A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - What’s The Best Chain Restaurant Of All Time? ft. Chef Tim Hollingsworth
Episode Date: September 25, 2024Today, Josh and Nicole are joined by Chef Tim Hollingsworth to debate which chain restaurant deserves the title of the best of all time. Leave us a voicemail at (833) DOG-POD1 Check out the video vers...ion of this podcast: http://youtube.com/@mythicalkitchen To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This, this, this, this is Mythical.
It's a new day. How can you make the most of it with your membership rewards points?
Earn points on everyday purchases. Use them for that long-awaited vacation.
Points never expire, so use them how you want.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
On eligible cards, terms apply. Learn more at mx.ca.
Nicole, I'm going to Italy this summer.
Oh, well, sounds fab. Can I come? Absolutely not. Turn supply. Learn more at mx.ca. Nicole, I'm going to Italy this summer.
Oh, well. Sounds fab. Can I come?
Absolutely not. But you know that sense of anxiety you get when you try and order food in a different country and you don't know the right words?
Oh my god, of course. Happened to me on my last international trip.
Well, no more embarrassment to be had, Nicole, because I've been practicing my Italian with Rosetta Stone.
Rosetta Stone has been a trusted expert for 30 years with millions of users and 25 different languages offered.
With Rosetta Stone, you get fast language acquisition, speech recognition, convenience, and all at an amazing value.
That's right! You can get a lifetime membership with access to 25 languages like Spanish, Polish, Korean, and more for 50% off.
You can learn anytime, anywhere. Learn on the go with the mobile app or at home at your desktop.
Plus, you can work on your accent with Rosetta Stone's built-in True Accent feature,
which gives you live feedback on your pronunciation.
You really learn to speak, listen, and think in that language since there aren't any English translations.
You'll be picking up a new language with words, then phrases, then sentences for better long-term retention.
It's so immersive.
So don't put off learning that language. There's no better time than right now to get started. A hot dog is a sandwich
listeners can get Rosetta Stone's lifetime membership for 50% off.
Visit rosettastone.com slash hot dog. That's 50% off unlimited access to 25
language courses for the rest of your life. Redeem your 50% off at
rosettastone.com slash hot dog today. I want my baby back, baby back, baby back, baby back.
I want my baby back, baby back, baby back.
Chili's baby back ribs.
With barbecue sauce.
This is a hot dog is a sandwich.
Ketchup is a smoothie.
Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what?
That makes no sense.
Hot dog is a sandwich.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
What? Welcome to our podcast, A Hot Dog Is A Sandwich, So what that makes no sense hot dog is a sandwich
Welcome to our podcast a hot dog is a sandwich the show we break down the world's biggest food debates I'm your host Josh Scherer and I'm your host Nicole and I 80 and we have a very special guest joining us today
Please welcome Michelin starred chef restriture co-founder of chain and immersive dining experience that reimagines familiar chain restaurant favorites
Tim Hollingsworth welcome to the show Hey guys, thanks for having me. Of course of chain and immersive dining experience that reimagines familiar chain restaurant favorites,
Tim Hollingsworth, welcome to the show.
Hey guys, thanks for having me.
Of course.
We did not add, Tim, you won maybe my favorite
in the most underrated cooking competition show
of all time, The Final Table on Netflix.
And I wanna give you your props for that.
Thank you.
I never saw it, but congrats on winning it. So today we're gonna be talking about what's the best chain?
Restaurant of all time or we're just gonna talk about how much we love chain restaurants and how important they are
Well, I I want to get into the psychology of chain restaurants because Tim what was what was behind starting chain
So chain, you know, originated from an idea
that my partner, BJ Novak, had.
And he wanted to create a chain restaurant
that wasn't necessarily a chain,
but like paid homage and felt like a chain
when you were going in and had like food
that was, you know, executed at an extremely high level.
He secretly thinks that, you know,
rather than going to all of these, you know,
different chef's restaurants and whatnot, people really
want to go to a chain restaurant.
And, you know, I, for me, chain restaurants were, uh, like a, uh, special
occasion kind of place growing up, you know, grew up in a very rural area.
And I had, you know, we live like 45 minutes to drive to like town.
Um, so it was like in the middle of kind of a national forest to be
honest with you. Wow. Up in near Lake Tahoe. And you know so for us, my mom cooked the majority of
my meals growing up. For us going out to a restaurant was special occasion you know and
chain restaurants were typically the ones we went to. Interesting. What was the chain that you were
most excited to go to on those special occasions? Because I think that tells a lot about someone.
Yeah, I mean, so, you know, for me,
you know, whether it was driving to school
and like hitting up Burger King in the morning
and getting like the sausage and egg sandwich
with hash brown, orange juice and a coffee,
whether it was wrapping up football practice
and getting a couple
of Big Macs on the way home, you know, or going to Sizzler, you know, for like that
fancier style chain.
Definitely hitting up like Wendy's back when they had like the salad bar.
I remember loving the salad bar at Wendy's. Getting those like sesame seeds,
ranch dressing, tomatoes. Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, for me, there's all of these, all of
these different ones. One of my first dates was going to Outback Steakhouse. Oh, same! That's so
still romantic. Yeah, going to Chilis, you know, whenever I went down to,
towards like Sacramento area and Folsom,
I would stop in at Chili's
and that was like another fun place for us to go to.
So, you know, they're each, I feel like each one,
each one is like, had its moments, you know,
had a special time, have created memories over there.
I think there's this general thought that people have,
which may or may not be true that chains say
2030 even more years ago were better that like in their heyday in their heyday, right?
That they were using better products that as they start expanding as private equity firms took all of them over as they start
Consolidating into these like gigantic mega restaurant monoliths that their quality got a lot worse
So it seems like a lot of what chain is doing is like, what if chain
restaurant food, but still back in the day when things were actually good?
Is that a fair presumption that people have?
Yeah, you know, I think so.
