Fine Dining - The Melting Pot feat. Rhyan Schwartz
Episode Date: November 8, 2023"Fine" Dining is back to weekly releases! The Melting Pot is in the midst of a renaissance, with ambitious expansion goals Michael details the changes moving into the new season Learn about the histo...ry of the franchise in Eat Deets (fka Resty Fact Round-Up) Guest host Rhyan Schwartz gives Michael someone to eat all the cheese that our host refuses to touch Michael rebrands cheese to ch**se Harrison Augustine 💸 Arrylius the XIV shares his wealth of knowledge to give The Melting Pot advice on their wall art The Melting Pot is sending mixed signals to platonic friends A battle between servers has Michael & Rhyan asking What's Going On Over There? Panic sets in as the stress involved with timing your meat-cooking is Way Too Much The most patriotic 5-star Yelp review ever in this week's Yelp from Strangers Stay tuned to the very end...there may or may not be a post-credits scene  Additional Voice Actors: Jessa Day 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 (October's episode explored Dave's Hot Chicken), 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 Melting Pot 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: Gordon Biersch Brewery Restaurant (Eat Deets)! I'm joined by All Elite Wrestling's "Pretty" Peter Avalon, and for the first part of the episode, I'll be teaching him the history of Gordon Biersch and their claim to have invented garlic fries. Ever work at a Gordon Biersch? Send your stories to finediningpodcast@gmail.com.  Totally Not Sponsored By: Harrison Augustine 💸 Arrylius the XIV
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to the fine dining podcast, the search for the most mediocre restaurant in America.
And this is the start of season two.
There are going to be some changes, some very big changes, some smaller but still noticeable changes.
But the mission remains the same, and that is to find you the perfect 5.00 out of 10.
The most mediocre dining experience imaginable.
I'm going to chain restaurants,
I'm going to all the things that you know and love
and like and tolerate and maybe some dislike
because I think that's where I'm gonna find mediocrity.
It's not gonna be at the high end,
it's not gonna be at your local mom and pops.
I mean, it might be at your local mom and pops,
but I'm not here to put them on blast.
I'm here to put corporate restaurant America on blast.
And I'm evaluating these restaurants based on their atmosphere,
based on their service, and based on their food.
This Friday, November 10th, you can hear me as a guest on the
Snack Show with Jamie Fallon.
And I'm going to throw to them real quick so you can hear what the
show's all about.
Hi everyone, this is Jamie, and this is Fallon. And I'm going to throw to them real quick so you can hear what the show is all about.
Hi everyone, this is Jamie and this is Fallon and we co-host a podcast called The Snack
Show with Jamie Fallon. Every Friday you can find Jamie and I embark on a weekly journey
all about snacks y'all because everyone loves snacks so let's talk about it. In each
episode we focus on a different type of snack, chips, cookies, roadtrip snacks,
holiday snacks, and so much more. We've also got special guests sometimes,
listener callins each week sharing their favorite snack and always differing opinions,
so there is something for everyone. We also have video episodes available on Spotify and YouTube.
So if you love to snack, come join us over at the snack show and check out our latest
episodes streaming everywhere you listen or watch your favorite podcasts.
This week I went to the melting pot and I am joined by a friend of mine for over 10 years.
Someone who knows me.
Unfortunately too well.
I guess is the best way to describe it.
My buddy, actor, writer, director, app developer,
Ryan Schwartz.
How's it going, buddy?
I got a decade's worth of Mikey-Miky under my belt.
I don't reside under your belt.
Oh, wave below the belt.
Like at the knee or something.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I got some shin.
So you are my guest host for this week.
I will have a different guest host each episode joining me on this journey.
But welcome to the show, Ryan.
Thanks for coming on and dipping some stuff into some cheese, oil, and chocolate in front
of me.
And with me.
And well, you feel my heart and the cheese
fills my arteries that is the mission.
I'm dining party of two.
Our table is ready but we will get to it.
Your table is ready follow me.
Have you tried our chicken breast?
Serving pancakes and ribs.
I recommend this spaghetti.
We're here to serve.
It's fine not to impress.
Your table is ready. Complementary butter and bread. These walls are broken. I recommend this spaghetti with huge saves Find out to impress
Your table is ready
Complementary butter and bread
These walls have growth signs
Knit knack how I had to look at
Autograph guitar, some crap from your city
Behold the trusty of mediocrity
I'm dining
Yes, I'm dining
I'm dining
Two ledgers on the sign are shining Now I'm flick! I'm dining! Two letters on the sign are shining!
You know, I'm flickering, irregular, tiny!
I didn't apply the perfect biiiiiiiight!
How the 10!
I'm dining!
I'm dining!
Hey everyone, before we dive into this episode too far, I just want to address the obvious
big change for season 2.
Last episode, the TGI Friday's episode, was in fact Garrett's final episode with the
show.
I got a call back in August from him, saying that he would be departing the show, that
he was done, and then we went out to eat that one last time to give him a fun and fitting send off. I just want to publicly say, Garrett,
it was a blast this year doing the show with you. Thanks so much for your time and energy
and enthusiasm. I wish you well. I hope you have the absolute finest of days. First impressions. So before we even walk into the restaurant, there's like a
very reflective door, like a mirror-like door. I don't know if they're trying to show you
like a before and after of what you look like before you get rolled out of this place,
but it stuck out to me. It was like a two-way mirror, like an interrogation room style.
Yeah, like the FBI is waiting for you inside of the melting pot.
What do they have to hide?
And then even before we get to the door, when you pull into the entire like strip mall,
do you remember how there was like a clock in like a, it's a small world style,
like a clock tower sort of thing?
No, it was within a peeking roof. There was a clock that was completely unnecessary and looked like a weird facade like a tomb down.
Like we're in like a back lot like this melting pot isn't exactly what it seems. It was like the back to the future clock.
I didn't see this at all, but that's fine. Yeah, that was all outside.
And then of course, we're joined by our friend Steve.
Yeah.
Listeners, if you go back to our Planet Hollywood episode where we went to the LAX Tom Bradley
Terminal Planet Hollywood, we went with Steve.
So you guys been on the podcast before he joined us for this, Ryan, you're actually the
one who introduced me to Steve.
Oh, yes. Steve's a legend. He was in Sharknado. Ryan, you're actually the one who introduced me to Steve. Oh, yes.
Steve's a legend.
He was in Sharknado.
I think you should leave two seasons worth.
He is a member of the turbo team.
He's a legend.
And I guess we got to be honorary members of the turbo team.
It was turbo time for sure.
It was that's what the clock was trying to tell us.
There we go.
It was turbo time.
That's what it was.
What a harbinger.
Good word.
Damn.
So we walk in.
The lobby must be mentioned.
Of course.
The lobby felt like a spa lobby a little bit where it's just clearly, hey, this is where
all the fanciest stuff goes to try and I guess easy when to.
Yes.
I would go further than spa lobby.
