Some changes included things like new flatware, a couple of small menu changes, just to start. I suspect more will be coming.
A friend of mine accompanied me on a recent visit. He and his wife used to dine at the Arbor regularly. He vividly remembered the sand dabs almandine and was relieved to find they were still on the menu.
In fact he didn’t really notice that many changes, so in that respect, the owners have achieved their goal.
I, on the other hand, making my first visit, viewed the restaurant from another perspective.
I thought the dining room was inviting enough. There is a bar and stage area for the entertainment to the right. The dining room stretches to the left and looks like a standard restaurant. The paintings on the walls looked a bit dated, but are nice nonetheless, up against what looked like new paint.
The menu reminds me of the dinner houses I worked at as a kid. Owned by one guy, or a husband-and-wife team, they catered to the neighborhood.
The appetizers were pretty standard: potato skins, jumbo shrimp cocktail and chicken tenders. There were also crab stuffed mushrooms and artichoke hearts that looked appealing.
Coconut beer shrimp won out in the end. The shrimp is coated in a crumb mixture and then deep-fried. It came with two sauces, a cocktail sauce, and a sweet and spicy sauce, which I preferred.
Instead of the coconut flavor in the shrimp mixture there were coconut flakes, and they didn’t want to stay on the shrimp.
We had salads before dinner that were included with our entrees, and both were fairly disappointing. The garden salad had cucumbers and tomatoes, but nothing else, and the ranch dressing was a little bland.
The Caesar had a good tangy dressing, but no Parmesan cheese flakes or bits of anchovies.