I think, you know, I think food as a whole, you know, all of our
ingredients that we eat, um, we even go into the grocery store and picking out,
you know, different, different ingredients are getting ingredients such,
you know, aren't really seasonal. that come from all over the world. And I feel like it's a lesser quality than
it used to be for sure, depending on where you shop at the shop and stuff like that.
But I think chain restaurants, the food back in the day, for me, creating these dishes,
it's not even necessarily going there and eating there. It's like, it's not even necessarily like going there and eating there. It's like, it's like creating it off the memory that I
had growing up and eating it. Like we did pizza, have pizza. And, um,
that was one of our partners, um, awhile back. And, and for me, it was like,
that's one of my first food memories, like sitting in Houston, Texas, um,
flash flood being stuck at pizza hut and like smelling, I can still smell like that buttery pan pizza crust.
You know, I can still see the red cup, I can still see like the video games,
and you know, so for me to recreate that pizza,
you know, wasn't going to Pizza Hut and having that pizza,
it was like based off of my memory of what it was and how it existed.
It's so funny, I literally remember reading New York Times food writer,
Tejal Rau's review of your Pizza Hut pizza.
And she said that it tasted more like Pizza Hut
than Pizza Hut, which is really freaking cool, right?
That's the power of food.
We're not just talking about-
Yeah, to be able to recreate that kind of experience.
It's not about the little molecules interacting
with your palate on your tongue, right?
It's about creating the emotions that you had. And so many of us have these strong emotions with chain restaurants
I know I certainly did when I had the I believe it's called a crunch Oh Supremo
Because the crunch rap came out it was 99 cents
I my high school not to brag was next to one of Taco Bell's top three most important locations in California.
Nicole's gonna giggle, but that's where they tested
all of their new items.
I'm from Orange County, so it's like 20 miles south
of their corporate headquarters.
And so the Crunchwrap Supreme came out,
and God, I mean, this would've been like 2003 maybe?
BFD.
Yeah, before it ever hit menus.
Big fudging deal.
And we used to, oh man, we'd mob there
after football practice, and we're like, well, fudging deal. And we used to, oh man, we'd mob there after football practice
and we're like, it's a hexagon but a tortilla
and there's a tostada in it.
But it was something that I have such strong memories with
because I had like a 45-year-old man screaming at me
as I was a 14-year-old, you know, committing violence
against other 14-year-olds. I'm talking about football.
Football.
I'm not talking about getting in knife fights
behind the Taco Bell, though we did see that sometimes.
But you have these strong memories associated with it, and I think that's one of the most
interesting things about chain restaurants.
Totally.
Nicole, what memories do you have, and how does that lead into your favorite chain restaurant?
Damn, so I agree with you, Tim.
Whenever we were growing up, going to a chain restaurant was kind of a fancy ordeal.
My mom was, you know, she was a stay-at-home mom, so we were eating a lot of home-cooked meals and she's like a good cook, you know, so I wasn't complaining necessarily.
But every now and then I'd be like, I want to go eat out, mom, and she'd be like, all
right, whatever. So I grew up around a CPK and an islands on Beverly Drive. And the islands
was on the corner and our school would do a lot of fundraisers with that Drive. And the islands was on the corner,
and our school would do a lot of fundraisers with that islands.
And I remember it very vividly.
I would go with, I would drag my parents to these like fundraiser things
because they were not about that.
They're like immigrants. They don't care.
So they would take us and my dad would get the Sandpiper sandwich,
which was a chicken sandwich.
My mom would get a turkey burger.
And then I would get whatever. I would like get a quesadilla.
It was like the best thing ever.
I was so excited to even walk in there because first of all,
they would set the scene so nicely about islands.
I loved everything about it.
It was like Rainforest Cafe light, you know?
They had these beautiful, these like Hawaiian shirts,
and like it was so cute, and they would just give you so much like attention
and I just loved how much attention like even the bathrooms were like
Called Hawaiian names for boy and girl like wahiney and like I don't even know what it is now
but something about like that attention to detail even as like a as like a fourth grader I
Loved so much because it really felt like it was curated
for like a kid to just love hanging out in islands.
But now at 31 years old, I hate islands.
Every time I walk by one, I'm like, good.
No, when's the last time you opened your heart
and walked into an island?
Three years ago with my niece, my sister,
my brother, and my parents.
And I said, this is terrible.
Like, what a fake vibe.
But I don't know, something about being a kid in islands and just like
loving going out with my parents was like obvious.
Same for CPK.
I think CPK was like two steps above islands.
CPK was a little bit classier.
You know, it was, it was California fresh, you know, they had cool pizzas,
like Thai chicken and Mexican, like tostada pizza.
And I was like, oh my God, culinary inventions.
It was truly incredible.
Their pizza game.
To this day, it's still pretty iconic.
I love it very, very much.
I think we need to give CBK so much credit.
And I'm fascinated by the fact that things
aren't chain restaurants until they are, right?
Paramount Plus.
We come to you from the mountain of entertainment
to tell you what's streaming on Paramount Plus. We come to you from the mountain of entertainment to tell you what's streaming on Paramount Plus.
Blockbusters, like A Quiet Place, Day One.
Originals, including Yellowstone.
I'm gonna let the world know we're here.
Light it up!
And hits like Dexter.
You're decent and good.
I'm not.
Paramount Plus, your eyeballs, equals entertainment.
Stream Paramount Plus from 6 That's a no. But a banana? That's a yes. A nice tan? Sorry, nope. But a box fan? Happily yes.
A day of sunshine? No. A box of fine wines? Yes.
Uber Eats can definitely get you that.
Get almost, almost anything delivered with Uber Eats.
Order now. Alcohol in select markets.
Product availability may vary by Regency app for details.
A lot of these just started small.
And CPK was founded by Ed Ladoux, who was Wolfgang Puck's pizza chef at
Freakin Spago right one of the places that yeah crowned what California like Newbell's cuisine was and he was doing what the is the
Peeking duck pizza and I believe the smoked salmon pizza were the two
Yeah, and this guy was like we can take that same ethos and like California barbecue chicken
Thai peanut sauce and like that was incredible at the time and still to this day informed so much
of what other people are doing.
