"food finds"
... the foods are spicy while others are sweet. There’s a good variety of dishes to choose from. Pizza, chicken, pork, beef, potatoes, rice, ice cream, and cookies. Every dish is dressed up with an array of colorful peppers, herbs, and spices. My favorite is the Cajun Big Easy. The Big Easy is the only cajun style food stand and the only one the that can fulfill my love for spicy foods. The Fridays in the corner looks funny because it’s a scaled down version of an ordinary one that can be seen outside of the mall. Walking by each stand gazing down at all of the colorful foods and the various textures trying to figure out what I wanted, I kept getting interrupted by the employees trying to persuade me to try a sample of their best food like a carny trying to get me to play their game, just so I would eat at their place. Once the decision of where to eat has been made people have to decide where to sit. There’s plenty of seating but during peak hours and seasons it can be hard at times to finds a seat. The eating area is very nice. It’s clean and well kept by the maintenance staff. The area is divided into four sections by walls about four feet high with dark green plants in them. The plants add a decorative touch and a little bit of an outdoor smell to the area. Each section has its own twenty-seven inch flat screen T.V. mounted flush in the corner on the ceiling. Many different kinds of people can be seen eating at the food court. From old to young, rich to poor, skinny to fat, and cute to ugly, it’s a very diverse place. Because of all the different ethnic foods all of the employees behind the counters of the food stands speak a different language fluently besides English. I have never been there and didn’t hear a different language such as Chinese, Haitian, or Spanish. Different kinds of relationships can be seen too. Lovers, friends, siblings, and whole families can all be seen fighting, eating, or laughing in the food court. The food court is also used as a meeting place by families not familiar with the mall or by friends that meet up after school or on the weekends. The employees that maintain the area are mostly of Mexican decent. They walk around sweeping up food off of the floor, watering the plants or dusting. They’re always busy doing something. The employees at the food stands are usually of the same ethnicity as the food stand they work for. At each food stand there’s a different language, accent, and look. Before leaving the food court, people can make a wish by chucking a coin into the fountain. This fountain is different from most. It’s brown speckled marble with a huge marble ball of the same color in the middle. The heavy ...