I would say dairy sauna. Is that a made up thing? Yes. Yes. I would go further than Spalabi. I would say dairy sauna.
Is that a made up thing?
Yes.
Oh.
It's a sauna, but with dairy.
Oh, oh, oh.
It was like a sweat lot of cheese.
You're metaphoring what melting pot actually is a dairy sauna.
Yes.
And so they really want you to notice all their wine.
They were very like, hey, by the way, we do have,
I don't know, approximately 3,000 wines. It was a humorous amount of wine. They were very like, hey, by the way, we do have, I don't know, approximately 3000 wines.
It was a humorous amount of wine.
Yes.
It was like, you know when you go through a corn maze
or like in a horror movie when someone's like running away
from someone and it's just endless,
it was that but with wine.
Yeah, like imagine a bunch of sandbags
between trenches or for a storm,
but instead of sandbags, it's a false wine.
Yeah. It was kind of obscene. It was too many. It was. And then they also had boxed roses
for purchase. And look, you are code stickers on top. Just think it's for easy checkout.
Well, they were very like trying to set a mood other than the one thing directly to your left,
a coat rack that had no coats.
Zero coats.
Because you're at a chain restaurant.
Who's gonna trust leaving anything unattended?
It had very take a coat leave a coat.
Like a charity coat, just like, yeah.
I don't need this one, but whoever might need it.
Yeah, sure.
Take it.
It's like a lost and found.
The box rose is, you're right, it is pushing this very date vibe.
I noticed one of the cards said, it's Thursday date.
I have one of those cards with me right now.
It's got roses all over it on the back.
Thursday date sweet talk.
Make Thursday your best date and really get to know your special someone with our fun and
flirty conversation starters.
Feeling thorny.
And then of course, I see what you did.
A QR code with a little heart in the middle of it.
Oh yeah, because the only thing sexier than roses
is a QR code.
Yeah, I mean, I think that's how most modern proposals
are happening are via QR code.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
So they also have like a glass case
that's just filled with their awards they've gotten.
And I didn't look at the specifics of what the awards were.
I did take a picture, actually.
Let me pull this up and see.
Okay.
Almost all of these awards are from St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital.
Oh, no.
And they are not for the quality, but they are thank you for
donations and recovering from cheese cancer. I don't know. Take another swing.
Recovery from children's cheese cancer.
The fact that I didn't pick up on this when I was looking at it, I just assumed they were
awards. I think might have kind of been their intent
like oh, we didn't win awards,
but we do get this plaque if we donate
and people respond to a plethora of plaques.
You see a bunch of plaques and you're like,
oh, this place must be good.
Yes, if you put up enough glass display cases,
people just assume it must be filled with accomplishments.
This place is great.
We're onto you, melting pot.
They also had a bowl of Andy's mints at the front that I really wanted right away.
I mean, because we didn't eat it much.
We saved space.
Right.
Pre-meal.
But here's my issue with it.
If you're a restaurant that serves gourmet chocolate as part of your meal, you don't
want just like crappy, basic chocolate greeting you.
I think that the shelf life on those Andes Mints
are incredible, not shelf life,
but how long they actually sit there.
Yes.
Because I imagine most people aren't falling for it.
But it's like having like a luxury car lot
and you're greeted with like a bowl of hot wheel cars.
Or just a 1993 camera.
Yes.
Just sitting at the front on the like display,
lift out front or whatever.
Yeah, you can't have the crappy version of something
if you're a luxury place.
Well, speaking of whether or not this is a luxury place,
do you want to learn more about the history
of the melting pot Ryan?
Oh, I am dying to know. Are you dying to learn more about the history of the melting pot, Ryan? Oh, I am dying to know.
Are you dying to know? I'm melting. Well, we're gonna find out in what is now known as
EAT DEATS. Formerly known as RESTY FACT RUNUP, but that's when Garrett prepared it. I'm doing all this
research now and I wanted to rebrand, so I'm calling it ETERIEDETALES. EAT DEATS.
EAT DEATS? The melting pot was founded in... Can I just interrupt? brand, so I'm calling it eatery details, eat dates. Eats?
The melting pot was founded in.
Can I just interrupt?
Why are you shirtless just to differentiate this from the past version?
Why are you shirtless?
Right?
You know, just trying on new things.
The melting pot was founded in July, 1975 in
mainland Florida, just outside Orlando.
That was one year before the bicentennial.
Oh my God.
Ha ha ha ha.
mainland.
The fact that they're literally founded in a place
that's like a love bird.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
The first menu just had three items.
Swiss cheese fondue, beef fondue,
and a chocolate fondue dessert.
Okay.
They haven't come that far other than switching up the types of cheese meat and chocolate.
They expanded laterally.
They expanded laterally, but it is still basically just those three things.
And you don't want a fondue of just one type of cheese.
Like a Swiss cheese, then you might as well just throw some Swiss in the microwave.
Like I think the entire idea of fondue,
just like a smoothie, a jambaduce,
you're not just like strawberry-only please.
Like it's about the medley of the fruits
or the cheeses in this case.
Just putting that out there for anyone who hasn't had fondue.
It's really about the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, it. One of the waiters, Mark Johnston saw franchise potential.
In 1979, with the blessing of the original owners, who we can't find their names online,
so I think they kind of want to stay anonymous.
So they're blessing outlive to their name?
Yeah, wow.
He and his brothers, Mark and Bob, opened a second location in Tallahassee.
In 1985, the Johnston's purchased the full rights to the brand.
The youngest brother, Bob Johnston, is now CEO.
He started at age 14 as a dishwasher.
Nice.
Yeah.
There's not a tremendous amount of difference between dishwater and fondue.
That's horrifying to think about, especially when all of the fondue is literally sticking
to these plates, like you kind of do get a disgusting medley.
It hurts.
Johnston openly admits to putting profit over people early on.
He expands, I didn't create a clear mission statement.
From 1985 to 1995, the melting pot tried to launch a franchise program, but things
didn't progress as hoped. In 10 years, the Tampa Florida-based concept only grew from 5 to 19
restaurants. We had trouble attracting franchisees because we were self-centered and focused primarily
on the bottom line. You go into a franchising business because of the bottom line. It's not
like, well, I was thinking of joining a franchise, but they seem too focused
on sky high profits.
Well, really, it really is a turn off.
Yeah.
I mean, I think what he's admitting
is that the company's policy to allow franchises
to buy in was a little bit too,
like they made it too high of a hurdle
if you wanted to open a franchise.
And maybe they were like very abusive tactics.
Like the employees, they shoved their hands
in the melting pot if they misbehaved.
Yeah, you know.
They were human rights abuses.
As they do.
They melted more than cheese.
This is not a fact.
These are the opinions and thoughts of ranchers.
And just for legal libel situations,
these are actual facts.
Beats.
The melting pot has 94 locations., their headquartered in Tampa. They also have two melting pot social locations in Florida, which seem to be more like bars with a limited
fondue menu. The quote they say is, the melting pot social is a bar-centric cheese-forward
whimsical dining experience with a creative culinary twist on the classic melting pot restaurant.
