

Hours
| Sunday | 11 AM–2:30 PM, 4–9 PM |
| Monday | Closed |
| Tuesday | Closed |
| Wednesday | Closed |
| Thursday | 4–9 PM |
| Friday | 4–10 PM |
| Saturday | 11 AM–2:30 PM, 4–10 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 77 W Cherokee St, Catoosa, OK 74015
Phone: (800) 760-6700
Website: https://www.hardrockcasinotulsa.com/dining/the-eatery
Menu Photos
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Tulsa’s Best All-You-Can-Eat Buffet | The Eatery at Hard Rock Tulsa
The Eatery Buffet in Catoosa, OK | Fresh Grilled Prime Rib Decadent …
The LODGE Eatery and Pub – Catoosa – Facebook
Reviews
The Eatery functions as Hard Rock Tulsa’s primary “everyone can agree on this” dining option, and it succeeds because of its consistency and its ability to handle heavy guest flow without feeling chaotic. The layout is structured into clearly defined stations—American comfort foods, international items, salads, desserts, and rotating hot entrées. This prevents bottlenecking and makes it easy for guests to navigate during peak hours.
Quality-wise, the buffet focuses on well-executed staples rather than experimental dishes. Breakfast highlights include carved ham, omelet stations, biscuits and gravy, and pastries that are kept replenished. Dinner shifts toward carved meats, fried chicken, vegetables, pastas, and occasional seafood offerings. Nothing feels left under heat lamps too long; staff circulate frequently to refresh pans and maintain presentation.
One of the underrated strengths here is how well the room absorbs big crowds. Even on busy show nights, food turnover stays high, and it’s rare to encounter a completely empty pan or a neglected station. The dining area has enough space between tables that you’re not constantly squeezed past other guests, making it comfortable for families and groups.
Service is efficient and unobtrusive. Tables turn quickly, drink service is reliable, and staff clear plates fast without hovering. For travelers attending concerts or gaming late into the night, the buffet’s predictable structure and broad selection make it one of the most practical dining choices on the property.
PRIME RIB ALERT — DON’T MISS IT
When The Eatery is running its prime rib carving station, it’s the single best value on the buffet. Roasts arrive on a predictable cycle, and catching a fresh one improves flavor and tenderness noticeably.
Best time to visit: Early dinner hours on concert nights when turnover is highest and lines are shortest.
Menu highlight: The prime rib is the best hot item in the entire buffet when it’s running — easily the highest-value choice on the line.
So, I checked out The Eatery inside the Hard Rock Hotel in Tulsa, Oklahoma — twice, because I’m dedicated to research (and food). Overall, it’s a solid 4 out of 5 stars. The place is buffet-style, which means you can make a plate that looks like it belongs in a “before” photo from a diet commercial — and I did.
Let’s start with the service — top notch! Every server there deserves a standing ovation (and maybe a raise). They were like a NASCAR pit crew for food — plates cleared, drinks refilled, smiles all around, and before I could even think “where’s my server,” another one would swoop in like a hospitality ninja. I came with a group of 11 (yes, we’re that family), so they automatically tacked on 20% gratuity — but honestly, they earned every penny. When I came back the next day, they even remembered me. Either I’m unforgettable, or I ate a suspicious amount of mashed potatoes. Speaking of which…
The food: most of it was fantastic! The mashed potatoes — oh my lord — I don’t know what kind of sorcery they put in there, but it was like eating buttery clouds. The steak was on point, Chinese food surprisingly awesome, salad super fresh, and the shrimp? Jumbo, crispy, and perfectly fried. Even the fruit looked like it came straight from a food commercial. They even freeze mugs so you can make your own root beer float — that alone deserves applause.
Now, for the heartbreak: the crème brûlée. My all-time favorite dessert, and sadly… it was a little runny, like it had stage fright. The pumpkin pie also missed the mark — maybe homemade, maybe haunted. I took one bite and my taste buds filed for disappointment. But hey, the ice cream bar redeemed it with tons of toppings, so all was forgiven.
Everything was spotless — seriously, the place was cleaner than my intentions at a buffet. And since we went during Halloween, some of the staff were in costume, which added a fun, festive vibe.
All in all, if you’re near Hard Rock Tulsa, go hit up The Eatery. Bring an appetite, skip the pumpkin pie, and say hi to the world’s friendliest servers.
Food quality was comparable to school cafeteria food.