Fine Dining - Katz's Delicatessen (Eat Deets) feat. Joyce
Episode Date: November 29, 2023Katz's restaurant experience drops next Wednesday! Michael's girlfriend Joyce joins Michael in New York City, and they dive deep into the history of the world-famous deli that's over 100 years old in... this episode of Eat Deets Katz's Delicatessen has been a staple of New York culture, amplified by its appearance in several movies and TV shows, most notably When Harry Met Sally Current owner Jake Dell has rules for how to conduct oneself at Katz's to avoid being thrown out Michael & Joyce address their anxiety over the intimidatingly complicated ordering process A truly hot take in Yelp from Strangers as someone knocks Katz's for being too far away from where they were coming from... More to come next week!  Music by: James McEnelly (@Ramshackle_Music) Theme Song by: Kyle Schieffer (@JazzyJellyfish) Segment Transitions Voiced by: Sandy Rose "Fine" Dining is on Patreon! Get an extra episode every month (Look out tomorrow for another New York-themed episode as we pit Joe's Pizza vs. Famous Original Ray's), extended Yelp from Strangers segments every other week, merch discounts, download access to our music including the 7 singles from our Olive Garden musical, and more! Patreon Producers: Sean Spademan, Joyce Van, & Sue Ornelas  Get the 5 Survival Tips for Casual Dining at www.finediningpodcast.com!  Send in your Gordon Biersch stories at finediningpodcast@gmail.com.  Follow the show on TikTok and Instagram @finediningpodcast  Let me know where I should go next by leaving us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, PodcastAddict, Overcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. I read every one!  Next week on "Fine" Dining: Katz's Delicatessen (Review)! I'm joined once again by my girlfriend Joyce, and for the second part of the episode, we'll give our thoughts on some world-famous pastrami, hot dogs, matzoh ball soup, and more! Ever work at Katz's? Send your stories to finediningpodcast@gmail.com.  If you're a fan of "Fine" Dining: The Search for the Most Mediocre Restaurant in America, you’ll love Banned Camp - a comedy podcast about why books are banned. Be sure to check it out and give them a listen. Search for them wherever you listen to podcasts - that's Banned with two Ns.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From this point forward, the word cheese will be bleeped
because Michael finds it offensive.
Hello and welcome to the fine dining podcast,
the search for the most mediocre restaurant in America.
I'm your host, Michael Ornellis.
And in this show, I'm looking for the most mediocre restaurant,
the perfect 5.00 experience out of 10
because I'm just a mediocre dude
looking for some mediocre food.
How'd that sound?
Sounds great.
Great.
Uh, with me this week, my girlfriend came to New York with me and we're doing some New
York based episodes.
Hello, my girlfriend.
That's going to be your name.
Hello, everybody.
This is Joyce.
You may have heard me talk about her on past episodes.
You've come with us. I don't know how many places.
Quite a few.
Benihana, Denys.
Can't remember all of them though.
Gukaku.
Yeah, you've been to a bunch.
Medieval times, rainforest cafe.
Oh yes, that is a lot.
I knew I said quite a few.
So yeah, we went to New York City.
I wanted to do a couple episodes while I was there.
And we got the opportunity to go to Katz's delicatessen,
very historic spot, very crowded spot.
But in general, does it fit the criteria of this show?
Walking into it, no, you wouldn't think so.
Like, I've seen this place on television
and all these different magazines
that I've always wanted to go
so I don't even consider it mediocre whatsoever
because it's such a specialty spot.
But that's what I've thought.
But then you look at the reviews
and kind of the way people talk about it
on like Reddit and Yelp and stuff like that.
And there's a lot of haters.
There's a lot of people out there calling it overrated.
There's a lot of people out there who are just,
anytime something gets too big,
it's gonna develop people who don't like it simply
because it's that big and they don't know
if it's so amazing that it justifies being that big.
So that's why we're here for the podcast.
I wanna like get my take.
Is Katz's mediocre?
Like some people seem to think,
is it worthy of being this big, famous New York institution?
We're gonna find out, and we're going to evaluate this place
based on three criteria.
We're gonna do it based on its atmosphere,
based on its service,
and based on the food.
Yeah.
Fine dining party of two.
Sit down, get in line, grab a ticket.
Our table is ready, We'll be right back
The table is ready
Have you tried our chicken breast?