They use
692,60 pounds of cheese and
542,250 pounds of chocolate per year. So Michael is getting visibly aroused right now
all this talk of tons and tons of cheese. I
Hate cheese, but those of you listening for the of cheese. I hate cheese.
But those of you listening for the first time, I don't eat cheese.
I don't like cheese.
It bothers me on a fundamental level because of a few things that happened in my childhood
that really grossed me out.
So I've discussed this with Michael's PTSD therapist.
And so this is the weird thing.
Michael feels the need for attention to pretend he hates cheese.
What he really does in private is he just guzzles scoop after scooped cheese.
It's like, why is he pretending to hate cheese?
In 2022, at least 74 of their restaurants set all time sales records.
That's all but 20. Can you imagine being one of those 20?
That's like, sorry, guys, we couldn't outdo it. We couldn't push the cheese as hard as he all did.
It hurts.
The initial investment to open a melting pot franchise ranges between 1.2 to 1.6 million dollars,
including a $45,000 franchise fee. So that's the buy-in price. That's way higher. Like I watched some Shark Tank.
That is very high.
But I mean, when the checks are as high as they are,
like you're rolling in money from the product.
I would like to know.
I would like to know the profit margin.
Yeah.
Because, yeah, when you shred some cheese
and you throw it in a pot and you charge 40 bucks for it.
Here's the thing.
Johnston says the average check is around $50 per person,
to which I call bullshit.
Like, yeah.
No.
average checks.
Are you going in to get one thing?
I, no, the average checks,
I, a hundred dollars a person.
E-dates.
They are looking for franchise prospects
to reach 125 melting pot locations by 2026. So they want another 31 restaurants within
the next three years. See, I think they're on a downward trajectory here because there've been
closing melting pots. I even thought this melting pot that we went to was was kaput. Because
this is by where you grew up. Yes. Was it always there? Yes. Yes. Yes.
Yes.
But there are other ones that were like in Woodland Hills or whatever that have since gone under.
So most melting pots in this area have gone under.
We'll go over it, but they're actually not doing too bad right now.
Okay.
It dates.
To determine the best spots for new franchises, the melting pot uses an AI platform called SiteZoost
to tell them where to open next.
Wow.
You like AI.
I do.
You're a big AI boy.
Yeah, this should open one in space.
Because AI, as we all know, is space.
Space.
It's the future.
It's the future.
As of 2016, the total sales for the melting pot
franchises domestically and internationally was a hair short
of $200 million.
They could have just rounded off.
They didn't need to do the hair short.
Yeah, and it may not be as high now
as their location is fluctuating.
Is that relevant?
Is that relevant?
Is that relevant?
That was total sales.
That's revenue, so we don't know how profitable that was.
Right, right, right.
And that's a figure that's seven years outdated
and we went through a pandemic where people
don't wanna share.
Be doing the little dippy dip.
Yeah.
E-dips.
So Melting Pot partnered with
National Friendship Expert, Dr. Melanie Ross Mills.
I'm gonna read this press release
because it's kind of funny to me.
Celebrate and create stronger friendships with delicious
dips and shareable sips. How do you share a sip? You like like a mom of bird regurgitating it into
the... Yeah, you can't share a sip. Challenge accepted. Ryan come here. Get over here all my shirts
still off. All right, Tampa, Florida, May 11, 2022. Grab your besties. Melting Pod is encouraging
friends to connect over Fondue
and has partnered with National Friendship Expert,
Dr. Melanie Ross Mills to share advice
on building stronger bonds with memorable experiences
like sharing a meal together.
We are created to connect and bond in friendships,
said Dr. Mel.
Friends who spend time catching up with memorable experiences
like those at Melting Pot often find their relationship growing and deepening.
This is so like heavy-handed of just like, you'll be better friends after Meltingpot.
I love the over-credentials of her doctorate.
Meltingpot has created an experience to encourage friends to get together and catch up while
indulging in delicious dips and shareable sips.
The best fondue friends forever, BFF,
aims to get besties around the fondue pot and turn moments into memories with a three-course
menu of creamy cheese fondue, fresh salad and craveable chocolate fondue, featuring enhanced
BFF, dippers of artisanal cured meats, cream puffs, and macarons starting at $27 per
friend.
Like, look, it was fun to go with you as a friend,
but clearly the target marketer is date night.
Like, you don't need sensuality between friends.
Well, so I will address that.
Let me finish this just because they are literally
branding days of the week,
friend day and like a romance day.
Oh my God.
So, so Monday is like,
the downs of cheese day.
The VFF F Entree can be added as a four course
for a minimal charge prices participation
very by location.
Just in time for National Best Friends Day
on Wednesday, June 8th,
friends can also enjoy the outdoors.
Sun, rain, outdoors and the sun.
They've got the new pink crush, yeah, I get right ever.
It's listing menu items.
Our mission has always been to bring people together
over fondue for conversation, laughter and memories.. Our BFF experience, which has offered year-round
every Wednesday, is the perfect break in the middle of the week to meet with
friends and we're proud to partner with Dr. Mel in helping friends connect
with each other. Now, the best part about this press release is what's next.
Connecting with friends will not happen without time, care, and effort.
Dr. Mel offers five tips on how to connect and bomb in friendship.
One, make an effort.
Let your friends know that you care by reaching out.
It can be as simple as sending a text,
making a phone call, or sending an email,
the moment a friend comes to mind.
Keep in mind, this is still in a melting pot press release.
They're coaching you on how to be a better friend.
Two, build one another up.
Help your friends identify why they are unique
and appreciated.
Be specific, give examples of how you witness
their strengths playing out in your lives.
Three, create memories together.
Grab your friends and plan out of the box experiences together.
Try the Wednesday BFF experience at Meltingpot
or local activities like twilight bowling,
painting classes or art museum.
I'm just saying this is like like try out mentor mentees.
For offer trust and extent vulnerability. Give your friend the freedom to be vulnerable without
judging. Conversely, share your own life experiences with trustworthy friends. Be trustworthy and
open your heart to connect. And five, let go of offenses and extend forgiveness.
Each of us is imperfect and will make mistakes in friendship.
Make sure you're not carrying offenses when a friend isn't perfect.
Make an exerted effort to forgive.
The BFF experiences offered every Wednesday all your long.
But yeah, the fact that they're just like coaching you on how to be a friend.
And by the way, they're friend day, they chose hump day, really?
You're putting friends on hump day and then Thursday you want to be your roommate any sense.
It makes no sense.
Two friends.
Two fondue friends.
Two best fondue friends Two best fondue friends
Forever wow a stockhouse of wine I
Could make some really saucy decisions if I got in that Ryan and Michael were just friends
Or so they thought they Mikey Mikey
Super cool of you to invite me to this melting pot.
It's pretty neat that we have a safe space to go and hang out and not feel pressured to
make out or fall in love or ram each other's butts or anything.