Absolutely.
CBK is a good one to really put on that, that top tier of the obelisk.
CBK is delicious.
Again, I haven't been in such a long time, so I think that magic might be a
little bit gone for me, which sucks a little bit, But I think I just gotta go back to CPK.
I think I gotta go back and get one of their
barbecue chicken pizzas and just live my life.
Barbecue chicken pizza for sure.
I gotta do it.
I also, well, I'm not gonna tell you my favorite yet,
but, and then also I grew up going to the Panda Inn
for special occasions, which leads to Panda Express.
Panda Inn was great, I loved Panda Inn.
It was like, how many were there, like maybe like four?
Was it like four?
I didn't know there were that many,
I thought there were, was it the Pasadena one?
No, I would go to the one next to the Beverly Center.
It was like right across, I'm sorry,
right across from West Side Pavilion actually,
being very LA right now.
And then that turned into a love of Panda Express.
I mean to this day, I will go to Panda Express and I will get the orange chicken, I'll get
the veggies, I'll get the chow mein.
I think it's so, it's just standardized in a way that no other chain or fast food restaurant
has done.
And it's delicious and it's delicious and no matter what Panda Express you go to,
doesn't matter if it's in an airport,
doesn't matter if it's in Vancouver,
it doesn't matter where you are,
the food is the same 100% of the way.
And I love that about them.
And then also when I was younger,
I used to go to Kmart with my mom a lot.
And if you went to Kmart,
you would know that they always had
a Little Caesars in the Kmart.
And this was before Little Caesars in the Kmart.
And this was before Little Caesars was like, you know, hot and ready and all that stuff. They would like have like pizzas out like on trays and stuff.
And you could like take a slice and you could just eat it.
And it was like me and my mom's like special little treat.
So I'll always love Little Caesars.
But the number one greatest chain restaurant of all time is Cheesecake
Mother F***ing Factory.
I, let me tell you, the freaking menu is thicker than the Bible. Okay?
And you can get what…
I love it so much.
I used to poo poo it a lot.
I used to hate it a lot.
But at this age, I love the idea of the Cheesecake Factory.
It's like, it's like this crazy design in there.
It looks like the Taj Mahal and like Versailles, like threw up in there.
There's so many options of food.
The drinks are phenomenal.
The cheesecakes are stunning.
I mean, whatever they got going on at Cheesecake Factory, they do it to the
nth degree and I think it's perfect.
You can go there as a kid.
You can go there as an adult.
You can go there on a date.
You can go there for any reason whatsoever and have the greatest time.
There are more than 250 items on the Cheesecake Factory menu.
It's like a Bible.
It's beautiful.
That's insane.
Yeah, so that's how I feel.
I think a good hallmark of a chain restaurant, Tim, correct me if I'm wrong here, is that
it touches every single facet of society, right?
Every tax bracket can enjoy that.
That's what I'm saying. Everything's getting more expensive
and Cheesecake Factory certainly isn't there too.
But the fact that like Justin Bieber is dining
next to like a blue collar family from Ohio
who's vacationing in LA.
Absolutely.
That's kind of incredible.
And I think it shows universal appeal.
Tim, what chain restaurants have your heart?
You know, I have to go with Panda Express.
I think, you know, like consistency.
And I, you know, the fact that they're still family owned as well, I think is like super
cool. Um, you know, it started, started in, uh, um, I believe it started in California.
Um, I went to the headquarters the other day, you know, I've been to Panda Inn and Glendale.
I think that was the first Panda Inn. So good.
And for me, it's one of those restaurants.
And they invented orange chicken.
Like orange chicken, they created that.
And that's probably such an iconic dish.
And the fact that they created that
is just such a cool thing.
And I feel like chain food in general, it's just, it's just a, it's a,
it's a, it's an equalizer, right?
You have people, just like you were saying, it's like people from all over.
Um, doesn't matter what class you are.
It doesn't matter where you grew up.
You've been to chain restaurants.
You have, you have your influence by these restaurants.
And, um, I think that's what's really cool about, you know, chain and what we do
is because we pay an homage to that.
Absolutely.
What about you, Josh? You got a favorite. Well, I think we're all big panda heads here.
Yeah. You can't not be.
The interesting thing about the consistency at Panda is that they're still like really
walk firing a lot of their stuff. They cook their stuff hella fresh.
They're like actually for what what other chain fast food restaurant at that scale is like
actually for what what other chain fast food restaurant at that scale is like actually like oil blanching ginger and garlic fresh like as they're making the
dishes that's nuts like so many fast food restaurants right it's about you're
taking a preformed frozen burger patty throwing it into a little steamer disk
thing but the fact that Panda still has consistency while having such a variable
process is insane and there's McDonald's, right?
They're forcing other people's hands.
McDonald's is trying to cook raw beef again
in their restaurants, right?
So insane.
They're cooking quarter pounders from raw,
which is something they haven't done in a long time.
I went to, I'm gonna leave the name of the chain out of it,
but they were, I got invited to some event
and they were like, we're making our guac fresh
in the store now.
And I was like, that's pretty crazy to do at this scale. And they did a demo and they have like, we're making our guac fresh in the store now. And I was like, that's pretty crazy to do at the scale.
And they did a demo and they have like chopped tomato, chopped onion,
chopped jalapeno, and then they take these giant just squidge go-gurts of
acidulated avocado puree and go into a giant bowl and they mix it and they're
like, see?
And I'm like, that's, I'm happy for you, but like, God, is that what we consider fresh these days? You know, just like acid treated avocado in a
vacuum sealed pouch. So the fact that Panda Express is still able to cook fresh like that, that's
really cool and should be celebrated. Also going to the Panda Inn for their buffet is really exciting.
