Huge Secrets Fine Dining Restaurants Try To Hide

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • Eating at a fine dining restaurant can feel like food heaven. The atmosphere sets the mood, and every bite can seem like bliss for your taste buds. Whether it's in the bread, salad, soup, or the main entrée, great fine dining dishes can transport you to another place.
    We may boldly try and replicate those tastes at home, but trying to capture those heavenly tastes often proves futile. Fine dining restaurants are often secretive about their delectable recipes.
    However, recipes are not the only thing that fine dining establishments hide from patrons. Here are huge secrets fine dining restaurants try to hide.
    #FineDining #Food #Restaurants
    Menu psychology | 0:00
    Not-so specials | 1:24
    The wine isn't worth it | 2:18
    So much butter and salt | 3:44
    Touched by many hands | 4:44
    Made in advance | 5:49
    Fancy ingredients? Maybe not | 6:45
    Well-done steaks, worst cuts | 7:40
    Cooks, not chefs | 8:36
    No sick days | 9:43
    Skip fish on Sundays | 10:38
    Read Full Article: www.mashed.com/35843/secrets-...
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Komentáře • 206

  • @MashedFood
    @MashedFood  Před 4 lety +20

    What are some memorably bad experiences you've had in restaurants?

    • @bleachguy64
      @bleachguy64 Před 4 lety +6

      The worst restaurant experience I ever had was watching his god-awful video

    • @bleachguy64
      @bleachguy64 Před 4 lety +3

      And one time I was even molested in the bathroom of a Tgi Fridays

    • @jordanlucien426
      @jordanlucien426 Před 4 lety

      When I choked on a mozzarella stick and my brother had to grab it out

    • @bigtravis6159
      @bigtravis6159 Před 4 lety +1

      When I first met her I Took my kids mom to a place in Clifton park NY called valentines for Valentine’s Day , it was highly recommended by her parents ,
      Asked the waiter if the veil was fresh or frozen , he said fresh, it was clearly frozen , when he asked how everything was I mentioned it and he lied again , hope he enjoyed the $2 tip on the $50 bill
      I delivered produce in my teens and seen some gross kitchens on my route ,
      A guy I known forever TJ bought a wine and spirits shop and when I was buying a bottle of win for my sister and brother in law house warming party TJ told me no bottle of wine is worth more than $40 no matter how much they are trying to sell it for

    • @bigtravis6159
      @bigtravis6159 Před 4 lety

      Never buy bakery delivered bread on Wednesday or Sunday in NY capital district since none deliver those days

  • @joeyjoe7930
    @joeyjoe7930 Před 3 lety +52

    If restaurants offer specials in order to use up excess food, then I’m okay with that! Why not? We get a deal and there is less food wasted.

    • @HenryZhoupokemon
      @HenryZhoupokemon Před 3 lety +2

      the food is less fresh

    • @jewitler
      @jewitler Před 3 lety +14

      @@HenryZhoupokemon yall say that and still eat mcdonald’s

    • @HenryZhoupokemon
      @HenryZhoupokemon Před 3 lety +3

      @@jewitler yeah cuz I’m paying $1 for my burger lmao
      I’m not gonna pay $10 for a seafood soup that went bad 2 days ago.

    • @jewitler
      @jewitler Před 3 lety +1

      @@HenryZhoupokemon yeah that’s why y’all obese af

    • @robertzeigler152
      @robertzeigler152 Před 3 lety +1

      @@HenryZhoupokemon your right $1 for a burger that went bad 3 weeks ago is much better than a soup that went bad 2 days ago. What were we thinking

  • @bleachguy64
    @bleachguy64 Před 4 lety +136

    Who is shocked by the fact that soups and sauces are made ahead of time? do you really think I'm going to sit there and make a marinara sauce that takes a minimum of 2 hours do you expect me to really make a a single cup of soup each time I get an order and have it ready for you in 5 minutes also serving the rest of the entire restaurant? Videos of ever seen mashed is such a terrible company

    • @TheCouponofDeath
      @TheCouponofDeath Před 4 lety +21

      For sure, I order a cup of onion soup, expecting to wait 2 hours minimum to get my food, and I always make sure to order my brisket the day before so I can get it after a 12 hour smoke. Trash list

    • @jblyon2
      @jblyon2 Před 4 lety +1

      My first job was in a restaurant. I did a lot of prep work. Even the bacon for your breakfast is cooked ahead of time in the oven and just crisped up before serving.

