CELEBRITY
There’s Zero Soul in the Food”: Fans Ridicule Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes’ New Restaurant’s $800 Meal That Tastes Like an Ordinary Dish
The restaurant opened September 17 inside the Loews Hotel in downtown Kansas City, combining their jersey numbers into one pricey play. But reviews are rolling in colder than a December game at Arrowhead.
Reviewers on Social Media Cook Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes’ New Restaurant’s Quality
Kelsey Huson from Business Insider recently dropped her review after burning through nearly $800 with three friends. Her take? The ambiance delivered a thousand percent. The presentation looked absolutely elite. But when fans saw that price tag for what they’re calling cafeteria-level grub, the internet went nuclear.
I ate at Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes’ new steakhouse, 1587 Prime. Our $800 dinner felt like more than just a meal
The menu reads like a hostage situation for your wallet. A Delmonico steak runs $135. A 16-oz boneless ribeye hits $165. Want surf with your turf? Twin lobster tails cost $76, roasted branzino $63.
Even the side dishes are highway robbery – $16 for mashed potatoes, $24 for a twice-baked potato, $16 for mac and cheese.
ALSO READ: LOOK: Taylor Swift And Travis Kelce Turn Heads With Late-Night 1587 Prime Date After Chiefs Dominate Raiders
In her review, Huson gave a reality check, penning, “Would I order this much on a normal night out? No. Would I go here on an average weekday? Also, no — but, let’s be honest, if I could afford to … yes.”
The backlash exploded faster than Mahomes’ no-look passes. TPS shared one savage review that went straight for the jugular, noting, “Save your money. This is a classic ‘let’s start a restaurant because of our reputation’ place. There’s zero soul in the food, menu is boring, and EVERYTHING is over priced.”
“I’m sorry $800 for one meal is ridiculous,” one user fired off.
Another attacked the class divide, adding, “Extremely overpriced items that the common folk save up to buy to further the divide between the owning class and the working class.”
The dress code added insult to injury. “STRICT DRESS CODE AND HIGH PRICES! WAY TO CATER TO THE ELITE,” a third fan wrote.
Another dropped this truth bomb, penning, “Football tickets have gotten too expensive for an average family of 4 to enjoy. Now 1587 restaurant is off limits to most. Do they take food stamps?”
The two Super Bowl champs might dominate Sunday’s prime-time clash, but in the restaurant game, regal fans abandon them because every menu item has a hefty price tag.
