Allentown PA: Roar Social House (October 2015)



My spouse and I most recently dined at Roar Social House for an early dinner on a Sunday afternoon in late October 2015; however, we have dined at the restaurant several other times as part of a larger group since it opened in September 2014. Roar accepts reservations by telephone or using an on-line system (Yelp by SeatMe). Roar is open for weekday lunch and dinner daily (which begins at 4:00 on Saturdays and 3:00 pm on Sundays). The owners of Roar also own the speakeasy called Hush and the ice cream parlor named Center Ice. All three establishments are owned by the Saylor family, who for many years owned The Shanty restaurant.
 
Roar is located in the space that used to house a Chinese restaurant, but there is absolutely no shred of evidence. The restaurant features three-story high ceilings (and two floors of seating) in a 1920s/1930s Prohibition/supper club atmosphere. The décor contains dark woods, exposed brick walls, interesting lighting, and a photo projection screen. The front of the restaurant contains both booth and semi-booth seating, a bar dominates the middle of the dining space, and the rear of the dining room contains both high-top tables and traditional low tables. To reach the restrooms, you pass through the semi-open kitchen, which has some high-top tables for two if patrons want to watch the workings of the kitchen. (These are not true kitchen tables, however because you are unable to see what the chefs are preparing; you can only observe the food after it has been plated when the wait staff adds the last-minute garnishes). Some limited outdoor seating is available on the front sidewalk in nice weather. Hush, the restaurant’s speakeasy, is located at the rear of the narrow building through an unmarked door. The small back room offers a tiny bar and some casual lounge seating, and the room can accommodate about 30 people. Valet parking is available (current cost is $6), but street parking and nearby surface lots and garages abound. This restaurant is located across from the rear door of the new PPL Center, so it makes an excellent choice before or after an event.

During our most recent dining experience, we shared several plates from their appetizer menu, including the macaroni and cheese balls (no longer on the menu) accented with a tomato dipping sauce, crab spring rolls (also no longer on the menu), crab cakes, and lobster roll. For dessert, we shared the apple cake, which was an enormous slice suitable for sharing and accented with whipped cream. We particularly liked the lobster roll and the apple cake. The crab cake appetizer was a bit disappointing in that each of the two mini cakes was topped with a piece of lump crabmeat, leading us to believe that the cake itself would also contain lump crab, but it did not. We have also tried the scallops (served with risotto) and lamp entrees, the papardelle pasta (accented with pancetta, chicken, and peas) and the charcuterie board appetizer. We look forward to trying their new menu (which began the day after our visit), particularly because it contains some new appetizers like the short rib steamed buns (which are very difficult to find on a restaurant menu in the Lehigh Valley), the cheesesteak dumplings, the short rib, lobster ravioli, tortellini with chicken and shrimp, and bucatini bolognese.

Service was excellent on this visit, even though it was a lazy afternoon. On past visits, we have found that service on a weekend night preceding an event at the PPL Center can lag a bit if the restaurant is operating at maximum capacity.

We will definitely return to Roar; we just wish that it was open for weekend lunch/brunch because it fits better into our schedules.






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