They're actually marketing pretty heavily to attract platonic friends.
That's right, we are trying to attract Platonic friends to each other.
Michael, why is your shirt off?
Are you trying to seduce me?
What? No.
Dude, we're just two good friends. There's no romantic attachment here.
That's what they think. It's no accident that we encourage friends to come on hump day.
I'm not gonna have sex with him, okay?
Michael, I'm scared. I'm trying to look at you normally, but all I see is Rose Petals made out of Osceago falling over your naked body, all in American beauty, with a fondue pot covering your naughty bits.
And when I look at you, I just see a lake of cheese and you're cruising up to me in a swan-shaped
paddle boat for two.
My heart, I don't know what's come over me, but I think we should get married.
Ryan, snap out of it.
We're just friends.
We're only ever going to be just friends.
Not on my watch.
You're going to be best fondue friends.
With benefits.
And do you Ryan take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?
Fondue.
Oh, so benefits as in health insurance.
I can live with that.
Not until after your honeymoon in Pound Town.
Oh, come on!
Ugh.
Well, if it means I get dental.
Thorne doing it all night long, written and directed by visionary friendship expert Dr.
Melanie Ross-Mills. Coming this holiday season.
EAT DEATS
Now, speaking of intimacy and melting pot, no lie, it was Hugh Hefner's favorite restaurant.
Okay. E Dates.
Bob Johnston, on recent remodels to the restaurant, said,
It's not your dad's melting pot or your grandfather's melting pot any longer.
It's sexy and contemporary.
No, no one has an association with that.
Also, like, they're low key taking a shot at your dad and grandfather saying they can't be sexy.
Like, when I think of my dad, next topic. Low key taking a shot at your dad and grandfather saying they can't be sexy
Like what I think of my dad next topic and I don't have like this association with melting pot of like an old-timey barbers Where I'm like wow what a dating thing?
Toss them a nickel or something
They bring your bowl of cheese. Let's not go to melting pot. They're too dated
Eats
All right, you want to know about fondue in general,
just a little bit about the history of fondue.
Sure, yeah.
The name fondue originates from the French word fondre.
I have no idea how to speak French.
It's F-O-N-D-R-E, fondre.
Fondre.
It's like a,
and it means to melt.
The dish can be traced back centuries
to almost 800 BC during the times of Homer's Iliad.
Literature from the era describes a mixture of goats or sheep's milk cheese with wine
and flour, something shockingly similar to today's fondue.
Shocking Lee is doing a lot of heavy lifting there.
Shockingly.
They're really telling us how to feel.
Oh my God.
There's no hard date for when modern fondue started, but it became popular during the 1800s
in the French and Swiss regions of the Alps.
I would really like to nail down a hard date on that, please.
I'll get back to the research.
Fondue was born out of a necessity
to use aged cheeses and breads during the winter months
when fresh food wasn't available.
Eats?
It's the national dish of Switzerland.
So yeah. I actually, when I visited Switzerland when I was 19, I had fondue there.
It was fantastic.
Did it seem like a common, like, oh, you've got to do this.
It's just a very sweet thing to do.
Yes, yes.
It was a gruyere-based fondue.
It's a food writer, Alex Scott.
The hot sticky gooey dish seems to have become associated in the popular mind with sex.
His flirty fondue is one of several romance novels featuring it.
In it, Boy Meets Girl at a fondue festival, and the term fondue is gay slang for hooking up with someone out of your league.
Okay, yeah, I mean it is like a bowl of boiling. Eat foods. Food historian slash journalist David Sacks says the dish,
which has its origins in 18th century Switzerland,
became popular in the US in the 60s and 70s
when the country was in the midst of a sexual awakening.
Sometimes the food makes the times
and sometimes the times makes the food.
I think the latter happened with fondue.
It became popular in America just as attitudes
about sensuality, physical proximity,
and other social norms were loosening up.
Fondue is by nature intimate, says Saks.
Can you imagine eating fondue with, say,
a bunch of professional colleagues at a conference
are with elderly relatives?
Probably not.
I don't even think that's true.
Like, it's easier for old people to chew fondue.
Yeah. You have to it was like 112. Also, that flies in the face of the BFF program. So, yeah,
it's at one point they're trying to pitch that this is a platonic endeavor. Yeah. And then they're
like, it's also like pure breast milk. Yeah. and I think that about covers all of the history of fondue, all of the history
of the melting pot, everything we could possibly need, friends go on Wednesdays, couples just
go to town on each other on Thursdays, that's the melting pot and that is-
No, old people allowed.
No old people allowed, and that does it for this week's EAT DEADS! Hey, Dynamaniacs!
Starting next week, EAT DEADS will get its very own release.
Each episode is now going to be a two-parter with one week in between, so this podcast
is going back to weekly, you'll get the history and background and growth and development,
and sometimes even the controversies of these restaurant chains one week and then the following week
You'll get what you've become accustomed to which will be the detailing of a visit to the restaurant what it's like
How was the food? Yelp from strangers all that so next week join me for an episode of Eat Deeps
Atmospheric
It was really dark in here.
It was like they were trying to emulate a candle lit experience, but instead it kind of
just feels like dim, small overhead lamps.
Yes.
Very small.
Like you're working in a coal mine.
That's the sexy vibe you want.
Yeah.
There's something smoking in front of you.
There's an actual abandoned track
through the middle of the rest.
I mean, it was mind-shafed-esque.
It was very labyrinthian.
Yes, there was so many corridors
with conflicting exit sign directions.
There was literally just two pointing to the left,
one pointing to the right,
and I'm just like, is one of them wrong?
Are two of them wrong?
Or are they just saying, eh, go wherever you're.
Anyway, you'll eventually tunnel your way out if you paw hard enough.
And it was so duck, because we kind of meandered around a little after the meal.
We got seated pretty close to the front area.
So it was like, I didn't really get a lay of the land.
And I wanted to know.
Right.
What this place was.
What's bizarre?
There were these different pockets of tables that looked like kind of hidden VIP lounges,
but there were like 10 of them. I guess they're trying to preserve intimacy like every table,
every room feels like, oh, this is the VIP room. Yeah, a little bit. But instead of feeling VIP,
it just kind of felt like you were intruding. When I was looking around, I could I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I think I, I, I think I, I, I think I, I, I think I, I think I, I, I think I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, like you got shrunk and you were inside a beehive. It felt like I was wearing like my dad's coat
when I was like a five-year-old or something.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was honestly pretty nice.
Like I liked the privacy that I felt we had,
but it was weird to just wander around,
see a big room, and then notice, oh shit,
there are people at this table.
Cause we left like 30 minutes after clothes.
I didn't realize they closed so early.
One of the amazing things we discovered upon wandering the corridors was a prize wheel.
Yeah, yeah, and it was like right by an alcove that had way too many chairs and one of the guys who came by and refilled our waters a couple times.
You was just sitting there.
You was just like sitting there staring at me as I'm taking a picture of the prize wheel.