  • @troypeezy2784
    @troypeezy2784 Před 4 lety +61

    So butter and salt make food taste better, that's a shocker.

    • @deleted44
      @deleted44 Před 3 lety +1

      Honestly they missed the point on that one. It isn't the item it's the amount. What most people consider a pinch of salt is about 1/4-1/8 what a chef considers a pinch of salt

  • @conclavecabal.h0rriphic
    @conclavecabal.h0rriphic Před 3 lety +4

    I worked at a very busy, high volume restaurant when I was in high school. One day, a hot water dispenser malfunctioned and I got a really serious 2n/3rd degree burn on the back of my hand. I literally watched my skin melt off. My manager didn't want to let me leave and go to the er. He even tried putting a slice of tomato on it- saying some weird bullshit about how that would help the burn. I had to push his ass out of my way to run to the back of the house to get to the burn kit. Didn't really matter as I ended up having to leave to go to the er anyhow. I ended up having to wear this weird soft cast on my hand for a long time, and still have a scar to this day. I'm in my 30's fyi. Restaurants are notorious for not only not paying sick leave, but guilting/pressuring you into coming in when you're sick as a dog. It's a hard line of work.

  • @JE-western-rider
    @JE-western-rider Před 4 lety +22

    Gloves in the kitchen also leads to cross contamination according to our city health inspector. He would only let us use gloves when working with raw chicken and ground beef.

  • @cheflev9884
    @cheflev9884 Před 4 lety +34

    Fine dining commandment: only wear gloves when the health inspector is there. Washing hands, practicing basic hygiene, and kitchen cleanliness is enough. Gloves are an expensive waste!

    • @markgriffith2473
      @markgriffith2473 Před 4 lety +12

      Gloves can also melt and create a worse burn. Gloves are good when breading food or in pantry ( salad ) section . And yes if a health inspector come in it’s hats and gloves . Been there done that !

    • @asadb1990
      @asadb1990 Před 4 lety +12

      i would be happier if the chef washed their hands instead of wearing gloves. people are more careless when wearing gloves

    • @mikemil828
      @mikemil828 Před 4 lety

      Note: If you are cutting hot peppers like jalapenos you'd want gloves, otherwise you'll be spending the rest of the day with your hands on fire regardless of how much you scrub 'em.

    • @cheflev9884
      @cheflev9884 Před 4 lety +5

      mikemil828 worst part is that false sense of security when you think the gloves are fine but there is a hole. The chili’s get on your fingers. You go to the bathroom. Later, mysterious pain and redness ensue around your man parts. You think, maybe it’s the waitress I slept with last week? Long story short, gloves are the worst.

    • @katieluebcke9867
      @katieluebcke9867 Před 4 lety +1

      And sometimes it gives off a plasticy flavor to food. I had to stop wearing gloves whilst making crackers because it left that flavor.

  • @nicholasyee5955
    @nicholasyee5955 Před 4 lety +36

    why is this titled fine ddining restarants, when a lot of these " secrets" are from lower end places

  • @joeyclemenza7339
    @joeyclemenza7339 Před 4 lety +6

    if you're at a "fine dining establishment" and taking shortcuts by dripping beef broth and passing it over as ajou, you're not in a fine dining establishment.

  • @brianlespoir6287
    @brianlespoir6287 Před 4 lety +5

    I wash my hands like every 10 minutes or more. Every time I've prepared something or touched something, I wash my hands and knife. When I go to the bathroom, I wash my hands, then when I'm finished, i wash my hands and when I get back in the kitchen, I wash my hands again. Food can be very delicate and I don't want to cross-contaminate food and also not mess with the flavours. The food needs to be as pure as possible, so I also use a some tools to transport foods.