Such good times. Because it's just like, you're just let behind the actual steam table line at Panda basically.
So fun.
To make your own plate.
I love it.
But just once.
I love Panda.
For me though, I think one of the most exciting restaurants to go to for me, because that's
what I'm trying to judge this off of, is what was I most excited to walk into.
Okay.
It's the Olive Garden.
Really?
When you hear your family.
When you hear your family.
It's sweet.
Because, like, I, similarly, we just grew up without a ton of money and
so going out to any restaurant was an experience.
Special shout out to Sizzler's 99 cent kids buffet because that's how we ate there on
every birthday.
But going into the Olive Garden you were transported to the hills of Tuscany through the eyes of
a nine year old, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Transported to the hills of Tuscany, through the eyes of a nine-year-old, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Transported to the hills of Tuscany.
You see the bottles of Chianti with the little...
Candle?
You know, the candles in it and then the little wicker basket around it.
That was incredible.
And then dishes that I'd never had before, right?
Metzaluna.
Metzaluna.
Why do we both remember the Metzaluna?
Well, the Metzaluna is my favorite kitchen tool, but that's for another podcast. But that, and then I think so much of,
I think it's a very American relationship to food
to think of the deal, right?
To be like, oh, we have a,
America's the only country that had 99-cent value menus
like as a consistent policy.
Like as an incentive to get people in?
Yeah, and we're one of the, we're the world's leader in all you can eat buffets.
Woo, America!
And so the fact that Olive Garden
had unlimited soup, salad, and breadsticks
with the purchase of a 12.99 entree,
we ate like kings, and you only,
only one person at the table had to order salad,
all the other ones could get soup,
so me and my family used to draw straws
to see who had to order
the salad.
How many times did you get the salad?
A fair amount, but still.
But no, I could still eat the-
You didn't want the salad, did you?
I could still eat the bowls of soup from other people because if one person got salad, everybody-
And the point is-
Oh, you were sharing?
You were sharing, yeah.
Okay, good, good, good.
Okay.
Yeah, but then I had to beg my brother for the soup spoon, and you're sharing soup.
It's weird.
But the soup at the soup spoon, it was good.
But the point is, you go back to Olive Garden and eat now,
and Olive Garden doesn't salt their pasta water as a matter of policy,
because they think it'll degrade the pans quicker, right?
And so, like, objectively, does the food taste great now
through the lens of somebody who's eaten at, you know,
some of the best restaurants in the world?
Absolutely not.
But do you still go there and you feel bounty and you feel
taken care of and you feel like you're back in the womb as a child and you're safe and
you're celebrating your grandma's birthday? Hell yeah you do. And she tries to order hot
tea at the end of her meal and they go, this is an olive garden. It's weird. And then she
doesn't care. So olive garden holds a special place in my heart.
Were either of you purveyors of the Never Ending Possible?
No.
Have you?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. You could eat as much pos-
You literally order a Never Ending Possible
and they bring you as much as- You can't tap out, huh?
What do you mean you can't tap out? You think they're gonna-
You could infinitely eat like 20 bowls of pasta there.
If you wanted to, however, you really tap out.
You shouldn't. I did do the Never Ending Possible. You did? I wanted to, however, you really have to... You shouldn't.
I did do the Never Ending Pasta Bowl.
You did?
I used to, and this is disrespectful,
but I was a teenager, me and my buddies,
we used to go to the beach in like San Clemente, T Street,
and we used to go skim board all night.
We would pack like 15 peanut butter sandwiches,
eat that all day.
We'd skim board until the sun went down.
And then in our like wet sandy board shorts,
we used to roll up to the Olive Garden for the never- You suck.
Oh and of course, oh we tipped 4% of course. We were poor man. It took a lot of gas to
get to the beach reading peanut butter sandwiches. I have since you know given
my recompense to Pint.
You really have.
Thank you so much. But we used to get the never-ending pasta bowl and then we'd just
eat. You really get sick of it after one and a we used to get the never-ending pasta bowl and then we'd just eat.
You really get sick of it after one and a half bowls.
Nobody needs that many bowls of pasta.
But how many did you clear?
How many bowls did you clear?
Six was the most.
And they limit the, you know, you're not getting the mezzaluno with the Madeira reduction or
whatever.
No, no, no.
No, you're getting like, you either get like meat, tomato, Alfredo.
White.
Yeah, or like maybe pesto is an option, but limit one per person.
Right, right, right.
So it was not great, but it was such a marketing tool for Olive Garden.
Yeah, I know.
That's what I always think about when I think of Olive Garden,
like never-ending possibles, maybe.
What about that?
Didn't, what was it, Red Lobster have like endless shrimp as well?
That's why I love chain restaurants.
They just do these silly little gimmicks just to get you in.
And I love it so much.
Well, endless shrimp is bankrupting red lobster currently.
Straight up.
No, an actual story came out.
I think on Bloomberg a couple days ago.
Tim, were you a fan of the all you can eat?
Yeah, but my all you can eat was more like the salad bars.
You know, going to the salad bars growing up.
But like, Sizzler salad bar, going to Wendy's salad bar.
I never had the all you can eat shrimp. I never had like the, oh, you can eat shrimp.
I never had, we didn't go to red lobster very often.
Um, and Olive garden, I literally have only been one time.
And funny enough, my wife took me there.
And so this is like after I had left the French laundry for working
out for like, she, she takes me on a date in LA and, uh, this is why I married her.
Right.
She takes me, she had a gift certificate, like a gift card to Olive Garden.
She's like, you want to go to Olive Garden?
I'm like, yeah, sure.
Why not?
I've never been.
And so she takes me there.
So I've only been one time.
Do you remember what you ordered?
I remember, I don't remember what I ordered.
I'm sure some sort of probably chicken Alfredo.
I mean, that's hard to pass up, right?
Yeah, that's the way to go.
But you can also get the tour of Italy,
which was the most exciting restaurant.
Josh loves the tour of Italy.