And I point at the prize wheel and I'm like,
oh, that's fun.
I wanna take a picture of the prize wheel.
And then he's just continuing to stare at me
and I'm just like, I don't know what's happening.
I don't know what I'm doing wrong.
I mean, he wished that he had a bead curtain
and some incense for some privacy.
Yeah.
Cause this place is all about like almost private, but not quite. Yeah, he needed some for some privacy. Yeah, because this place is all about like, almost private, but not quite.
Yeah, and he needed some sensual privacy.
Now, one of the other people that you pointed out to me,
there was a lady at a table behind me to my left.
Do you wanna describe how she looked?
She was in Shindiana Jones.
Like a she Indiana Jones.
Indiana Jane.
She was in Indiana Jane.
Yeah.
And she was with like three other people
who were not in Indiana Jones clothes.
Well, I mean, she just had like,
both the vest and a hat.
Yeah.
And like maybe a whip, I don't know.
Oh.
And the hat was at the expense of comfort.
Like it was a cramped booth.
I'm sure she could not put her head all the way back.
I mean, she's getting cheese on the brim.
I think she was told, oh, you've got to go to melting pot.
It's an adventure.
And she was like, I'm ready for it.
Anything but snakes.
She hates snakes.
She does.
They do have fondue snake meat, but that's.
Oh, God.
That's the secret menu.
You pointed out the grouted table?
Yes, there were, so it was tile tabletop with grout, so I-
It felt like a shower.
Yes, like, or a floor.
Like, usually you just have like a slab of granite or something that's the whole tabletop.
Maybe they hose it down after a messy table or something like that.
Grout would just create more things to stain and clean.
It mildes.
Yeah.
Which ages and becomes cheese, which is honestly,
the comparisons between mildew and cheese,
the fact that there aren't zero is one of the things
that grosses me out so heavy about cheese.
They are, mold-based.
Yeah.
Well, I'm done.
I don't wanna keep talking.
But yeah, there's a big,
what do you even call the grill in the middle of the up?
Because it's not like a grill top or anything.
It's like a hot plate.
Yeah, built into the table.
Built into a flat surface.
They're not even like the coils or anything like that.
It's just flat and you've got the big metal pot on the table.
Very hot, you're sitting there like,
I guess I wasn't too actively afraid of
like I'm gonna burn myself.
There was a good amount of space
in between us and burnable surfaces I guess.
Sure.
Yeah.
There were Cubist paintings on the wall.
Is that what I know very little about art?
Is that actually how you would describe?
Uh, well, there were, they were cubes.
I don't know if it was Cubist, but it was, it was a bunch of
multi-claric cubes.
And it just seemed like it was an uninspired,
they were just like, we got to put some here.
Well, because the area we were seated in had no art.
No.
It was like, only if you took the hallway to go to the bathroom.
They're like, I guess we'll put something.
But even then, it was like, the light was too bright in there.
Like for an otherwise very dark restaurant, you could see like scuffs on the wall.
And it was just, I was like, oh, I get the dim lighting now.
Because if the whole restaurant was this well lit, it would not be nice.
It feels like they went a little to Panera bread with their decor.
Like they could have gone more romantic.
They could have doubled down on the rose petals and the romance, some cherry blossom pictures,
something a little more flowery and pretty and romantic.
But this was all just like kind of shoved and hidden in the back.
Yeah, this was like motel art.
And now a word from our totally not made up sponsor.
I'm sorry, this talk of paintings that belong in motel rooms is rather gosh.
I'm here to save you from that.
My name is Harrison Augustine, winged money- Water Moji, a really is the 14th,
and my trust fund paid out into a lump sum that is only getting smaller and smaller
unless I invest in something.
And I went for the fanciest sounding podcast I could find.
Fine dining.
New media, I'm so bad.
I'm, I'm, I'm, of course.
Now it would appear that there has been an error of judgment on my part.
I did not see the quotation marks around the word fine, but it's okay.
I'm going to class up this podcast.
That's right, every episode.
You're going to hear from me, and I will update you about the finer things in life.
And it's hard putting together advice for those who can't relate to your way of living,
but I will push through and advise you people how to be classier. As far as this melting pot and
it's motel style paintings, my suggestion, why not commission a bank see or two? That'll spruce
up the joint. I won't charge for that advice but feel free to take it. Anyways, I've got
to get going. My private badminton court isn't going to use itself. We'll talk next time.
Toot-o-loo. The music in here was very low. I mean, to a point where I sometimes you go
to a restaurant and it's overwhelming and you're like, I really wish they'd turn it down. It was very low, but it also had like a fidelity quality to it
to where it sounded like it was coming out of one of those pill speakers or like a shower speaker.
I genuinely thought that the table with the girl with the Indiana Jones had on had like a speaker on the table.
That's how an iPhone in the pocket playing music. Da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da Absolutely. We didn't get judged. No. But the environment was in and of itself kind of shushing you.
The studiousness clashed with the romance.
Yeah.
Overall, I'd like the atmosphere well enough
that I'm gonna give it one thumb up.
I'm not going a full two.
Yeah.
I'm not going no thumbs.
I'm not going in the middle.
Like it was a positive atmosphere.
So one thumb up for me.
Sure.
And I'll do like a,
having trimmed my thumbnail in a long time thumb up. So it's up for me. Sure. And I'll do like a, uh, uh, haven't trimmed my thumbnail
in a long time. Thumb up. So it's like a little bit like a one point.
All on thumb up. Just a one point one. Yeah. Like you trimmed your nails. It's been a few
weeks. I'm not like in months. You're not like that guy in the Guinness Book of World
Records with a curling thumbnail. No, no, not that yoga guy. That's his name, yoga guy.
Yoga Joe.
Serious.
We had a server and after the first visit,
you said he had a winning smile.
Yes, it was just dazzling.
It was like a row of chicklets.
It sparkled, It glimmered. He was suave. He
was a little spicy and exotic, youthful. Probably had to be what, 25 maybe. Yeah. He was like
fresh out of cheese college. Yeah. He was fine. Yeah. I mean, my biggest complaint is that he made small talk while he was making the fondue.
You remember that?
I mean, I didn't mind because I felt I would have been awkward to just sit there and stare at him while he's like,
but we're not doing work.
We were staring at the process.
Yes, that's like going to Benny Hanna and while you're like trying to watch like the explosions, they're just like,
slow-wrench your grama.
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Would you like me to flip this shrimp?
Ah!
I don't even know where that would be.
How often you cut your hair?
Ah!
It's like, I'm trying to watch, like the small talk choices
are just so out of left field,
you'll have audio wisdom teeth, Tad and me.
We actually did talk about that.
We did talk about that.
That was, I had none.
I have one left.
And Steve has two on zig-zag sides.
Yeah, one upper right and one lower left.
And we don't want, if we mess that up,
I mean, we're gonna re-record this whole thing
because we don't wanna misrepresent Steve's wisdom teeth.
Well, here's the thing.
I never said upper right right, and lower left,
which one is the one missing versus which one is the one having?