  • @ryanowns5
    @ryanowns5 Před 4 lety +3

    $60 for a ribeye? That shit better be 5 inches thick lol

  • @stevedoy796
    @stevedoy796 Před 4 lety +4

    As a chef, I'm shocked that restaurants actually prep things in advance, the horror

  • @comradecid
    @comradecid Před 4 lety +9

    remember that bit about gloves if you're one of those people who has inexplicably decided to don a pair whilst outside, in a vain attempt to protect yourself from plague

    • @whisperzzar3321
      @whisperzzar3321 Před 4 lety +2

      Exactly. As a semi professional chef, while we may touch your food, at the rate we wash our hands, the plate we put the food on is dirtier than the digits and utensils we use to plate up.
      EDIT: note: Gloves are usually only used by those who handle raw meat, or in the direct view of the public. The majority of cooks and chefs dont use them, and thats ok. Do YOU wear gloves when cooking dinner?

  • @MGreen5833
    @MGreen5833 Před 4 lety +3

    9:07..are they naked under that apron?! 😂😂

    • @7Ghos
      @7Ghos Před 4 lety

      I don't want her anywhere near my food

  • @nadia3013
    @nadia3013 Před 3 lety +2

    Seriously...did we go to the same culinary school? This is literally a week's worth of class assignment information.

  • @Raymond-rr5iv
    @Raymond-rr5iv Před 4 lety +6

    I knew it !! I just could feel it in my bones. My favorite Italian restaurant trying to stick it to me !!

  • @daniellesomerfield8799
    @daniellesomerfield8799 Před 4 lety +12

    He shouldn't be tasting out of a ladle for a start.

  • @lifewithcarrie88
    @lifewithcarrie88 Před 4 lety +6

    Food workers definitely need sick leave. I don't want to get sick because of some greedy owner. Now is the time to do so for sure

  • @TheNinnyfee
    @TheNinnyfee Před 4 lety +1

    Learning cooking from dishwasher upwards is actually better than culinary school because you learn every aspect of the craft and also learn respect for every station and for the kitchen environment.
    And you get paid instead of paying for it.

    • @donmiller2908
      @donmiller2908 Před 2 lety

      The school gives you a more rounded education. Learning at a single restaurant allows you to learn how to correctly prepare everything on their menu, that's all.

  • @namor521
    @namor521 Před 4 lety +2

    That's why I prefer to make it myself. Make whatever is on any menu

  • @ryacus
    @ryacus Před 4 lety +12

    Not giving someone what they paid for is called fraud where I come from.

    • @EGOCOGITOSUM
      @EGOCOGITOSUM Před 4 lety +2

      people who order a well-done steak deserve a lower quality product

    • @thomasparent5620
      @thomasparent5620 Před 4 lety

      You ordered your steak well-done, you’re getting EXACTLY what you paid for

    • @cmd31220
      @cmd31220 Před 3 lety

      Ah, but they ARE giving you what you paid for. Because legally you're right, a restaurant doing a switcheroo from what's on the menu IS a type of fraud.
      But if you notice, most of the time the menu descriptions are very generic even if they sound thorough and detailed. With the well-done steak example, as long as I don't explicitly say it's a USDA Prime graded cut, I can swap out a Choice cut and at well done, even some of the best chefs can't tell the difference.
      Same thing with labels like "organic" and "fresh" that have very specific legal definitions. I guarantee you when you read "organic" on a menu, you think it means something completely different from what it actually means. Maybe you'd still consider that fraud, but according to the law, it's just a case of cavaet emptor

  • @bigtravis6159
    @bigtravis6159 Před 4 lety +3

    Lots of restaurants that claim to be “fine dining” use frozen food and overcharge ,

    • @kalimacho1
      @kalimacho1 Před 4 lety +1

      Fine Dining Is For Pretentious & Suckers

  • @richard_aguirre
    @richard_aguirre Před 4 lety +1

    The salt is one reason COVID has been good for my health. I used to eat out 6 times a week or more. Now I have had food prepared outside five times (two from restaurants, the other three from grocery delis) since March 17th.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Před 4 lety +4

    Shocking mark up is shocking

  • @nesirsitsir
    @nesirsitsir Před 4 lety +13

    Too bad none of this matters right now because no restaurants are open

  • @ElenaKovakina
    @ElenaKovakina Před 4 lety +3

    Another dirty secret of (mostly fancy) restaurants - use of illegal labor. And that won't be a hole-in-the-wall - no, those will be mostly fine dining places, that would be routinely exploiting unpaid labor of interns, promising them experience, or "stage". This is illegal, according to US labor laws. And it's just dodgy, knowing that your money will go to business owners, that use this practice to save on labor costs.