Serving pancakes and ribs I recommend this spaghetti with here to serve is fine not to impress
Your table is ready
Complementary butter and bread these walls have growth signs Knit, knack, cowboy hat, good luck hat, autograph guitar, some crap from your city
Behold the trust me of mediocrity
I'm dining, just fine dining, fine dining
Two letters on the sign are shining
You know I'm flickering irregular timing
Identify the perfect five.
How the ten?
I'm dining.
I'm dining.
Hey there, it's Jennifer and Dan from Bandcamp.
You're go-to-comedy bandbook podcast.
This season we're headed down the Mississippi River
with the adventures of Huckleberry Finn. We'll read it out loud one chapter at a time,
trying to figure out why it was banned in the first place. But we're probably not
gonna be able to find a reason because bookbending is so stupid. Join us every
Tuesday and Thursday for new episodes. Find us wherever you listen to podcast that's band camp with two ends join us
first impressions I had a couple of friends friend I went to college with and her husband and
they're now one year old super cute who joined us and they were coming in from New Jersey their bus
didn't show up so they were running a little, so we actually waited all the way through the line,
and then I was like, well, they're not here yet.
Let's go to the back of the line again.
Yeah, there was no rush.
Yeah, so we did the line twice just to go in and eat once.
There's like a bouncer that lets you in
and they let you in and batches.
So, you know, this place is always packed,
but it's interesting, because you go inside,
it's also packed, but yet they can let full waves
of people in.
So I think as they kind of filter out,
they wait until there's enough space
to let a batch in instead of kind of doing it one by one.
They have a strategy.
It felt like you're graduating class
like when a group leaves, you're like,
ah, there goes Class of 07.
Now, come on in Class of 08.
Mm-hmm.
And then we get inside, there is a bouncer basically,
like a security guy at the door,
and there's Salami hanging from the windows,
like cured Salami all over the, like,
like, curtain, they have actual beef curtains.
Which I don't say proudly, but they literally do. It's just a bunch of hanging salami against the window.
I don't remember seeing that. I must have missed it. You sure on me a picture?
Yeah.
Oh, I must have missed it because I was anxious.
But the main thing that you notice when you come in, I mean, one, they give everyone a ticket.
That's kind of unavoidable. That's one of the things where if you go on Yelp or look it up online,
it's a very divisive system because you walk in and you don't really have a clear idea
of what's going on.
You see a bunch of meat counters, you see a bunch of lines,
you see other lines that aren't for meat cutters,
and you're just kind of left to fend for yourself.
And I hate that feeling because I never want to be that person that holds up a line.
I mean, and New York is very intimidating.
They kind of expect you to come in and know what you're doing.
Yeah.
But then they, they were helpful.
You when you ask the question, they were the employees or the, or the customers,
the employee when you first walking with a ticket.
Yeah.
So I didn't feel like they were like being mean to me or anything ever.
Cause there's some place where you go like,
they kinda look at you like,
why don't you know these things?
But I didn't feel that there.
But I was always worried that they would look at me that way.
So there was this irrepressible anxiety
that I had the entire time.
Yes.
And even though, and I'll get into it more in service,
but our meat cutter was very nice, but he had that,
he just had a New York face.
He had a New York face about him, and you know exactly what I mean by that, where it's
just like, I don't know if I have the patience for you, but it's just his expression.
He was very kind.
He looked intimidating, but he was very nice.
And plus, I feel like because they didn't tell us what to do,
because there's so many signs everywhere.
Like, you're a second order.
Right, there's a second order.
You're your frankfurter here, order your sandwiches here.
You just got to read.
Sides are at the end.
Yeah, I mean, honestly, that is, it's amazing how well
you can get by in the world if you just take a second
to read the sign.
But it is also packed.
It is wall to wall.
Again, eight meat cutters and lines for each of them.
And they're not short lines.
And they bleed out into the tables.
Into the tables.
So my friend who joined us, her husband went,
squatted down on a table.
Which is OK.
I don't want you to think that we're not allowed to do that.
We're allowed to do that.
No, it was like, yeah, it was like teamwork.
It was basically like, all right, you secure the table.
You know, we'll get on trays, you get sides, right?
So we kind of split the floor almost.
It worked out, it was a lot.
But, you know, people are here for the history
and for this experience.
So it's kind of part of it.
It's a busy place.
Okay, we've told you our first impressions of the place.