Oh, wow.
So no matter what I'm right.
Nice.
Yeah, it was very specific to not mention it.
Yeah, Vignus is great.
I guess my only issue with the service was,
so just by the process of what we did,
it requires phases of interaction, right?
The cheese, the meat, and the chocolate, I feel like we didn't see him much more beyond
the parts of the process that required it.
Like the cooking in front of us.
Yeah, like there were definitely times where drinks were running a little bit low and
there were other people coming by with drinks.
Oh yeah, there was a separate drink at here.
But, yeah, I don't know.
I mean, there's still,
and I mean,
I mean, ground us fresh nutmeg.
I mean, we have to give him credit for that.
Yeah, but he did it on the cheese,
so I was not able to.
So that doesn't make cheese more appealing to you,
knowing that there's nutmeg on it.
I mean, it makes it more appealing,
but like a pile of vomit with nutmeg on it isn't gonna be like, oh,
suddenly I want to eat that. Okay.
Now there was a really weird moment of our server started the grill or the hot plate and
walked away to let it heat. The guy who came to pour water refills almost
the guy who came to pour water refills almost immediately came by and adjusted it and like accused Steve of like turning it off like with his knee and Steve was like yeah, yes, ridiculous. And then and then Steve was like what no, I didn't I didn't touch anything and he was like, oh well then the server must have put it to look and then like within a minute of him walking away, our server came back and was like, oh, why is it so high and turn it down and it seemed like they were in like a war with one another and i just gotta ask ryan what's going on over there
What is going on over there? Ryan, what's going on over there? So this is definitely what it is. I think they were prints and the poppering this.
So they've done a roll swap where they were like, your job's so much easier.
And they're like, no, your job's easier. And they're like, okay, we can prove it. We're gonna switch.
And they're walking a mile in each other's shoes.
And he's like correcting the mistakes of the quote unquote superior position guy because
he's doing it wrong.
Exactly.
He's like the training wheels.
Yes.
Of the prints.
And that's why they were both in fake moustaches.
They both had like groucho mark style like the glasses with the big nose fake moustaches.
And they were like customers wouldn't buy us.
I don't want to be. my stashes. And they were like customers wouldn't buy us. If we only dress in each other's wardrobe,
no one will buy it. We got to put on elaborate disguises and they went real cheap,
real cheesy. And I'd like to believe that at home and their diaries, they both learned a lesson
and were like, wow, it's really, really, that's the takeaway. That you walk them out on
someone else's shoes and there's challenges you really, uh, that's the takeaway. That, you know, you walk them out on someone else's shoes
and there's, there's challenges you wouldn't expect
and they learned a lot.
It's like pouring water is not easy.
See, from my perspective, from my perspective,
you're not wrong in that, like, I always end up
with way too much ice and I'm like, come on,
read the glass, okay?
Exactly.
The glass is mostly ice.
The way that the lip tapers off
at the top of the poor jug.
I mean, it's like an ice sheet.
It's just a slip and slide of ice cubes.
Yeah, no, and you gotta know how to manage that.
And what you need is like a great, you need a great,
but then you would get no ice.
You just get pure white.
I'm okay with that.
I like cold water, no ice.
That's my preference.
The ice hangs out there and keeps the water cool
Obviously, you don't want the ice bobbin up to the lips
But the it serves a purpose. I think we've figured it out right and I think we have in fact figured out what's going on over there
Now there was one other server that I noticed do something that tickled me. There was a couple, they were out on a date, and
a server came by, their server, and asked them, so were you married? And the girl gave a very quick
note just dating, followed by a solid like 40 seconds of abject silence, and the waitress just hyper focusing
on making the fondue.
Just like, oh God, I've let too much time elapse
without saying something and now this is just gonna be silence
until the nutmeg is done.
Yup.
It was so palpably awkward and-
The guy's just putting the proposal ring back
in his pocket like about to get rejected, but he was able to read the room and didn't make the movie
wanted to save them really.
Yeah, it was so painful.
Yeah, he's just like, I just saw a look of rejection on his face and just the waitress
just like, I hate that I have to be here for the next minute.
Like I'm required because I'm mixing this cheese fondue.
It tickled me.
Anyways, overall on the service, I'm going to go one thumb up.
Now this is, I've bit my nail down past the past the cuticle.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So this is not an extra thumb up.
This is an almost one thumb up, but enough for me to say. This is like a point nine seven.
I'd probably put it like a point eight seven.
Yeah. Oh wow.
But I'm going, I'm going one thumb up.
Do that. You should see a doctor, man.
If you've lost point one three of the mass of your thumb,
you know, there was a lot of math involved in this dining experience.
As we will see, as we will see.
Yeah. I'm going, but I'm going to go one thumb up just not with the most enthusiasm.
Okay.
I'll go like trick thumb from a magic shop up.
Don't spoil how they make a fabric disappear, Ryan, that it's a rubber thumb that you put
on and then tuck into the hole between your fist, tuck the fabric in there, slide your
thumb back in, and then
you do it, and people are like, what?
Don't steal that magic trick.
Don't steal that magic trick.
Don't steal that magic trick.
Your explanation of it.
So do you think a trick thumb is larger or smaller than a typical thumb?
And please, be honest, don't do one of your big lies.
I think it's about an average thumb, but a regular thumb.
It's a full 1.0 thumb.
It's a, it's like a replica.
It cuts off a little bit on the bottom.
That I was hoping for.
See, that's what I was like,
I want it to be a trick thumb business.
So you're not, so you're like not full right?
It's a 0.88.
But a thumb plus the fake thumb with the fabric in between.
That's like a 1.3 thumb business.
Oh, you're stuffing, It's like stuffing a broth.
So you're talking about just the thumb on its own.
I'm talking about the trick thumb on its own,
not being worn as a prosthetic,
concealing a hanker chief,
which impresses everybody
because they didn't know the trick thumb existed
in the first place.
Food.
Yummy.
So now, I guess the process of the melting pot
and I guess the order that they bring you stuff,
it starts with the cheese fondue,
right?
There was nothing before that, right?
Right, and what we skipped was the salad course
that comes after that, but we didn't do that.
Who's filling up on greens?
If you're going out to a dinner like this
and you're getting the salad, I'm sorry,
but you're just not using your stomachs real estate
the way it was intended at a melting pot.
I think maybe it's to get some fiber in there
so that you're not just like,
squirts,
squirts galos,
squirts make me.
Yeah, like I think maybe that's part of it.
But I mean, they also bring you broccoli for dipping
for a couple of the things.
That's true.
For the cheese and for the...
Right, right, right.
But yeah, so you start out with,
it's, the full thing would be four courses,
but we did the three.
And by we, I mean, Michael ate all the cheese to himself.
So...
Since I don't like cheese and I don't even tolerate it
from here on out, and this isn't just this episode
for the rest of the life of the podcast,
the word cheese is getting bleaped.
Michael is a fossil little boy.
Michael is a fossil little boy.