There's a tour of Italy, which is chicken parm,
some sort of fettuccine Alfredo, lasagna,
and then ravioli, I believe?
Wow.
I don't know what regions.
You're really- I was about to be like,
where's the peep-op region?
It's literally the tour of New Jersey.
It's literally the tour of New Jersey.
It's literally the tour...
Tour of the Sopranos, season one.
Like you get a little bit in the East Philly,
but then you're back into like Asbury Park,
going to the train.
But then they started a tour of Northern Italy.
Oh, nice!
They're doing so much.
I mean, people are interested in that kind of stuff, so why not?
Oh, they certainly are.
I'm not close to it.
Tim, talk to me about the Sizzler salad bar. Because that is something that Sizzler has, I believe, declared bankruptcy.
They're still around, they're still hanging on, but I believe they have filed Chapter
11, so not long for this world.
But describe to me how beautiful the Sizzler salad bar was in its heyday.
I mean, it was like, number one, I mean, it was surrounded by kale, right?
Like it was like, it had this bed of kale. Ornamental What are they? The largest purveyors of kale? Pizza hut.
Pizza hut salad bar was number one. Sorry. How could I mix up my salad bars?
And it had, I mean, just for me, it was like one of those things where I still to this day,
love a good salad. So, you know, going there and getting lettuce and just like picking whatever
you want on there. I mean, it was like tomatoes, the croutons, the sunflower seeds, the ranch dressing.
Um, you know, it was sometimes put a little olives in there.
You know, it's, it's one of those things that, um, that, you know, again, we
didn't, we didn't have a lot of money, so we weren't ordering like big things,
but, you know, I would go to the salad bar many times and that's like basically
how I filled up at Sizzler, right.
Uh, never allowed to order a steak there. Yeah. Yeah. Correct. Correct. to the salad bar many times. And that's like basically how I filled up at Sizzler, right?
Never allowed to order a steak there. Yeah, correct, correct.
They got ground beef and a vat near the taco station.
That's your steak. And that was your steak?
That was, yeah.
Well, they had a whole taco station.
They had the tortilla warmers.
They had a vat of yellow liquid cheese
and they had carnitas or some sort of shredded wet pork.
Didn't you used to make like little dishes
with your brother to your grandma?
Can you tell Tommy a little anecdote?
It just means so much.
My grandma went to her grave, God rest her soul,
at 101 years old, loving the Sizzler.
And she lived next to one and my brother and I,
and he is, you know, he was a sommelier at some point.
And so we're both little bougie food boys at this point.
And so we go to Sizzler with her, you know, we might have eaten a gummy or two.
And we decided to have a little cooking competition
to see who could create the most unhinged dish at the salad bar.
And so, I mean, we were like, you know, using a butter knife
to scrape like lemon zest off the iced tea lemons.
We made a little like imitation crab, kind of like ceviche, lecce de tigre situation.
Oh, lecce de tigre at Sizzler.
Talk about a class act.
I'm gonna go to Sizzler with you.
We gotta, let's go, man, let's party.
You put the meatballs in the taco shells.
That's very fun.
But it was like a create your own destiny thing.
Tim, do you think there's any way to quantify
what the best chain restaurant of all time is?
Like who did it the best?
Who is your North Star that you're following
and why is it TGI Fridays?
I think, you know, I think you gotta go
with the Golden Arches, no?
I mean, yeah.
I mean, McDonald's is so iconic that, you know,
for me it's everywhere.
It was, you know, were they the first people to have like the, the
play pens and stuff like that?
Oh yeah.
You know, I just remember going as a kid and being able to, you know, to, or
the five per dollar hamburgers or something like that.
Oh my God.
They did.
I should go.
10 for a day.
It was on Saturdays and Sundays.
It was 10 for a dollar at some point.
And Filet-O-Fish Fridays.
Yeah, we used to go after church and I would like literally crush five by myself.
We used to buy them and freeze them.
We used to buy them and put them in our freezer and when my dad was working late, we'd microwave
them.
Wow.
Damn.
How did they reheat?
So glad you asked him.
As a chef, you'll know that the wettest items are going to heat the quickest.
So that means the one single pickle on the hamburger would be completely molten.
So what you gotta do is you gotta take the frozen pickle out.
Onions are fine, they dissolve.
But you take the frozen pickle out, nuke it,
and then you throw the frozen pickle in the latent heat from the hamburger
will get your pickle back up to room temp.
And then you put some sweet baby-raised barbecue sauce on it.
And barbecue sauce on it
McDonald's yeah, it's uh
Number one truly they've done incredible work. They invented the business model too And that's the business model that has powered a majority of chains. I think we're we're seeing that change up though
Now we're like Chipotle. I think Chipotle is going through some weird years Chipotle is going through some weird years. Chipotle is going through some weird years.
But over the course of the last 20 years, they've had like the most impressive
rise as far as the model goes, as far as adopting tech goes, right?
Something like 60% of their orders are coming through an app right now.
Chipotle did a really good job of like showing people all the food in front of them.
They took what Subway did.
Subway was super instrumental in that. Right. And being like, hey, look at our vaguely rusty
iceberg lettuce, it's right in front of you now.
And Chipotle was like, we can do that,
but with better looking food.
And so I think they would be in the contention,
but I think they're sort of ready to pass the torch right now.
You think so?
Have you tried their brisket?
No.
I tried their brisket the other day.
Pretty fire. How's it? It was really good. I tried their brisket the other day. Pretty fire.
How was it?
It was really good.
I mean, I don't know, when I think of Chipotle,
I think they did something so unique.
They made fast food kind of sexy in a weird way.
And I've never ever quantified fast food as being sexy,
but the idea that I could choose my salsas
and like I could get so much guac,
I could get as much guac as I,
like there's something about the way
that they would swap it in front of you,
it was intentional.
Like with Subway, like I don't know,
Subway was never, I don't know, Subway, I feel like-
You've been a bad burrito.
Shut up.