  • @PrgressiveHouse
    @PrgressiveHouse Před 4 měsíci

    As long as the food is not expired it's great that they try to get it through tho

  • @YoniNadi
    @YoniNadi Před 4 lety +2

    I would think that after the coronavirus scenario; it’s probably better if people eat their foods in their own homes to avoid any viruses passed on by any restaurant employees!
    It’s always less expensive to eat at home with food from the supermarkets!
    There are plenty of pressure cookers available; and air fryers in the supermarkets, or online!

  • @JamesW81
    @JamesW81 Před 4 lety +3

    Here's another secret you weren't supposed to know.... Salt is a flavour enhancer. Think about that for a moment, think about how often you eat at fine dining restaurants, and think about what you would expect from that experience. Yeah, that's right, Food that tastes as good as it can. This video is what's hard to swallow.

  • @joeguzman3558
    @joeguzman3558 Před 29 dny

    I worked in a restaurant so let me tell you something- after you had your food delivered to your table and the waitress comes back to take it back with any excuse- let her or him take it back and don't argue that it's what you ordered- there's a reason why she's taking it back because it was intended for someone else- you fill the blanks

  • @ianbeddowes5362
    @ianbeddowes5362 Před 3 lety

    I live in South Africa. There are plenty of drinkable cheap wines. Most of the time I do not like very dry wine. A fruity semi-dry is good enough for me and for the traditional South African brie (barbecue) a local semi-sweet rose of which there are several cheap and nice brands is the ideal accompaniment. Other than that we occasionally go to an Indian restaurant very popular with the local Indian community.

  • @chichiboypumpi
    @chichiboypumpi Před 4 lety +2

    Japan deserves to get more Michelin stars

  • @SeanSandyHouston
    @SeanSandyHouston Před 4 lety +14

    Support local restaurants fine dining or hole in the wall!

  • @camthevitaman
    @camthevitaman Před 4 lety +5

    They said if you see an item on the regular menu and the specials it's a red flag...what's wrong with that? It's coming up to expiry so they give you a deal. I don't see what's wrong with that at all. Isn't that just normal practice?

    • @ryacus
      @ryacus Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah I don't see the problem with it if it's cheap enough.

    • @AlanHope2013
      @AlanHope2013 Před 4 lety

      It's not what most people mean by special, though. It would be a lot less attractive if they told the truth and called it fire-sale meatballs.

  • @georgemurphy2579
    @georgemurphy2579 Před 4 lety +3

    I industrial psychology is a field unto itself. Corporations pay big bucks to obtqin all forms of marketing techniques.
    This includes the music that is playing during your shopping experience.

  • @Rtw111
    @Rtw111 Před 4 lety +9

    Restaurants want to sell their products? Wow, never realized their true intention.

  • @sandraweilbrenner67
    @sandraweilbrenner67 Před 4 lety +2

    Bread baskets get reused from table to table.

    • @wgfakzram795
      @wgfakzram795 Před 3 lety

      Fine dining, not The Cheesecake Factory. Bread is rare as far as I'm aware in fine dining, they prefer to be more outlandish or experimental. Also, this video is bullshit.
      99% of this is just good business and common restaurant practice. Making sauces and certain items ahead of time?? No shit, dude, you can't make anything that takes 2 hours minimum in 5 minutes. Been in the food service industry for 6 years, and I see all of this, all the time, everywhere I go.

  • @flyntflossy3044
    @flyntflossy3044 Před 4 lety +1

    In the two steakhouses I've worked in, they do save the shitty cuts for well done orders.

  • @bleachguy64
    @bleachguy64 Před 4 lety +2

    Who looks at the middle of the menu first? It's a book meant to be read from left to right

  • @bigspoon7984
    @bigspoon7984 Před 4 lety +1

    Nothing is going to get me in a restaurant anytime soon.

  • @rosestewart8879
    @rosestewart8879 Před 4 lety +2

    So li might as well buy a Marie Calendars and save money!!!!!!!

  • @Daniel-yd7mx
    @Daniel-yd7mx Před rokem

    I don’t wear gloves when I cook and don’t expect anyone in the restaurant to wear them

  • @glopez900
    @glopez900 Před 3 měsíci

    The mark ups are not worth the convenience of dining out, now.
    It doesn't help that service has also been going downhill.