Baby, Michael is a fossil little boy.
Michael is a fossil little boy.
From this point forward, the word cheese will be bleeped because Michael finds it offensive.
So if I said sh** is right now bleeped. See, it didn't sound that way to me. It just sounded
normal. I was just speaking. Yeah, but this goes through like an immense amount of processing.
Are you talking about post-product? I am talking about post-production. What if I said
America sh**, America sh**, America,, sh**. Are you saying that knowing what happens
when I say the word America?
No, I was just doing that completely randomly.
Yes, of course I know.
Have you heard this podcast before?
So the way this has worked in the past is
I've brought my sh**'s correspondent, Steven,
with me to different restaurants
and he gets a minute, one minute on the clock
to talk about
sh**s and give his review beyond that I don't give that time of data to
So Ryan you get one minute on the clock to talk about the sh**s fondue
Okay, so we ordered the alpine and that starts out with a little splash of white wine in the bowl and
We ordered the alpine and that starts out with a little splash of white wine in the bowl and then they add the shredded, gruyere and a mix of some other chit-chat-frague which
one and you mix that up and you add in the garlic and then you add in a little more wine
and then you grate the nutmeg over it.
Really a nice blend of flavors because you've got the the sort of the the savory
Umami flavor of the You've got the sort of bite a stringent flavor of the wine in the alcohol and you've got you know the different herbal
Flavors of the garlic and the nutmeg really really nice stuff I would say
Probably a little too heavy on the wine. I think it had a little too much bite
And I was also drinking it with wine
So it was kind of wine on wine action had on a hat. But delicious sh**. It's delicacy. There's an
art to it. It's not something that's easy. It must be earned.
Now it did come with a bunch of dippers as well. So it had like a platter that had pretzel bread.
You had carrots, like a bag of bread. Yeah, it was just had pretzel bread. You had carrots, celery, broccoli.
Yeah, they were.
It was just the pretzel bread.
I could swear I tasted two types of bread.
Maybe they were, but I didn't know.
But you just want pretzel.
Broccoli, raw, uncooked broccoli, celery, carrot,
and apple, green apple, green onion.
And which one did you feel mixed the best?
The pretzel bread and the granny Smith apple.
Okay, so if you had to give a score.
Sure, a score to each individual one or the entire,
least favorite dipper and favorite dipper.
Least favorite dipper might be,
and this is more the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
Least favorite dipper might be like a, like a raw carrot
or broccoli, I like, it's like, I don't know,
mixed with the dip, it is a,
maaah, close to a five.
Okay, but the apple and the pretzel bread
are more close to like a seven or eight.
So it's maybe a seven point five.
Seven point five.
Okay, so I mean, pretty big range there,
two point five points, depending on your dipper,
but overall, you thought the fun, the,
f***ing fun was pretty good.
Yes, aside from the fact that it had a little too much bite
from a little too much alcohol.
All right.
And actually, I stole a couple of the dippers just on their own,
just had a little...
You're gonna have a beautiful red.
You raw broccoli piece.
I just wanted it to be known that I was so hungry
that I couldn't wait for the next course
to start eating.
What's your review of the water?
I did get a pela grino with a spritz of lime
that I had to squeeze and they refused
to remove the lime carcass from the table
for the entire meal.
They wanted you to honor the lime sacrifice.
They came and bust a whole bunch of things,
but not that.
I just had like a slice of lime carcass.
You used every part of the animal,
they wanted you to eat it.
For dipping like the implement that they had for the fondue,
you very quickly dubbed a diident.
It was very much a diident because-
Like it was a trident, but minus.
And there were two prongs.
Could it have benefited from a third or fourth prong?
Absolutely.
Well, it actually, it got me wondering like,
well, what makes a trident a trident?
Because I assume that it's like the size and practicality
and stability, but then was it you or was it Steve
who pointed out that dent probably just means teeth.
Right.
In this case, so, dident just two teeth.
Well, then I guess the size doesn't matter.
It's how you use it. And yeah, so we're just like sitting there with like two pronged dients,
so you get two each. You get two times two. And so you've got four deadings. Are you getting started
on the math? Okay. Let's get into it. Okay. Okay. So, I mean, let's get to the meat then.
Yeah.
So, the next course was meat.
And so, we got a platter that had five meats on it, and the specific fondue that we got
was a coca-avine, which is what meat with wine or beef with wine or something like that.
Yeah, it's got like mushrooms and red wine and stuff.
Yeah, mushrooms, green onion, garlic, red wine,
all kind of boiling in this pot.
Yeah, so if you've ever thought to yourself,
the best way to have steak is to boil it.
Oh, are you in luck?
I didn't hate this preparation.
It's not for the steak specifically.
It's not my favorite, but the steak still tasted pretty good.
Sure, but it's not usually recommended that you boil steak.
You know.
But so here's the thing, you got all these raw chunks of meat and it's up to you, kind of
like Korean barbecue, to cook it.
But unlike Korean barbecue where you can see visually, constantly, how far along things
are, it's submerged.
It's submerged, so it's in a mystery pot and you're losing track of who's... Well, y'all were losing track. Me, the Rubik's Cube expert over here
was sitting there just like timing precisely.
Because there's multiple stopwatches on the table,
active at this moment,
which is never a good sign for restaurant.
And not an exaggeration.
We all had our phones out.
Or you had your...
I was using my watch. I was using my watch stopwatch.
You guys were using your watch. And not an exaggeration.
We all had our phones out, or you had your watch.
I was using your watch.
I was using my watch, stopwatch.
You guys were using your phones.
When you're having to track multiple, multi-tasking things,
instead of just enjoying the meal,
because the beef pieces take like, you know,
two minutes.
Well, I would say all, okay, so.
We got a garlic pepper steak and a teriyaki steak.
Both of those for you and I who wanted the medium rare, they said about a minute 40.
Two minutes or so for Steve wanting it medium.
Then the shrimp and I got a lobster tail.
The shrimp and the lobster tail were both three minutes.
Two minutes, right.
And then herb-crusted chicken breast and Memphis style dry rub pork were both six to eight minutes.
So those were the long ones.
They tied up your skewer for a really long amount of time.
And then you've also got potatoes that are four minute recommendations.
Four minutes if you want them crispy, but you can leave them in there indefinitely if
you want.
So you've got all of these interlocking fractional mathematical considerations.
As you're trying to just like still engage in conversation, you're always having like, oh shit, I lost track of time.
It's just this constant stress.
This felt like juggling.
It was literally felt very much juggling.
Okay. I've got two balls going in one hand and I'm trying to like add a chain saw with my third one.
Yes.
Because I was trying to do, okay, I'm going to cook one long while I cook one short so that I can swap out a short and cook two shorts in the time you cook a long.
Right. But the, but the math, it doesn't fit perfectly fractionally.