Now we're gonna go into the history.
In this week's Eat Deats.
Eat Deats?
Now as loyal listeners know, my mom listens to every single episode of the podcast, and
she doesn't love the recurring noise for EAT DEATS.
And you know what?
Not everyone likes chewing sounds,
so I'm actually going to make, from here on out,
the EAT DEATS sound effect, easy listening addition. Eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, eat, brothers. Wow, that's a long time ago. Yeah, 135 years ago.
Hard to imagine. 100 years before we were born, it was founded. And then it's
Morrison, Hyman, Iceland, like the country, but their actual name is Iceland.
Mm-hmm. But they changed it when they arrived in Ellis Island for an Americanization.
But how did it get to cats? In 1903, Willie Katz joined the operation and the restaurant's name changed with it to
Iceland and Katz.
Who is this guy?
Is he family?
Is he an investor?
He's a friend of theirs.
Yeah.
Are you trying to suss out anyone like you're really protective of the Iceland brothers?
I am.
I don't like these people who are getting near.
Who's jumping in?
Family first. No, actually I shouldn't say that.
I'm not, that's not the thing.
I'm gonna leave that in so your family can hear that.
Family first and then you take it back.
No, I do not, as a therapist,
I always found me first.
Oh, that's right, Joyce is a therapist.
Now y'all know.
Buh, buh, buh, buh.
Willie's cousin Benny came in in 1910 and bought out the Iceland brothers, officially
changing the name to what it is today.
Harry Tirobsky, a landsman of the Catsys, which some places online say land lord of the
Catsys, a landsman is something different.
A landsman is a fellow Jew from the same region or town in the old country. He bought into the partnership in
1917. So now it's Willy Katz, Benny Katz and Harry Turovsky, but no more Iceland. They went into or at least
Heimann, Iceland went into real estate. I don't know what the other one did. How much did they buy it for?
Knowing how the value of the dollar has plummeted throughout the years, it was probably something like,
hey, I'll give you $300.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So while this sequence of events and ownership
is believed to be accurate,
a little digging from food writer Robert F. Moss
found the stated timeline to be off.
Ellis Island immigration records
have the Iceland brothers not arriving in New York until 1902,
14 years after the stated 1888 founding of the original Delhi
and found Morrison-Himon to be around the ages of 11
and six years old respectively in the year
the Delhi was claimed to be founded.
Which I guess in the late 1800s, child labor was so rampant that the idea of a six and
eleven year old entrepreneur isn't crazy.
Eat meats.
With this new information, the only thing that really changes for cats is its role in the
popularization of pastrami, which was already being eaten and sold all over America at the
time of the actual founding in the early 1900s, as opposed to contributing to the rise of Pastrami, and the fact that
delis were already flourishing in New York City by the time Katz's came on the scene. So they
weren't really an innovator in being a deli or in Pastrami, but they were renowned for it.
Yeah, now I'm curious how they got so popular compared to the other places, if it's already
a well-known thing.
Well, so one of the things that has contributed to their lasting popularity is that they're
not actually a strict kosher deli.
They are a kosher style deli is the term that they use, which means that they're not closed
on the Sabbath.
So they're open on Saturdays.
And what's actually interesting about that is not only are they open on Saturdays that they're not closed on the Sabbath. So they're open on Saturdays. And what's actually interesting about that is,
not only are they open on Saturdays,
they're open 24 hours on Saturdays.
Oh, wow.
So their hours are typically 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
on weekdays, Monday through Thursday.
And then Friday, they open at 8 a.m. like all the other days.
They stay open to midnight and then Saturday all day and then Sunday all day until the following
11 p.m.
It's just one very, very long shift.
Well, not a shift.
I hope no one has to work that all the time.
That would suck.
The deli was originally across the street from its current location, but moved due to
the building of the New York subway system.
The vacant lot was home to barrels of meat and pickles until the facade was added to the
storefront in the late 1940s.
So the subway system started to be built and it forced cats all the way across the street.
I didn't even remember seeing the subway across the street from any corner from cats, did you?
Well, we also took an Uber.
But I've asked, and I remember being very observant.
You didn't even see the salami in the window.
You're right, you're right.
Like, yeah.
Yeah.
So cats' moves, tons of meat, literally.
Cats' website says they serve roughly 15,000 pounds of pastrami, 8,000 pounds of corned
beef, 2,000 pounds of salami, and 4,000 hot dogs every single week.
