
Address and Contact Information
Address: 100 Nicolls Rd, Stony Brook, NY 11794
Phone: (631) 632-2881
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Simons Center Cafe | Stony Brook NY – Facebook
Simons Center Cafe (@simonscentercafe) – Instagram
Simons Center for Geometry and Physics: LFSM
Reviews
For those who weigh less than 140 lbs, eat enormous breakfasts, are in the mood to spend $25 on a small 2-course lunch that will only fill you if you eat four or five bread rolls, and also willing to suspend the belief that much of the food served could easily be cooked at home, the Simons Center is the perfect place for lunch. But the average weight of an adult man in the US is 180 lbs and meager portions will leave them in want. The stinginess of the portions is much discussed by returning visitors. On many separate occasions, I’ve heard postdocs and grad students remark that the portions are smaller than they remember. Since the center does host many conferences that I’ve been officially registered for with per diem funding and we also have a weekly seminar lunch (again, funded by a generous faculty member’s grant), I have been able to document their portions without having to pay the exorbitant prices.
The following photos supply evidence; in each, I have not yet eaten so what you see is exactly what I got. Note the coin for comparison of the portion sizes; either the US quarter or Canadian 2 dollar. For instance, on three occasions with carrots, I received only three carrots, showing that it wasn’t a one-off event. Or note that there are only six green beans in another photo (my friend got five). Or compare the amount of watermelon in one salad vs the other. Or note that the braised short rib could be approximately covered by 4 US quarters. Also, I am no food expert but this food seems standard American (or western European, if you must), not culturally diverse. Certainly, the menu hardly varies over the course of many months; I’ll say they have ~10 entrees in rotation with room for only small variations (see the repeat steak). Of course, a research center with a cafe shouldn’t be expected to have the breadth of a restaurant but the cafe at the IAS in Princeton at least has some culturally diverse meals.
One of the other reviews from the past year (with several photos) depicts trays of muffins and desserts. These are only available to conference participants at tea time or banquets. Also, high turnover rate for employees. Once, I thought conference participants could have coffee but they said locals can’t have it and I had to dump it.
To summarize, I grant that a subset of the food might be tasty but in my opinion, it is highly overrated and the cost of living is high enough on Long Island. Don’t waste it at the Simons Center Cafe, especially if you don’t wish to support a monopoly like Lessing’s.