Please Call For Reservation For Business Meeting, Birthday Parties, Celebration. Open Every Day & Holidays!
Restaurant Location
Number of Employees
5+
Number of Seats
200+
Average Price
$7.99-$9.99
Restaurant Type
Cuisine
Offers
Dine-in
Buffet
Takeout
Parties
$10.00-$15.00
Ratings
4 people have voted
Awards and Honors
AVG:(5.0)
AVG:(5.0)
AVG:(4.8)
AVG:(5.0)
For the Top 100 Restaurants
Top 100 Buffet (2011)
Top 100 Buffet (2010)
Comments(9)
Reviewed by:
Ebony E. on:
12/13/2012 4:16:00 PM
I'm giving this place two stars because the food was gross and cold. To me most of the food looked like it was just sitting there all day. The first plate I had I just threw it away because it was ice cold the second plate was meh the selection they had wasn't that great. The only thing that was good was the BBQ ribs, cheese cake, and their ice cream. This place is huge and I can imagine how crowded it can get on the weekends but I will not be coming back.
Reviewed by:
El H. on:
10/29/2012 9:40:00 PM
Well, my tip is...only go there when you have too. This place used to be so good, now not so much. Too bad. This place was less than a quarter full on a Saturday night and has a B rating. The food was not hot and the steam table selection seemed lacking. I predict this place to be closed within the year.
Reviewed by:
Brenna S. on:
9/27/2012 3:27:00 PM
The whole place seemed very rundown, from the decor to the rust on the bathroom stalls. More importantly, the food was not at the proper temperature, shrimp was not deveined, the whole place smelled greasy, and I came back to discover a cockroach walking around on our table. The manager tried to do the right thing by giving us a 10% discount, but we are not going back.
Reviewed by:
L T. on:
8/26/2012 7:55:00 PM
Their food sucks I'm sorry lol but it's all good when someone else treating you hehe
Reviewed by:
Djinou J. on:
8/14/2012 5:02:00 AM
Four stars is for the quality of this Chinese buffet in comparison to the food I've seen and/or eaten at other Chinese buffets. I have a sort of bias against Chinese food after a bad experience so I was really reluctant to eat here but my boyfriend wanted to so...yeah.Anyway the food was really good and surprisingly fresh the first time I went. It was a Sunday afternoon I believe. I went again midday on a Thursday and it was blaaaaah. I learned never to go to a Chinese buffet when they aren't busy; it makes sense that when they are busy they are cooking more and changing the trays more often as opposed to them sitting for long periods of time when it's slow. If you want to try it, go on the weekends when its busy!
Reviewed by:
Joey I. on:
8/1/2012 2:23:00 AM
Chinese buffet. It's pricey for Ridgewood, but it's got a very big selection, more than 3 zones to grab food from.Go for lunch, if you can. I don't think any one item is great, it's run of the mill stuff.Place is enormous though, I mean huge!
Reviewed by:
Sarah R. on:
4/13/2012 11:31:00 AM
Came here for weekday lunch. I believe it was around $8, more or less. The choices were of typical Chinese fare, with trays of mashed potatoes, mac n cheese and other deli staples. Food was pretty good and service was consistent. I guess I couldn't complain since I paid eight bucks for two heaping plates of shrimp cocktail, two bowls of soup, a lot of dessert...a smorgasbord, basically. Whew.
Reviewed by:
Matthew A. on:
2/14/2012 9:58:00 AM
Since I don't have a music blog or any blog for that matter, you fine foodies here at Yelp will just have to put up with what will prove to be an unjustifiably useless review of K&K Super Buffet because, despite it being a restaurant, not a bite of food was to be had.In fact, the reason I had left Queens (...to go to Manhattan to go through Brooklyn to get to Queens...) was to catch a show. You see, like the mild-mannered Dr. Jekyll, for one night the otherwise conventional K&K Super Buffet underwent a Mr. Hyde-esque transformation, assuming Mr. Hyde was a lot less of a sociopathic murderer and much more into Bon Iver.Thanks to the efforts of Todd P., a frequently name-dropped figure in context of the NYC DIY music experience, the buffet stowed away steam trays and opened its doors to host a few DJ sets (who I was too late to catch and am now too lazy to look up), The Babies, Black Dice, and the headliner Real Estate who are originally from Ridgewood, New Jersey and is the inspiration for the clever transposition of towns.Seeing as how:A) Real Estate's latest album, Days, was the soundtrack of my life for a week,B) Tickets cost less than a Subway $5 Footlong (Okay...tickets were actually $7 after fees, but still kudos to Todd P again for keeping the price unbelievably low),C) The venue was a CHINESE BUFFET,There was no way I was going to miss out on the experience.Apparently, neither were hundreds of other people because, despite the size of K&K resembling what I compared to as a "Townhall for a middle-class southwest American suburb" or a friend saw as a "McChurch", the place was packed out. In fact when we first got there there was a line that stretched the entire perimeter of the parking lot to get in. I was actually shocked on how orderly and professional the entire situation was given that the sheer amount of people lined up on a Saturday night was more than enough for a fiasco. Say what you want about hipsters, but they can queue up patiently like champs.Perhaps it's because I imagine most Chinese buffets to be minimally decorated food landfills with a layer of grease coating plastic covered furniture but K&K was rather nice and clean looking. The bamboo (or faux bamboo) wall decor fit in nicely with the mini-waterfall up front though it seemed more Japanese inspired than Chinese. I did think the crystal ship chandelier was a bit gaudy and more befitting for the house of a pirate hip-hop artist. The tables were dull though and while I'm not even expecting dinner cloth, it didn't have to look like the inside of a bowling alley.I actually couldn't figure what the stage was made of, so I am unsure if there was make-shift or if the buffet actually sported one but either way, it was sufficient. A wish that I had made to my friend earlier, that the audience would be placed amongst the buffet tables, was joyfully realized as I watched most of the show from what I would guess to be the dessert section.The acoustics were an audiophilic wonder and sound levels were mixed to the perfect blend of fidelic euphony...nah, I'm just kidding, I have no idea what I'm talking about. But I do know there was a shit ton of amps and it was loud and it was awesome and it was a Chinese buffet so who cares.
Reviewed by:
Brandon Z. on:
2/3/2012 5:17:00 PM
I haven't eaten here, but at night this place sometimes magically transforms into Ridgewood's largest music venue. Good sound, great sightlines, crystal ship chandelier. Cap the capacity a bit lower and we're golden.