Is that like one semi-truck?
I don't know.
Pounds and tons? I don't know. Pounds and tons.
I don't know.
I didn't prepare.
I didn't prepare a diagram of what like a baseball arena full of
pistromials.
I was able to imagine was the hot dog because you said in numeral amount of
4,000 instead of the weight.
Typically when you order brisket, they do it.
You do it by the weight.
True.
So my nephew with like 50 pounds, so times like by a lot of him.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
They sell 300 wallases worth of pastrami every week.
That's a lot.
But not as much as I thought though.
300 a week.
What?
I expect you to say a day.
This is just one dish on the menu.
They're not only a pastrami place.
Oh yeah, you're right, you're right, you're right.
There's corn beef, there's turkey.
Yeah.
And which is an additional, you know, a bunch of different weights.
8,000 pounds of corn beef, that's an additional like 160 wallases.
There, did I put it in terms that you can relate to?
Yeah.
Now I can actually visualize, wow, that's a lot of meat.
Eat meats.
During the Second World War, the sons of all three owners were serving in the armed forces
and the family tradition of sending food to their sons became the company slogan.
Send a salami to your boy in the army, which is supposed to be read with a New York accent
to make the rhyme work.
I was gonna say, why did you choose that accent?
Because it doesn't rhyme unless you say it with that New York New England style accent.
Gotcha.
Send a salami to your boy in the army.
Like, it's not a perfect rhyme.
The next regime change came all the way in the 1970s when Lenny Katz, son of Willie Katz,
took over the business after his father's passing.
In 1980, both Benny Katz and Harry Tarovsky passed, leaving their shares of the story to
Benny's son-in-law, Arty Moxtain, and Harry's son Izzy.
Hmm, so a family business.
I wonder if they wanted to take over.
Oh, interesting.
Like, yeah, like, were they pressured into it or yeah
I don't I have no information on that but I'll actually get into it when I go into the next steps of ownership
There's new ownership
In
1988 on the 100th anniversary of the claimed founding date of the deli with no offspring of their own to carry on the business
founding date of the deli, with no offspring of their own to carry on the business, Lenny, Arty, and Izzy sold the business to longtime restaurantor Martin Dell, his son Alan,
who worked as a chef and manager at a neighboring deli, and Martin's son-in-law, Fred Austin.
Alan's son, Jake, joined in late 2009, and as of 2020, is in charge of major operations.
Wow, they just keep selling this place.
I do find it interesting that Katz's deli
has been owned by people with the last name Katz and Del.
And Jake is still the current owner and operator, yeah.
Eat Deats.
Speaking of Jake Del, the man's got opinions
on how to conduct oneself at Katz's.
In a 2016 interview with the star Tribune
He laid out the following rules to quote unquote not get in trouble at the deli because he can and will kick you out
Although several of these are just strong suggestions. What would you get kicked out for that just increases my anxiety?
I mean, yeah, it is a place with a lot of tension built into how people view it.
Because he literally says that his grandfather would have kicked people out for specific things.
It sounds like he's more tongue in cheek about it.
This one isn't one you're gonna get kicked out for, but order a hot dog as an appetizer.
He says New Yorkers know they have the best hot dogs in town, with a crisp casing and a juicy inside.
He's adamant that hot dogs are to be served with mustard and sour crout, not pickles, not relish,
not salad garnish, not ketchup.
He then says ketchup is okay
if you're under six years old and tell Chicago natives
that they don't know how to eat a goddamn hot dog.
How do you feel about that?
Honestly.
Oh yeah, you don't have a mic-sh-cog-hot dog.
I love sh-cog-hot dogs.
You're a fine.
I mean, I prefer it with ketchup,
but I actually really did like their mustard
and sourcrow, which surprised me.
I'm glad to hear that you're starting to like pickled items.
Those are my favorite.
Pickled items, not foods.
Like, oh, here's a pickled wallet.
Yes, it's delicious.
Been in a jar for the last two weeks.
That was yummy.
Yeah.
Rule number two, pastrami has rules.
If you ask for it on white bread or with mayo,
there's a chance he'll throw you out.
Mustard on rye, that's the way.
And that's what we got.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Rule number three, mustard is the most important condiment.
Not yellow mustard either.
