly every recipe calls for some kind of roux, a traditional French sauce that consists of butter, oil, or some other fat mixed with flour. Beyond that, the specific spices and ingredients vary wildly, but most versions of gumbo fall into one of three general categories. Seafood gumbos feature oysters, crawfish, and other catches simmered with okra and vegetables, whereas filé gumbo uses a spicy herb made from ground sassafras leaves to highlight the savory flavor of andouille, poultry, ham, or smoked links. The third variant is known as gumbo z'herbes, a vegetarian recipe traditionally served during Lent.
Despite its indisputable creole ties, gumbo can't actually be traced to a single cultural tradition; the version using filé powder, for instance, originally derives from Native American cultures. Either way, the name itself comes from the West African term “gombo,” which means “okra”—a plant native to Africa that the French colonists of Louisiana likely introduced to North America in the early 1700s.
The Turkish meal at Hakan Turkish Grill begins at 9 p.m. with two hours of open bar, a professional belly-dancing performance, and a group belly-dancing lesson. The two-course Turkish meal made from all-natural ingredients includes your choice of either hummus or tabouli and a choice of kofte (ground-sirloin patties grilled and served with rice and veggies), chicken (sautéed with garlic and veggies and served with rice), or a vegetarian sauté of seasonal veggies (served with rice). After the event, guests will be shuttled via Hummer limo to either Club Play or B.E.D., where they'll skip the line of either of the posh South Beach nightclubs and will typically enjoy two initial free drinks before dancing the night away. Reservations are required.
European and American flags crown Redlefsen's Rotisserie & Grill, symbolizing the cuisine that can be found within. The restaurant specializes in German cuisine, particularly wiener schnitzel. When preparing this dish, cooks observe traditional techniques: they pound out the veal with a German dictionary, and then bread, fry, and accentuate it with lemon, capers, and anchovies. Chefs also create French-inspired chicken Provence and draw inspiration from Italian and Portuguese cookbooks. To complement meals, the restaurant maintains a diverse collection of imported beer, including Leffe Blond and Warsteiner.
Every Wednesday and Thursday in October, the restaurant celebrates Oktoberfest. Accordion players fill the beer hall with traditional melodies and the Alpenblumen Bavarian dancers perform folk dances.