But like, I don't know, Subway,
I feel like people would just throw it on there
without care, but I'm like,
the training facilities of Chipotle,
I feel like before all the videotaping and the GoPro-ing,
but in the beginning, I feel like they put a lot of love
and care whenever they would actually assemble it
in the beginning.
And it made you wanna go there more and more.
But now it's kind of just kind of disintegrated
and they are just kind of like not failing,
but they don't necessarily care as much as they used to.
You don't get the same vibe that you do.
No.
Tim, what do you think is next in the evolution of chain restaurants?
Because we see like the arrival of Ghost Kitchens, for instance, right?
That are making people even question what a restaurant is.
It's no longer a place that you walk into, you know.
Outback is putting their wings on Ghost Kitchen menus under completely separate labels.
But what do you think is next in the evolution?
Does it excite you?
Does it frighten you?
You know, I feel like they're all going to,
they're all kind of gonna go back in time a little bit
and try to visit their origins
and how they used to do things.
I feel like they've sort of industrialized so
much sometimes that I feel like they're looking back at how, looking at the processes and
of course streamlining things, but also thinking about how they can create more quality in
what they do. Or at least that maybe that's just a hope, but I think that that's probably
the next iteration of change. I feel like they have to acknowledge the fact that that's probably the next iteration of change.
I feel like they have to acknowledge the fact that there's so much love and nostalgia for
these places that we don't necessarily want them to evolve and create new dishes.
We want them, yes, that's part of the process, but we still want the things that we grew
up on.
We still want the items that maybe have up on, we still want. We want the items that maybe have left the menu and they come back.
Those types of marketing moves for them I think are key.
Interesting.
Nostalgia, baby.
That's what it's all about.
Down with all kings except King Ludd.
I'm a fast food Luddite, man.
Go back in time.
Start frying the fries and lard again.
Taco Bell, you know, you don't gotta make chicken
into tortillas anymore, you know?
That can just live inside of them.
Stop, reject modernity, embrace tradition.
We're doing it.
I'm Jean Marie Laskus.
I'm a journalist.
I spent my career helping Americans understand
the lives of other Americans.
Coal miners, gun shop clerks, staffers in the White House mailroom.
In my new podcast, Cement City, I tell the story of an entire town.
A dying town that you have absolutely no reason to care about.
But trust me, you will.
Listen to and follow Cement City, an Odyssey original podcast in partnership with Cement
City Productions. Available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts. I like casseroles. Sorry, I stayed in the same pitch. All right, Tim.
So this segment, we have our fans have actually written us controversial opinions about their
own chain restaurants that they love and hate.
We're going to read them out and you are going to get first chance to respond to all of them.
You ready?
Yes.
All right, Nicole, you go. Sure. So, at Dala Cisena says, Sonic's mozzarella sticks with their honey mustard is a god tier
combination and way better than dipping them in marinara. How do you feel about mozzarella
sticks and honey mustard?
No, that's a fail. I don't agree with that.
So passionate.
I haven't had it, but I'm eating it in my mind right now. And I feel like I got to go
traditional marinara. And by the way, I love mozzarella sticks and I love marinara. And
the two are together like, you know, put it in a fine dining restaurant. That's what I
say.
Hell yeah.
What about ranch?
Ranch everything. I love ranch.
Okay, great. Great. I'm glad.
Ranch on pizza? 100%.
Yes. very good.
I would eat this and I would be happy about it.
Is that weird? Like, I don't know.
I love honeymussy. I put honeymussy on a lot of stuff.
Honeymussy on chicken nuggets is like my jam.
McDonald's honey mustard is one of my favorite fast food condiments out there.
So I have never had the Sonic ones either,
but I feel like I would enjoy this,
but maybe as like a first bite, but not like as a continuous bite, you know what I mean?
I'd probably go for the marinara and the ranch.
TBQH.
Nicole, you know me as a bit of a world traveler.
You?
Yeah, yeah.
Where'd you go recently?
Well, I was recently in Sardinia.
Oh my God.
And there's...
Shut up, dude.
There's a dish in Sardinia, it's a dessert, It's called Ceatas, where they take a young pecorino,
but a very stretchy one, not like a pecorino romano, it's not aged.
So it's like a salty cheese, not dissimilar from matz in a lot of ways.
They wrap it in pastry, they fry it and they drizzle honey on it.
These are the same flavors going on there. This is a dessert.
You know, the fried cheese with the honey mustard, that's a dessert.
And that's fine that you're eating it.
But the mustard is the turn off.
It's almost like kanefe.
I was about to say, it sounds like k eating it, but the mustard is the turnoff. It's almost like kanafe I was not saying sounds like an effort, but it's the mustard is the turnoff
I went to Providence once and they made a honey mustard dessert
And if they can make a honey mustard dessert and the sardinians can put honey on fried cheese
Then the sonic mozzarella sticks and honey mustard is a dessert
and that's
You can die on this hill
We got we got at Sherrod Ethan.
If you're going to make fried food, you should not be changing the oil.
Let the flavors of the past live on, Tim.
I think we all got to say no on that one.
I mean, look, dirty fry oil is something that you could taste.
Like it like comes through in the food and it's a huge
huge turn off for me. I'm gonna say no on that but I will pivot and go a dirty grill like a dirty
griddle that has been seasoned cooking tons and tons of burgers. That you can you can you can
cook a better burger on I think. Wow I agree with you. Like Bill's Burgers in North Hollywood. Oh, my gosh, I love Bill's Burgers.
Yeah, I had it like, what, I had it like three months ago
after like a long hiatus. It was so good.
OG, man. Bill lives on. He's like 95 years old now.
Yeah, he's old.
Yeah, old man, old griddle, great burgers.
So good. Wow, I agree with you a thousand percent.
That's like the best take ever. Well done. Proud of you.
The dirty fry oil thing, I can taste it. It's like the best take ever. Well done. Proud of you.
The dirty fry oil thing, I can taste it.