Real mustard is brown as yellow, and they make their own spicy deli mustard to go along
with the sandwiches.
All I could think of is my sister because she can't have mustard.
Like an allergy thing or like she won't tolerate it.
She gets heartburned so like she's not gonna fit in.
I'm sure you could get it without mustard but if you're putting a...
But you'll be judged.
What are you gonna put ketchup on a pastrami?
Nothing.
Put nothing is fine.
Mm-hmm.
It is juicy on its own.
EAT DEATS.
Rule four, interact with your pastrami cutter.
They intentionally put you face to face with the meat cutter
so that you can customize to your liking.
You can get samples, you can specify if you want leaner fatty meat,
but it's a strong opinion that juicier is better,
and juicier is like their code word for fatty.
He basically was like, we understand that people feel a certain way
about ordering something and be like, make it fatty,
so juicier is kind of become their code word.
That's a good code word.
Yeah, it's also the name of my son.
According to Jake Dell, the ideal meal is
Mozzarella Ball Soup, a hot dog,
half a pistromy, and lot keys.
Sound familiar?
That sounds like our meal.
That's literally our meal.
And we-
Bob got the, we added a bobcat.
We did add a bobcat and he said
if he has room for dessert,
he goes for the sh**s cake.
So we differ a little bit there.
If you got like a New York style sh**s cake.
Do you think you had to remember seeing it?
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Damn.
This.
Other rules include trying the lot keys, being aggressive with your pursuit of which lines
you need to stand in and to not lose your ticket.
So that's a big deal.
I really don't understand the ticket system.
I don't know why we have to return the ticket.
So speaking of the ticket, that's a staple of Katz's.
When you walk in the door, every individual is given a ticket.
The ticket has a bunch of numbers on the front of it which used to stand for how many pennies
you owed for your order.
The numbers would get punched as you moved from station to station and at the end, they'd
total it all up and that's what you'd pay on your way out.
With the fact that the prices aren't nearly the same as they were over a hundred years ago, nowadays they just write your total on
the back. This is done to avoid paying at each station, allowing you to get your food back
to your table while it's still hot. So it's saving you the transaction times at each of
the stations that you go to. I don't think it helped my food stay hot.
Well, it also didn't help that everything that different stations, well that you go to. I don't think it helped my food stay hot. Well, it also didn't help that.
Everything that the different stations.
Well, that you went to get the sides
after we had both gone to get the sandwich.
So the sandwich had time to sit,
the monsuball soup had time to sit,
and then it wasn't until you got back with the sides.
Yeah, but what did I went by myself?
No one can go at the same time as me.
Like, that's true.
Eat, Deats.
A lost ticket costs $50, and each adult who enters is given one.
Even unused ones must be returned at the end of the meal,
or they'll have to pay a fee.
You know, I was actually looking through Yelp.
I saw a person who's trying to sue caches
for false imprisonment for not letting them leave
because they lost their ticket,
and were refusing to pay it.
It seemed like that one was from a while ago,
so I don't know how it resolved,
because it was just based on a Yelp review,
but didn't sound nice.
I don't think you know how hard I was holding onto that darn ticket.
You're just like white knuckling at the entire time.
And I was like, I can't drop this.
My life is on the line.
The double checking quadruple checking every few minutes to make sure I still had it.
So these lost ticket fees are definitely helpful to the deli's economics.
As Prostromy and Briscott once considered trash cuts of meat have seen their prices
bloat with the increased popularity of Texas style barbeque, putting delicatessons in deep economic waters as the
wholesale cost of brisket has tripled since 1988.
Dell revealed that cats' maintains its status as a healthy profitable business because of
its sides.
Gotcha.
I don't know much about meat, but Pistorba is brisket.
Yes.
Okay.
In 1989, the Billy Crystal Meg Ryan comedy when Harry met Sally filmed one of cinema's
most iconic scenes in Katz's deli.
The scene about how commonly women fake orgasms led to Meg Ryan's character moaning and screaming
with pretend pleasure to prove a point, grabbing the attention of the entire patronage of the
restaurant and leading to the famous line, I'll have what she's having said by another patron and onlooker played by director rob rhiners mother Estelle.
The restaurant has a sign hanging from the ceiling above where Meg Ryan sat to commemorate
the scene.
So we were out on a movie set.
I mean, we were at a place that has been used in multiple series.
They own the night in practical jokers.