  • @stevenmqcueen7576
    @stevenmqcueen7576 Před 3 lety

    Learn to cook. Anybody who knows his way around the kitchen can prepare meals in less time then it takes to eat out and at a fraction of the cost. Start with the basics - stewing, pan, frying, braising, roasting, poaching - and learn how to use fresh herbs and spices. Then master sauces, starting with a basic white (béchamel) sauce and tomato (marinara) sauce. And remember the two most important rules of good cooking - (1) your food can only as good as the ingredients you use and (2) get all your ingredients ready before you start to cook (as the French say, “mis en place”).
    Knowing how to cook will also make you more discerning diner when you choose to eat out.

  • @BatCaveOz
    @BatCaveOz Před 4 lety +1

    4:03 - Shout out to my man, Bryan Callen! From The Fighter & the Kid 👊

  • @casualsenpaitv
    @casualsenpaitv Před 4 lety +2

    no one who orders a well done steak deserves the best cut. You ruin beef when you cook it like that.

    • @casualsenpaitv
      @casualsenpaitv Před 4 lety +1

      @lilmothugs If you'd like I can give you my rubber boots too. They'd probably taste about as good as a well done steak. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @VoiceOfReasonXXX
      @VoiceOfReasonXXX Před 4 lety

      @lilmothugsThe customer isn't always right or smart, but they paid for it, so I give it to them. Of course, I still mutter under my breath what a moron they are.

  • @williamstanley4960
    @williamstanley4960 Před 4 lety +1

    Their attempts to trick the rich actually give really rich people the opportunity to take the game to the next level. We use this knowledge to see who has it, and who does not.

  • @robertzeigler152
    @robertzeigler152 Před 3 lety

    Theres like maybe a tablespoon or 2 of salt in most 2 gallon batch salad dressing. Portioned out its literally a dash of salt...

  • @roman_birdie_songwriter

    I know many Chefs who made their way up from the dishwasher and they can actually perform much better than some people with culinary schools that I've seen. Every chef should be judged based on experience, not the education..

    • @donmiller2908
      @donmiller2908 Před 2 lety

      I agree. This Mashed list is ridiculous and unreasonable. As long as the dish is prepared correctly I don't care if the chef came from Le Cordon Bleu or the dishroom.

  • @ashmanproductions
    @ashmanproductions Před 4 lety +1

    Just saw my uncle (Jamie kaler) in this episode.

  • @alwin7891
    @alwin7891 Před 4 lety

    Why do I feel deja vu ?!

  • @capostatus64
    @capostatus64 Před 3 lety

    Song at 7:20? Heard it somewhere awesome once...

  • @dallasorr1794
    @dallasorr1794 Před 4 lety

    Being a cook over ten years some of these are true some maybe iv just never seen someone do it.

  • @jks15jkhaha2
    @jks15jkhaha2 Před 4 lety +1

    doesnt sound like fine dining... I GOT BAITED

  • @derekjeter7076
    @derekjeter7076 Před 4 lety +2

    Really people are you that shocked when you're In a high volume kitchen you have ticket times In a small frame rushes are 2-3 hours for dinner

    • @mattjones940
      @mattjones940 Před 3 lety

      really though! sometimes there are two cooks on the line feeding upwards of 250 people and then cleaning and closing everything down two hours after closing sometimes. People have no idea how hard the work can be, and cooks generally do not receive much if any of the tips that the servers get from the guests.

  • @kouleeofficial
    @kouleeofficial Před 3 lety

    I must be a cheapskate cause none of those marketing on the menu affect me lol.

  • @bestkitchenproductskaren
    @bestkitchenproductskaren Před 4 lety +1

    Chef is Chef

  • @kieranpavlick3909
    @kieranpavlick3909 Před 3 lety

    Did anyone else know when you saw the title that there would be a clip of Gordon Ramsey?

  • @stargo2931
    @stargo2931 Před 4 lety +1

    They can shove their golden triangle.

  • @stephen32frazier
    @stephen32frazier Před 3 lety

    @4:08 is that Byron Cologne?

  • @conclavecabal.h0rriphic

    I love butter.

