Salina's Pizza

21114 South La Grange Road, Frankfort
(815) 427-4992

Recent Reviews

Ali A

Best pizza in the Frankfort area !!

Atmosphere: 5

Food: 5

Service: 5

Tarik I.

Great food . Food right on time and hot. Great service We took the pizza next store and ate it at Charcoal BBQ ,so we had a mixture of pizza with kabob and delicious salads Great atmosphere

Pedro

Catering order never got prepared because the kitchen manager didn’t feel like making it I guess. Never offered a valid reason why it wasn’t made and worst of all nothing was done to rectify the situation and much less an apology. Kitchen manager refused to give us contact information for other management/ownership. Have been ordering catering for several years and it’s a shame it has to end this way.

Atmosphere: 1

Food: 1

Service: 1

Luigi's Pizza & Pasta

High priced pizza with the low quality of Domino'

Food: 1

Service: 2

Z

They cater to us at BMW in Orland Park - HALAL FOOD, GREAT SERVICE, GREAT PRICES ?? A+ Highly recommendedVegetarian options: Veggie Pizza

Atmosphere: 5

Food: 5

Service: 5

Recommended dishes: Chicken Parmesan, Chicken Tettrazini, Harvest Salad, Chicken Caesar Salad, Italian Chop Salad, Garlic Breadsticks, Thick Crust Pizza, BBQ Sauce

Nattie Dee

Delicious!

Food: 5

Mark C

Chicken was dry, coleslaw drenched in mayo and pasta salad dripping with oil. Very

Food: 2

Service: 3

Dawn O.

The absolute best pizza!! I always ordered from the Tinley Park location and was so disappointed to see them change over to catering only. Tonight I called the Frankfort location to see if they had expanded their delivery area. To my surprise, they had an outgoing delivery near my home and were able to add me to that delivery schedule. The pizza was amazing as always! The gentleman that answered the phone couldn't have been more nice and accommodating. I'll drive there to pick up a pizza. So happy to have Salinas pizza for dinner tonight and I realized how much we've missed having it.Top notch establishment.

Melaine K.

For some reason we never tried Salina's! Well, we did last night and where pleasantly surprised! The pizza was excellent. We ordered it well done and so glad we did. The only down side is that it was pricey, maybe we will find a coupon next time. We will be ordering again!

GeorgeKittle

Food at Salina’s isn’t greasy as people say their food is. I tried variants of their food and I think that’s great to have a large variety of food in one or more establishments. Hay Fever was a comical play with a strong message. The actors throughout this play steadily used others to gain their own attention. The message this play left behind after many laughs was do not use others, plain and simple. The space was a well-constructed thrust stage however, the stage was not raised off the ground and the seats appeared to be mobile which lead to the belief that this is an Environmental Theater. As for the layout of the stage, there was a couch and a table in center stage for the first two acts, a door to the unseen outside front of the house upstage right, there were two large double doors upstage center leading to the backyard garden, and a raised floor upstage left containing a piano, a bookcase and a door leading to the home library. Stage left there was a half spiral staircase that lead up to the second floor which had a painting and lights that extended across to stage right. The second floor also contained the bedrooms for the house but the doors were not in sight. The detail was greater than expected: the hardwood floor throughout the first floor seemed to be genuine, the actual bookcase filled with real books not stage books, and the extremely large double doors with translucent glass and floral designs lead to the Garden, which featured an array of plants behind the doors. Rascher was displaying his love for Michelle Lu (Myra) in the most dramatic of fashions; he was playing the Bliss’ game of pretending to be in complete love with someone and then a moment later change his mind. Rascher was proclaiming his love with elegant speeches and coddling up next to her and eventually kissing her. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. Rascher made this scene particularly hilarious because he was completely over the top in typical Bliss fashion. Of course, all of this was for naught because Luz ended up kissing Joe Hubbard’s character David Bliss in act two and also Rascher proclaimed his engagement to Caitlin Stagemoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the feel by dressing in all costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. Five stars out of five stars women!

Saif Hamdan

I randomly decided to eat from here today and little did I know, it was the most delicious Pizza I've ever had! Such a great experience ordering from here. The service was top notch and the pizza was to die for! I highly recommend!!

Atmosphere: 5

Food: 5

Service: 5

Bareah Alhayek

I ordered 6 pizza’s for my son’s birthday party, and everyone loved it. Great prices and great quality!P.s. the fried chicken and mac n cheese are amazing!

Anita Burmila

Love love love Salinas PizzaHave been a regular before Covid and they have bounced back nicelyIt’s been a few years but they survived!Welcome Back

Joe

Food at Salina’s isn’t greasy as people say their food is. I tried variants of their food and I think that’s great to have a large variety of food in one or more establishments. Hay Fever was a comical play with a strong message. The actors throughout this play steadily used others to gain their own attention. The message this play left behind after many laughs was do not use others, plain and simple. The space was a well-constructed thrust stage however, the stage was not raised off the ground and the seats appeared to be mobile which lead to the belief that this is an Environmental Theater. As for the layout of the stage, there was a couch and a table in center stage for the first two acts, a door to the unseen outside front of the house upstage right, there were two large double doors upstage center leading to the backyard garden, and a raised floor upstage left containing a piano, a bookcase and a door leading to the home library. Stage left there was a half spiral staircase that lead up to the second floor which had a painting and lights that extended across to stage right. The second floor also contained the bedrooms for the house but the doors were not in sight. The detail was greater than expected: the hardwood floor throughout the first floor seemed to be genuine, the actual bookcase filled with real books not stage books, and the extremely large double doors with translucent glass and floral designs lead to the Garden, which featured an array of plants behind the doors. Rascher was displaying his love for Michelle Lu (Myra) in the most dramatic of fashions; he was playing the Bliss’ game of pretending to be in complete love with someone and then a moment later change his mind. Rascher was proclaiming his love with elegant speeches and coddling up next to her and eventually kissing her. It appeared that Wrentmore instructed the actors, to keep their pauses longer than natural to heighten the awkward tension in the scene, which made it brilliant. Rascher made this scene particularly hilarious because he was completely over the top in typical Bliss fashion. Of course, all of this was for naught because Luz ended up kissing Joe Hubbard’s character David Bliss in act two and also Rascher proclaimed his engagement to Caitlin Stagemoller’s character, Jackie Coryton. Rascher made his voice more shrill and audible to appear to be more dramatic and create more attention for himself. In the same way, Rascher used grander gestures with his arms (flailing, waving, etc.) to cause a more dramatic effect. The play was well interpreted by all whom were involved. Steven Wrentmore, the Director, kept the feel by dressing in all costumes and everyone spoke as if they were living at the time. Michelle Bisbee, the scene designer, made the inside of the home appear because everything was grand. The Bliss’ home was grand with the spiral staircase, the very large backdoors, and the eloquent piano. The actors’ mannerisms seemed like they were portraying a silent film. In older movies, actors seemed very dramatic and had flamboyant actions to prove so; the actors in Hay Fever shared the same feel for the dramatics. As far as Stephen Wrentmore’s directing goes, he did an excellent job. The scene when Chris Karl (Richard) and Caitlin Stegemoller (Jackie) enter and are left alone to make small talk with each other is the best pertaining to directing. The two actors used the entire stage in this scene and were very awkward with one another. This was Wrentmore’s doing because you could tell he had a vision for this scene in particular because it seemed very crisp and well rehearsed. The actors played it perfect with the excessively long pauses in their awkward small talk that the crowd was laughing through the entire scene. Five stars out of five stars women!

juby019

hours are iffy and do they stop answering there phone at 6 when they close at 7? For a pizza place it kind of has a bad business model.

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