Pocahontas Pancake and Waffle Shop was originally
opened in 1974 by the Crisostomides family. In 1986 The Zervoudakis family,
Mary, Angelo and George bought the restaurant and
kept the Pocahontas name. Since that time there have been many changes
made to the restaurant. We brought in local artist Jim Johnson to paint murals
on the wall and windows and had an authentic Indian Tee Pee built inside. Our
crew works hard to keep our restaurant in good condition, serve the best food
possible and provide a family friendly atmosphere. Our staff is mostly seasonal, made up of
collage and high school students. We are open year round although from mid
November until mid March we are only open 3-4 days a week. You can always find
us open on Weekends and most holidays.

In late August of 2002, the Food Network
featured Pocahontas Pancakes and Waffle Shop on the "Best Of" series
choosing us as the "Best Pancake House in Virginia Beach".
We appreciate you choosing Pocahontas Pancake and
Waffle Shop and hope you enjoy your visit.
Below is a newspaper article printed
February 2007 in the Virginia Pilot, the local newspaper for Hampton Roads,
Virginia .
Restaurateur opened his heart to women needing
sustenance!
IT WAS A SMALL ACT: Susan Anderson was going to take her friend out for
pancakes. She wanted to give Melia Trost a much-needed break from some
family worries.
On a Thursday morning earlier this month, Anderson drove Trost to the
Pocahontas Pancake and Waffle Shoppe at the Oceanfront.
If you haven't been there, Pocahontas Pancakes is a landmark of the
tourist strip on Atlantic Avenue. Over the summer, the lines can stretch
out the door, but in the beginning of February the Oceanfront often
resembles a ghost town, and many businesses are virtually empty.
When the women walked in the restaurant's back entrance, they were the
only customers, and no one was around to seat them.
Men standing near the door said the place was closed. The front door was
locked. The men apologized and said that during the off-season
Pocahontas is open only on weekends.
Anderson persisted, saying her friend had never been to Pocahontas.
That changed everything.
Owner George Zervoudakis invited them in. He asked them to sit down. He
made them coffee and warmed their mugs to make sure the coffee stayed
hot.
Then he went in the back and made his famous pecan waffles. He
apologized that it would take 15 minutes to warm up the grill. He sliced
bananas for a side dish.
As he worked, the women sat in the empty restaurant and talked. Girl
talk. Some about their children. Some about growing up. Some about
Trost's teenage daughter, who was fighting a second bout of cancer.
The smell of the place, Trost said, was very comforting, like her
mother's kitchen.
Then Zervoudakis brought out the food, which the women described as
incredible. The waffles had an elaborate design around the border.
After 30 minutes, Zervoudakis approached the table. He told the women
he'd be right back, he needed to go pick up his wife.
"Is it all right with you?" he asked.
Of course, they said. And the women kept talking. When he came back,
Anderson pulled out a $20 bill to pay.
But Zervoudakis wouldn't take it. Anderson followed him around the
restaurant, and still he wouldn't take it. He said she was embarrassing
him.
"It's becoming go, go, go. Money, money, money. Maybe I'm one of the few
romantics left," Zervoudakis told me later. "A few dollars in my pocket,
it's not going to make a difference."
Zervoudakis is energized when people treat him well. He says it's the
hospitality that comes with being Greek. In turn, he likes to give back
twice what people do for him.
I told Zervoudakis why the women were there: to keep their minds off the
anxiety that cancer brings. I told him that the next day Melia Trost's
18-year-old daughter was going in for chest scans to see if her cancer
treatment had worked. He was quiet and said "oh." Then I told him that
the test results came back and the cancer was gone. He didn't say much.
But Trost described that morning as "an absolutely amazing" experience.
"It's hard for people to know what to do," she said. Some people don't
call. Some people avoid the subject in conversation. Some people don't
ask what they can do. Everyone means well, but they just don't know how
to help.
"He gave us exactly what we needed."
Coffee, bananas and waffles.
Reach Mike Gruss at (757) 446-2277 or mike.gruss@pilotonline.
The Virginian-Pilot © February 24, 2007
Voted "Best Pancake House in Virginia Beach
in 2002"
by "The Food Network".
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