It's one of those things that I have.
I can taste it. I can smell it.
I can taste it.
Well, in culinary school,
we used to have to like empty out the grease trap.
Yeah.
So I can taste it. I can smell it.
I can feel it. I am part of it.
I think to me that's people who don't like filet-o-fishes
have only had them in dirty fry oil.
I love filet-o-fishes.
Cause the dirty fry oil somehow accentuates the fish flavor and makes it worse, right?
Oh my gosh, yeah.
And so I think that's the key to a good filet-o-fish.
Which I love the filet-o-fish.
Canola oil, when you heat it up too much, it ends up smelling fishy.
Yeah, canola past the smoke point.
It's weirdly fishy.
Sail Into The 90s says,
When you live out in the middle of nowhere like I do, the
chains taste so much better. Sorry. Tim can relate. Yeah, you know what, there's
there's sometimes sometimes you go to these chain restaurants and I feel like
like for me it's like on a road trip and you know you're traveling you know
maybe my family lives up in Northern California so I travel up there drive up
there all the time and so you know sometimes maybe my family lives up in Northern California, so I travel up there, drive up there all the time.
And so, you know, sometimes stopping into these small towns
that, you know, don't really have other restaurants
and are far from everything,
you might have like the best taco boat you've ever had.
And it's like the proportions are right,
like the heat on it's correct.
You know, whereas, you know, maybe late night in LA, you're not going to get that same taco
supreme or nacho bo grande.
So true. I remember I was in Bentonville, Arkansas for a business meeting and me and
the people I was working with, they're like, okay, let's go to a restaurant. I'm like,
oh my gosh, we're going to go somewhere in like Arkansas. Like I've never had food from like the South before.
And then we walked into Olive Garden.
I'm like, all right, this is what it is.
But I was kind of, I mean, I'd love to try
like regional unique foods from like different
like towns and whatever.
But I understand this mentality because of the consistency
and the QC that goes into chain restaurants.
So I kind of agree a little bit.
Fresno, California, I waited 45 minutes for a table at Texas Roadhouse.
That was the greatest meal of my life.
Oh my God.
The greatest meal of my life.
Texas Roadhouse is good.
When you're smelling the yeast rolls for 45 minutes in the lobby.
Texas Roadhouse is really good.
It's very good.
Big fan.
We got a good one here.
We got at Grufferstein, Chili's was only worth it when they had the original Chicken Crispers.
Tim, are you aware of the change that Chili's made to the Chicken Crispers in 2021?
What's the change?
So they used to be a wet batter.
And it's not like a tempura.
It was like a, almost like a Gorton's frozen fish wet batter that the steam from the chicken
would kind of leave it a little pancake II sometimes
And in between the layer in between the layer and the chicken and then they would be utterly oil logged every single time
And they've since changed them to being a more like dry wet dry double dredge
That's probably coming from a freezer, but the og soggy greasy wet battered chicken crispers
I don't I'm not a chicken crisper person.
I'm a type of person that goes to a restaurant specifically for
like whatever my order is.
Like I, I, like I get the same thing.
I, if I go to Chili's right now, I'm going to get chicken tortilla soup.
I'm going to get fajitas.
I'm going to get a big margarita.
And like, that's, that's exactly, that's exactly what I'll get.
I won't, I won't veer out and get something
that I haven't had before necessarily.
Might take a bite of like whoever I'm with,
but yeah, I don't know.
I haven't had either one of them.
I'm the opposite where I go to any chain restaurant
and I get whatever has the like capital N-E-W
exclamation point.
Yes.
On an angle next to the, uh, next to the name.
No!
No!
Uh, Chili's had a, God, it was like double stack quesadilla Santa Fe burger.
It's a burger, but the buns are quesadillas and it had all their stuff on it.
And you know exactly what that's going to taste like.
And you know, it's going to be a little bit worse than either a quesadilla or a burger
You know what I mean? You're like, I don't but I had to get it and I had a perfectly fine time
Slopping it down with a couple Coors lights. I don't know. I've never been is this Chili's?
Yeah, you never been I've only been to Chili's once before in my life and I need to go again
I don't know. I went one time
I think I got there like chicken Santa Fe salad or something like that.
They loved Santa, Santa Fe was a massive buzzword
from like, I'm gonna say 97 to 06.
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was that like Pepita cilantro dressing
that everyone like had a hard on for.
Bobby Flay was on every single Food Network show.
The premier Mexican chef in America, El Bobby Flay.
I just never, I never dabbled in chilies, but we did recreate these.
We work on a show called Last Meals on the Mythical Kitchen channel, and we did remake
the OG chicken crispers and they were good.
They were pretty damn good.
Not my, not my cup of tea necessarily.
I'd rather just eat like a Popeye's chicken tender.
But like meh, it didn't really do it for me.
I don't like wet batter with skinless boneless chicken.
Like a wet battered southern fried chicken, I think.
I'm down.
Gus' does a wet batter but it's a thin, lazy one.
But like a pancakey batter on a chicken tender, it doesn't do it for me.
Tucker underscore Steven says, a vanilla frosty is better than a chocolate frosty.
Yes.
100%.
And then you gotta get French fries and you gotta dip it in.
Yeah, yeah.
Vanilla Frosties are new.
That was a new thing.
They didn't have those when we were growing up.
Oh really?
Vanilla Frosties-
This is like the Mandala effect.
I'm gonna estimate,
I'm gonna estimate 2002 is when they came out.
I love Vanilla Frosties.
I think the vanilla lends to the frosty consistency.
And of course I agree with you regarding French fries
and dipping them in.
What's up?
Not until 06.
Oh, well.
Not until 06 did the vanilla frosty come out.
Impossible.
I don't like chocolate frosties.
I like vanilla frosties.
I also had a strawberry frosty whenever that was a new,
new ticket item.
And I really like the strawberry frosty,
but I will say it's vanilla strawberry chocolate.