  • @BenjaminGessel
    @BenjaminGessel Před 4 lety +1

    Butter... 🙄

  • @kaisagod57
    @kaisagod57 Před 3 lety +1

    Fine dining is not at all using up leftover ingredients right before spoiling, what is the script writer on??? i want some

  • @lauranyc4966
    @lauranyc4966 Před 4 lety

    I go to the same 3 restaurant and order the same food 🤷🏻‍♀️ and I don’t drink alcohol of any kind 🤷🏻‍♀️ more butter is better for me 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @davidwootton683
    @davidwootton683 Před 4 lety

    I think the Mashed Lady does not have a clue as to how long it can take to make a proper Beef/General Meat Stock. (This is a base for many soups and sauces). Four days! White meat, Chicken and the like, two days! I think this is restaurant Bashing.

  • @monkeytrollhunter
    @monkeytrollhunter Před 4 lety +1

    *After watching this video*
    Me: "I'm never eating out again"

  • @rogerszmodis
    @rogerszmodis Před 3 lety

    The butter isn’t a secret. At least to anyone with a tongue or rudimentary knowledge of Europe.

  • @alannasarafat9938
    @alannasarafat9938 Před 3 lety

    Like the French always say. "There is no to much butter" 🙃🙃🙃

  • @jojiscuisine7492
    @jojiscuisine7492 Před 3 lety

    What im getting is that you're basically ripped off and fooled if you go to any restaurants in the US

  • @schartattack
    @schartattack Před 3 lety

    Or just try knowing anything for yourself. I know that sounds crazy, but if you know what a bottle of wine retails for in your market, you can look up and down a wine list at a restaurant and see where the best deals are. If you don’t understand wine, you deserve to be overpaying anyway.

  • @bobby1953buick
    @bobby1953buick Před 3 lety

    Is that @bryancallen eating butter with a spoon?

  • @TheIkaika777
    @TheIkaika777 Před 4 lety +1

    I could tell you some stories that would shock you and make you never want to eat out in fine dining restaurants.

  • @acbc3543
    @acbc3543 Před 3 lety

    I am my own secret in the kitchen at home

  • @guitarking367
    @guitarking367 Před 4 lety +2

    Hi. Culinary graduate here who has worked at restaurants from Fast Food to Fine Dining over the course of 14 years... This video is mostly garbage.
    When a FINE DINING restaurant runs a special there are only 1 of 2 reasons:
    A. They want to add a product to a menu but want to see how popular it'll be so they run a "special" to test the waters.
    B. They've already changed the menu and still have product left over from the old menu to get rid of.
    Other points in video:
    YOU ARE NOT EATING EVEN CLOSE TO A STICK OF BUTTER
    Health Science has shown the amount of salt needed to raise blood pressure is actually much much higher than initially thought (according to nutrition class).
    Any fine dining restaurant worth a damn WILL NEVER use pre-made offsite products for 99% of their menu.
    No self-respecting restaurant is going to higher a recent grad with only school experience as a Sous-Chef or higher. They'll start at the bottom just like everyone else.
    Some points that were semi-accurate:
    Well-done steaks - We'll use the same cut off the subprimal but it will be the thinnest cut we made as these temps take FOREVER to cook on a decent-sized cut.
    When being sick: Yes. We go in sick and don't go home sick. And believe me the % is MUCH higher than 15%. Health insurance has almost zero to do with it. If someone calls off there is typically not enough kitchen staff to cover which makes things harder on everyone. And when it comes to health insurance restaurants CAN NOT AFFORD IT. A little known fact is food cost is typically 30%. Meaning for every dollar you spend on a meal 30 cents goes to just the food on the plate. that means the other 70 cents goes to employees, taxes, and keeping the lights on. On average only 2 - 5 % of total profits actually goes into the owner's pocket so they can't afford it.

  • @starkillerpro4840
    @starkillerpro4840 Před 4 lety

    I work in a Restaurant in germany and i can say every Think is true

  • @robertfarnon6223
    @robertfarnon6223 Před 4 lety

    Food poisoning at Marco Pierre White's with a wild mushroom pasta dish.

    • @VoiceOfReasonXXX
      @VoiceOfReasonXXX Před 4 lety

      Really?. Most all people who claim to have gotten food poisoning from a restaurant turn out to have done it to themselves. Nearly all food poisoning is the result of home cooks. People who have dined out and gotten sick tend to assume it was the restaurant and not the un-refrigerated egg salad sandwich they had for lunch.