Uh huh. A couple of episodes of Law and Order.
When I looked online, there was a list of maybe 10 or 12 things
that had filmed at Cases.
I wonder they have to ask Restaurant to not permission.
Forbidden.
Not permission, but no customers can go that day
or is it that they just use their own extras.
Yeah, you're probably shutting down for a day, paying a fee,
and then providing your own extras and people and stuff like that. Typically that's how it would work.
Eat Deats. Whether 135 or just 112 years old,
cats' delicatessen remains a New York staple and one of the most popular delis in the world.
And that'll do it for this week's edition of E.D.
All right, we've gone through the history of Katz's delicatessen. We've got a full review of the place next week, but before we go to that, why don't we turn to Yelp and see what other people
are saying about Katz's delicatessen yelp, little yelp from strangers.
I'll let you up a little yelp.
Give us those complaints while you literally whine and die.
Yelp!
All right, this is Yelp from Strangers, our segment where we go to Yelp and read out our favorite
one, two, three, four, and five star Yelp
reviews about the very restaurant that we dined at.
Katz is Delicatessen.
I'm going to start us off with a four star Yelp review.
This is from Alfred B. One month ago.
And I want to state, this is the only Yelp review he has ever written.
It's a good idea, but it's not nearby.
East New York is a long walk from Central Brooklyn.
I do love the hot dogs and canish.
The grilled rubens are even better.
I'm sorry, but I'm out of breath
and I'm out of town and of luck.
Carnegie deli hot dogs,
hot pastrami on Rye, York City,
classic fat mots of ball soup.
I have no idea what that sentence meant.
But as I said, it's a long, long walk from Prospect Park
to the lower east side of New York.
What do you talk it like?
Yelp is not meant to factor in where you're coming from.
And who told you to walk?
You live in a city with some of the most accessible public
transportation in the world with the subway system
You're just being like I like cats is deli, but it's really far from where I happened to be no
I just such a crazy take in a public review
Sometimes I wish I was closer to certain LA restaurants and I get mad sure
But is it gonna affect your review of the place parking?
Maybe that's different.
That's a different thing.
They chose to be a very far location from me.
I started this is from gourmet G written over 18 years ago.
I want to point out this says first to review.
This is Katz's first Yelp review.
So it must be fake. It must be a family member.
This is the very first five star review I think I've ever
seen in my life. So I fought Michael to be the one to read
this review. Okay. So a lower east side institution since
1888 to look at the framed photographs of politicians foreign
dignitaries athletes and entertainers lining the walls one would guess that
everyone who's anyone has passed through their doors for a tower of the
strommy with mustard on rye a juicy dill pickle on the side it was here that
Sally faked an orgasm for Harry but I suspect it was the corn beef that really
brought on her waves of ecstasy
Does gourmet think that good food makes women climax? Yeah, I'll have what she's having and in order to go as well
I love that his name is gourmet. I kind of don't believe that his name is gourmet
But for the sake of a five star yelp review, I'm here for it.
Yeah, and plus he seems like a very active reviewer.
Yeah, I mean, he's got 2,097 Yelp reviews and 2,097 photos uploaded.
Mm-hmm.
So I think I trust him.
You can go download our full Yelp from Stranger's segment at our Patreon.
The link for that is in the description of this episode, or you can go to patreon.com slash find outting podcast.
And we're now offering a one week free trial. So what do you have to lose?
Go check it out. People have wild opinions, and we get to read oh so many of them.
Thanks.
Okay, so that does it for our first impressions and the eat-deach, the background on Katz's delicatessen.
Now, we are ready next week to go into our review.
You liked Katz's, right?
I did.
I thought I would like it way more.
Way.
Well, there's so much hype to it.
I guess.
And maybe again, we talked about in podcasts where like,
maybe because I had a wait in line for something else and I could have eaten it. It guess. And maybe again, we talked about the podcast where like maybe because I had a
way in line for something else and I could be very stressful. So we will get into that next week.
We'll talk about what it was like to do the line, what all the food was like, what the atmosphere
is like. But in the meantime, follow me on social media at Find Dining Podcast on Instagram and
TikTok. Send me an email Find Dining Podcast at gmail.com. Joyce, do you want people to follow you on any social media or you just want to stay anonymous?
Stay anonymous.
Okay, great.
Alright, we'll see you next week.
Have a fine day. you