The origin of the frosty is so funny to me
because Dave Thomas, who was very intentional about everything,
Wendy's didn't come out until I believe 69,
when a lot of these other big chains, Burger King,
was like early, early 50s in Florida,
In-N-Out 48, McDonald's like 46 46 Wendy's is kind of a late player to the game
That really took off from from Columbus, Ohio. I believe but Dave Thomas
Invented the frosty. It is literally half chocolate half vanilla. That's the whole schtick of the chocolate frosty. Oh
That's why it's not particularly chocolatey. Okay. Yeah, and he stole, not stole the idea, but got inspired.
Tastes like Swiss Miss.
Tastes like Swiss Miss, it's nice.
But he got inspired by like a racetrack
that had an ice cream bar that would serve something similar,
but he didn't want a strong chocolate flavor
to quote, distract from the burgers.
And so that was the whole origin of the Frosty.
I think I understand a little bit.
I get it, I've never, I've never drank a chocolate,
I guess I'm not a big chocolate shake guy.
Well, there's a reason I I guess I'm not a big chocolate shake guy Well, whenever you reason I guess burger
Do you eat the burger and then drink the milkshake at the same time like you would at Johnny Rockets?
Would you know that another chain?
Do you do you also drink your milkshake together?
No, but I finished the burger and I finished my fries with the milkshake.
Yeah, the milkshake is the dessert.
It's not the accompanying drink.
The Diet Coke is the accompanying drink.
The 68 ounces of Diet Coke.
I like went to In-N-Out the other day and it had, you know, just a half hour wait inside
for food.
It was some high school football game must have let out and it was just mad
crowded and I just sucked down just three, you do 90% diet coke, one pump of root beer,
one pump of Dr. Pepper, because then you get the aromas of all of the star sparilla root
and all the 23 flavors.
Very intentional.
Just sucked down.
So intentional.
Three of them. Oh my God. Oh, you'll change it up, do a little arnie-palmy.
They got new in and out.
They have new white labeled lemonade for them, I believe.
Yeah.
All right, we got time for one more.
Let me find something.
Here we go, here we go.
Living in New Jersey where there's a plethora
of good pizza, there's still value
on having a Papa John's Pizza Hut or Domino's.
They serve two different purposes.
I don't even think of them as the same food. I
agree with that. I think that
It's it's it's not it's not a normal pizza, right? There's lots of different types of pizza and I think that
Chain pizza is like a Domino's pizza
Like a Pizza Hut pizza like a round table pizza All of those are like they're kind of like Little Caesars are all like their own, their own thing that you can get a craving for. It's not, it's not
like, you know, here in New York, I had a slice of pizza last night, you know, and it's, it's, that's
a New York pizza, you know, it's a New York slice. That's its own thing. To me, it has nothing to do
with like Domino's or Pizza Hut. And that's like, you could have them both in the same day, and
that's not considered eating pizza.
Yeah, it's a taco.
It's the same relationship with Taco Bell and Mexican food.
I disagree with you very, very much.
What?
Well, it's the same genetic makeup.
It's crust, it's tomato sauce, it's cheese.
It is the same.
It's tortilla, it's beef, it's salsa.
Yes.
You think Taco Bell has anything in common with the Sonora Town?
Do not giggle at me.
A soft taco from Taco Bell serves the same purpose as a street taco.
The fact that you even said soft taco though is insane, right?
What do you mean? I'm clarifying because I knew you would bring up...
Don't fight in front of our guest.
The fact that you would even assume that it would just be a hard crunchy taco is your problem not mine
It's not my problem. It's the top selling item at Taco Bell number two
So what I think what Tim's I think there's a lot of validity there is a unique
It's like Subways bread smells like a dentist office
Yeah, there's there are these sensory memories that correspond to chain restaurants.
Nobody could ever recreate perfectly,
like, the way that that hydrogenated butter-flavored fat
that soaks into the Pizza Hut pan pizza crust.
No one can perfectly recreate that.
Does it matter? It's the same food.
It's just done... It's the same food, but it's different purposes.
But it's the same food, period. Point blank., but it's the same food period point blank. Sorry
It's like been run through a
Clone fax machine
Appropriation of an appropriation of but at the end
It isn't Andy Warhol piece, but that's fine. It's still edible and still serves its purpose and you still enjoy it
Yo roundtable Maui's a we pizza
Roundtable Maui Zowie pizza.
It's delicious. Oh, 100%.
Ate that after winning the JV Basketball
Summer League Championship.
That's right, go Mustangs, baby.
Suck it, El Toro.
Oh God, I think that's a wrap on that.
After suck it, El Toro.
Tim, thank you so much for joining us today, man.
Where can people find you?
They can find me on Instagram at Chef Tim Hollingsworth.
Hell yeah, everybody.
Thank you so much for coming on.
It was a pleasure.
Chainfest LA.
Yeah, everybody check out Chain.
They're doing really incredible work, man.
I'll never forget the time you did,
not the orange chicken,
but you did actually a rainbow chicken skewer.
Oh, no way. With an orange green.
Did you not have that?
We were at the same event.
Roy G. Chicken.
Roy G. Chicken, that's right.
Where was I?
Was it Chainfest last year? Oh, I didn't go last year. It was Shabbat? It was Shabbat. Roy G Chicken, that's right. Where was I? Was it Chain Fest last year?
Oh, I didn't go last year.
It was Shabbat.
It was Shabbat.
It was Shabbat.
Sorry.
Tim, you gotta make kosher-friendly chain.
And on that note, thank you for listening
to A Hot Dog as a Sandwich.
We got new audio-only episodes every Wednesday
and a video version here on YouTube every Sunday.
Yeah, check out Chain Fest is coming back
to LA October 5th, Tim?
October 5th.
Woohoo!
We'll be there, man.
Everybody come check it out.
Be fine.
We'll be signing autographs for 15 bucks.
Nicole, how much you charging?
Free, baby, free 99.
Free 99.