  • @fuq278
    @fuq278 Před 4 lety

    Usinunue matumbo Sunday

  • @carlbowles1808
    @carlbowles1808 Před 4 lety +1

    I worked in resturaunts from fast food to high end. You Tell the truth, the industry is about money. Diner beware.

  • @IcyB-xg6xs
    @IcyB-xg6xs Před 3 lety

    You'll never get "freshly prepared food" in a fine dine restaurant. Because it's just not possible to make all that stuff on the spot. But, it will always be stored, hygienically (atleast places where I've worked), at around 2-3°C. And trust me that is safe, and it is as per standards. Restaurants associated with 5 star hotels, have to adhere to hygienic practices due to the occurrence of random audits, by 3rd party organisations hired by the hotel chain. So, atleast 4/5 times, the food you eat is good, safe and hygienic. But, not worth the money, trust me.

    • @donmiller2908
      @donmiller2908 Před 2 lety

      I cooked in the Navy aboard a ship for 4 years. We used to get a newsletter twice a year from some independent organization listing the top 50 food processing/preparing companies/organizations based on hygiene. These were restaurants, companies like Kraft foods, or Tyson Foods, military etc. Out of the top 50 the Navy, as an org., always placed between 17th to 13th. The number one spot on every list? McDonald's. It might not be haute cuisine but their restaurants are clean.

    • @IcyB-xg6xs
      @IcyB-xg6xs Před 2 lety

      @@donmiller2908 Indeed. McDonald's hygiene standards are strict to the point of absurdity, which is a good thing obviously.
      They have myriad rules pertaining to food's shelf life, food handling, etc. It's really clean.
      Eg: the shelf life of a freshly prepared batch of fries is just a couple of minutes (2-3 minutes maybe, I don't remember clearly, but it's in that ballpark). It's immediately replaced with a fresh one, as soon as the the timer goes off.

  • @georgewbushcenterforintell147

    Butter is very good for you .if you smoke eating butter will open your air ways

  • @katieluebcke9867
    @katieluebcke9867 Před 4 lety

    Wow, paranoia much? As someone who has worked in and run a kitchen for several years, most of this is garbage. Just that note about "specials have a good chance of being things almost ready to go off"? No, family meal is the typical vehicle for that. Just because, for example, you have the inner part of the brussels sprout leftover after using the outer leaves as a garnish, you can't just make up a special to use them up and expect people to order it. (If you can come up with a good dish, absolutely, but it's not nearly as simple as "we have this left, let's special it".) Final comment is that I hope most fine dining cooks want to be there and want to do their job well. I certainly hope for more from the chefs, and that is the person who should make the final decision about whether or not something like a piece of fish gets served. And then you adjust your ordering, you figure out if you should ice or oil a protein to keep it fresher for longer, or you decide whether you should have the dish at all. That's the most frustrating part of this video, it ignores that most head cooks/chefs are REQUIRED to make those decisions, because YOU are the person responsible for food costs, wastage, etc. Every restaurant is different, but a lot of this is fear-based nonsense. At least the food safety parts...can't comment on the wine, 'cause I only ever had to order cooking wine!

  • @stephenrefrew5466
    @stephenrefrew5466 Před 3 lety

    Yeah because a $60 ribeye steak is a deal compared to the Waygu LOL OKAY

  • @armandoheredia6819
    @armandoheredia6819 Před 3 lety

    If they offer food that didn’t sell well more then fine if there’s mold and roaches no standards people standards

  • @williamstanley4960
    @williamstanley4960 Před 4 lety

    It is funny to hear the science denying crowd still saying butter and salt are bad. LOL

  • @tommartin693
    @tommartin693 Před 4 lety +6

    What a load of bollocks this is 😂

  • @lennybusker8144
    @lennybusker8144 Před 4 lety +7

    If you’re thinking of getting the soup of the day, remember to ask what the soup of yesterday was

    • @ryacus
      @ryacus Před 4 lety

      You think they are gonna tell the truth?

