My husband and I have been going to restaurants together since we started dating — approximately seven years ago. Because that’s what you do with humans you like spending time with: You eat out at restaurants and treat yourselves to steaks and veggie burgers and nachos and lo mein and maybe even adult beverages if that’s the kind of mood you’re in, and you enjoy each other’s company. (Or maybe you are much, much more fiscally responsible than I am and you cook at home, and if that’s the case, I salute you; you’re going to be a millionaire much sooner than I am.)
When you go out with your parents, or your BFF, or even a co-worker, they might scrutinize the food they ordered. They might send back their salad because the arugula seems, ugh, I don’t know, flaccid. They might be like, “This avocado toast is just OK, but I kind of want my $16 back, you know?” But the level of scrutiny from friends and family does not match the level of scrutiny from a professional chef who is, by nature, a food snob.
For 20+ years, my husband has cooked food on a monstrous scale. He’s been behind the scenes. He knows the secrets of cooks that we regular restaurant go-ers do not know. He has ordered millions of dollars worth of food for millions of hungry people. He is on first-name bases with the people who deliver produce in big cardboard boxes you normally only see when you buy a refrigerator, and part of his many jobs has been to inspect the food that’s delivered to make sure it’s fresh and doesn’t look like crap before it gets cooked.
So when we go out to eat at a restaurant, he can spot imperfections and shortcuts gone wrong, and it’s annoying sometimes, but the intel is also useful. If you’re still reading this, then I assume you wanna know it, too. Let’s begin with the many ways going out to eat has been destroyed forever for me (and now you, sorry about that).
“Homemade” is such a loosey-goosey term thrown around in the food and bev world. If something is ACTUALLY homemade, the cook has truly created the type of food from scratch, not using (or barely using) anything pre-made.
If the fries are, they’re usually unevenly shaped and don’t look like a machine sliced them. For me, fries are fries, and they are delicious, and I will stuff my face with all the fries, regardless of where they came from. But now ya know the truth.
Usually frozen fish is uniform in size and more watery. It usually tastes the same as fresh, so *shrug*.
Specials is (generally) code for “we have a ton of stuff left over from our last order, and we don’t want to waste food, so we came up with an entree or two that utilize these on-the-cusp-of-going-bad ingredients.”
Technically, the fish is OK to eat. But it’s on its last legs (fins?). It has maybe one more day until it could be poison and give you a tummy ache. It’s also not fresh by that point — it’s been frozen. So, hey, it’s your life. I’m just sayin’.
I don’t know how, but he can tell when a sauce isn’t made from scratch.
And this is something I actually learned while serving for a few years in college.
Only thing is that if the dish is too old, or if it’s already been heated, the cheese starts to break.
If your soda tastes weird, it could be because the nozzles haven’t been cleaned (when I worked at Panera in high school, we had to send them through the dishwasher *every* night).
This can also get you sick, so be careful out there, fam.
Same idea. A restaurant or hotel or wherever that has an ice machine should be cleaning out their ice.
Ideally, you don’t want your ice to taste like anything, right?
Watch the coffee as you pour your milk/creamer in.
Or does the coffee just immediately turn a lighter color of brown? You’ll know what I mean.
New York-style cheesecake and tiramisu from a cafe that doesn’t specialize in dessert (or really have the capacity) is most likely not made in-house.
If you care about such things.
There’s a huge difference. When someone has cracked eggs into a bowl and whisked, you’ll get an even texture and color (light, light yellow, preferably fluffy).
Can you tell that I love scrambled eggs? I do.
That’s worse than instant potatoes (he knows the difference between NICE instant potatoes because those generally will have bits of potato skin mixed in, and cheap instant potatoes, which are more bland and powder-y), IMO, because there’s actually something about instant potatoes I secretly like (don’t tell anyone, especially my hub).
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