  • @matthewgalati1870
    @matthewgalati1870 Před 3 lety

    Ths has nothing to do with fine dining. Fine dining restaurants and not concerned with trcking you. The average meal per person in a fine dining restaurant is about $300.00 and up, they do not have to cut corners and if they do then the high end customers will not return. Plus if you are eating previously frozen food you are NOT at a fine dining establishment.

  • @meganjarvis7970
    @meganjarvis7970 Před 4 lety +5

    Everything in life is such a lie! Nothing Nothing but lies!

  • @grantchow13
    @grantchow13 Před 4 lety +1

    Every business strategizes how they conduct business too maximize sales and profitability. It’s called promotion and marketing !!!!!
    Stop trying to make a conspiracy of everything.
    Restaurants aren’t health spas.
    That’s like eating at McDonald’s and blaming them your fat.
    You as a consumer make choices and decisions. Any business exists to get your business.

  • @gregpatterson921
    @gregpatterson921 Před 4 lety

    Or, why not just order what you want. 🤪

  • @gregjohnson720
    @gregjohnson720 Před 4 lety +2

    Did she say “en jus”? The use of this French term by non French speakers is sometimes crazy. They will call the sauce (jus) au jus. Au jus means with sauce and not just the sauce it self.

    • @gregp5254
      @gregp5254 Před 4 lety

      Greg Johnson cool she’s not French and this isn’t a French channel

    • @markgriffith2473
      @markgriffith2473 Před 4 lety

      Almost correct . Au jus is made from meat juice from cooking ,so not sauce. .

    • @gregjohnson720
      @gregjohnson720 Před 4 lety

      Sorry Mark but still incorrect au jus literally means at jus or at sauce. This is when a sauce is added on top of the protein.

  • @Torgo1969
    @Torgo1969 Před 4 lety +3

    1:57 Number 2 about the "specials" is no secret at all. Everyone knows that a "special" may very well be made of about-to-go-bad ingredients. Do you think we are all children or something and that we don't understand profit-and-loss and how to run a business?

    • @13374me
      @13374me Před 4 lety +1

      Plus why is this a bad thing? Like I'd rather them put it on special than throw it out

    • @carlbowles1808
      @carlbowles1808 Před 4 lety

      Soup of the day= simmered food scraps.

  • @GravaticBurst
    @GravaticBurst Před 3 lety

    You're punished if you are sick.

  • @sandraweilbrenner67
    @sandraweilbrenner67 Před 4 lety

    Country gravy is made in 5 gallon buckets every tuesday morning and reheated the rest of the week.

  • @hannamariewilson
    @hannamariewilson Před 4 lety

    Emphasis on "gloves provide a false sense of security"

  • @crobinson2624
    @crobinson2624 Před 3 lety

    Shhh... it’s not butter.

  • @atticusr.5228
    @atticusr.5228 Před 4 lety

    Most of the restaurants follow exactly what you expose here. Nothing new. Unfortunately fine dining restaurants are classified on a graphic level at the highest excellence. Starting with quality of the water of your pipes, to the hygiene of the entire place. Anything must be above 80%

  • @dylanwyont9095
    @dylanwyont9095 Před 3 lety

    I was working one night and we were busy, like 350 guest, and someone sliced there hand then. Instead if saying anything, this person SEARED THERE HAND IN A SKILLET. Popped a glove on then went back to work. The kitchen is wild. (He didn't use the pan after)

  • @LB-xk6fk
    @LB-xk6fk Před 4 lety +11

    This is absolutely full of non-truths. Ridiculous. Do some more background research.

    • @Rubix1982
      @Rubix1982 Před 4 lety +3

      Lonnie B yep I’m a chef. It’s bull shit.

    • @LB-xk6fk
      @LB-xk6fk Před 4 lety +2

      JKnowles when they were speaking of saliva covered foods during the middle of the covid-19 pandemic, it seems that this was only meant to hurt the business. Very unprofessional and could be very damaging to restaurants in today’s day and time.

    • @trublacking8572
      @trublacking8572 Před 4 lety +2

      Maybe something restaurant but not all

    • @trublacking8572
      @trublacking8572 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Rubix1982 I mean I get where you're coming from but maybe some restaurants do it but she kind of like generalizing it was all restaurants do that

  • @Doginthesleep
    @Doginthesleep Před rokem

    This is the Karen of lists lol