Well, so the way I did it was I take two, you know, I had two things that were a minute 40,
right? The two different types of steaks. I had two things that were two to three minutes,
the lobster tail and the shrimp, and I had two things that were six to eight minutes,
which were the pork and the chicken. So I would just take one of each of the same time one,
put them both in, set my timer,
and pull them both out together.
Which is a better strategy.
I, because I underestimated how frustrating it was gonna be.
I thought my biggest thing was gonna be impatience on,
well, I'm not eating anything for whole chunks
of minutes at a time.
Yeah.
Usually at a meal, when the food comes,
everything's ready to eat.
Right.
And those six to eight minute ones, I felt those.
I really felt those gaps where I was like, okay, now I'm waiting six to eight minutes.
And the only thing I was able to eat since the last thing I cooked was the two single-byte
servings of the things that I just thought that out.
Everything's single-byte.
So you've invested six to eight minutes, like you wanted to bite.
Yeah, like yeah.
There's no service that is made better by offloading more of the responsibility onto you.
And you're already paying a premium to be here.
Yeah.
It's like you expect to end the cook your food.
I think here's how I would have done it.
I would have served fully cooked meat and given a dipping sauce just like the sh** fondue
where it's just you just quickly dip your sauce.
Yeah, I do get it, but that just by nature isn't what the
process of fondue is.
No, the process of fondue when it comes to sh** in chocolate
is exactly that.
Sh** in chocolate, yeah.
And that's what people most associate with fondue.
The meat is almost a forgotten part.
But I will say just with melting pot going back to like the 70s,
this is what they have always been.
Sure.
So our lack of familiarity with that process
isn't necessarily they did it wrong.
It's just we didn't know the process.
I'm in the amateur here.
I'm not as good of a cook.
So I'm constantly risking under or over cooking my food.
Right.
And I'm not able to just have casual conversation.
I'm balancing all of these different mathematical equations.
I did feel like I deserved a plaque in a glass case
at the front of my restaurant,
or home when Steve went to pull out a chicken
that had only been in there for two minutes.
You say it doesn't have any,
and I was like, hey, hey, hey, hey, that's chicken.
You wanted six to eight minutes.
There's life.
I could have sworn chicken was two to three.
I'm like, it's chicken.
I'm sure there's a lot of food poisoning that happens
at the melting pot because there's no way
on any given night that someone's not
under doing a chicken here or there.
Yeah.
They should also give you a little pH kits
and you can test for amounts of Ecoli,
a little Ebola, you know.
Picture the chlorine levels are right.
Yeah, that's all part of the fun.
Yeah.
The more work and stress and things to keep track of, the more relaxed you can be.
So all this said, it was a very stressful situation.
And you know what?
I would go so far as to say the stress level of doing this was way too much.
This is way too much.
That's right.
I'm giving this week's, this is way too much award to the pure calculations
and math involved to making the meat course work.
Wow, that's a top-up.
That's a top-up.
That's a top-up.
Wow, that's a top-up.
That's a top-up.
It is very coveted.
There's always a drum roll, please.
Yeah, I mean, it was stressful, even though I do feel like I got a good handle on it personally and I felt like my food always
tasted the way it was supposed. I never got one where I was like, oh, I definitely messed that up.
Even still just the amount it had to run through my mind was way too much.
Yeah, you want to casually relax, especially when you're spending that much money.
Like if the value proposition was, here, have this discount food, you cook it yourself
and save a little bit of cash, then it's like maybe, but if you're already spending this
pricey amount, you're paying for the service of a chef to prepare it perfectly.
Yeah, of course, you do expect a quality to be there, and if you have the accountability
and you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, I don't know if I can handle this responsibility. Yeah, it's, and again, it's boiling steak. Come on.
So let's get into actually talking about how we liked the dishes. Sure. Or didn't.
I mean, the meat was to me, mediocre, the, the, the, the, the chocolate were the things to
rave about from there. Well, let's go through each one. So we had the chicken breast.
This was my lowest score of the meats. But I think Steve was really into the chicken specifically.
I tended to dip this one.
They had a curry sauce.
And I found myself pairing the chicken
with all the pepperyness to it.
I thought it went well with the curry,
but even still, I'm going five out of 10 on the chicken.
Sure.
Yeah, I could go six.
Yeah.
There was the shrimp obviously meant to go with the cocktail sauce.
Cocktail sauce, I thought it had a very horse radishy bite.
Like, you really felt it in your sinuses.
Which I like.
My first bite I was literally like,
is there wasabi in that?
Yeah, I like wasabi.
I do, I like, no, it's good.
They went hard on the wassab's.
And I thought the shrimp was pretty good.
It was fine, but I mean, it's like when you're cooking it yourself,
really the quality of the shrimp is how well it was cooked.
So it's like, you gave me some raw shrimp,
and I boiled it properly.
But at the end of the day, the taste is what matters.
And I, I will put this disclaimer out there.
I feel like I cooked everything as well as I was supposed to.
So my scores are going to reflect your variance in mind.
Sometimes some things were over, some things were okay.
I don't think I ever undercooked anything.
Yeah, so I'm gonna go seven out of 10 on the shrimp.
I actually, I love the shrimp quite a bit.
I'm with you on that.
Then there's the Memphis style dry rub pork.
I was not into it.
I had a couple of bites where I kind of forced myself
to savor the texture and be like, okay, this is a little like.
The texture was a bad part.
Ah, I thought it was a little pulled porky before you pull it.
It was like pre-pulled pork.
I think I just overcooked mine.
It was just too chewy.
Yeah, I think mine turned out okay.
I got it right, even still.
I had it at a 6.5 out of 10.
I'm going for, I would rather have like a nice,
you know, properly cooked piece of pork.
Now they had like a plum sauce
and they also had a teriyaki sauce.
And I thought that the pork went really well
with the teriyaki.
Yeah, with the sweet,
which on the dry road I didn't expect.
Both the sweets went well with the pork, yeah.
Yeah.
Then we had the two steaks, the garlic pepper steak.
I thought was the better of the two steaks.
My first bite I wasn't super impressed,
and then the other three that I had really shine through
and I could taste the garlic.
I actually tried this steak with each one of the sauces
and liked all of them.
I went seven and a half out of 10
on the garlic pepper steak.
I preferred the tariaki steak. I'll go 10 on the garlic, garlic pepper steak. I prefer the teriyaki steak.
I'll go five on the garlic sticks on the teriyaki.
I mean, because I'm comparing this in my mind to like,
really good steaks I've had.
Of course. There's no way it's approaching that.
And I thought that with the teriyaki, the like sweetness of it was almost a
distraction from the meat.
It yes.
To where I was just like, I would rather just taste like the good meat.
I'll say it one more time.
If you're boiling steak,
it's just never gonna turn out as good
as if you make it on the grill.
The real star of the show for me was that added lobster tail.
I got it, came with its own extra dipping sauce,
which was like a Dijon butter.
And you're kind of crapping over the concept of boiling,
only for steak.
Okay.
This might be maybe my new favorite preparation of lobster.
I mean, I guess typically you do boil a lobster, but specifically with all the infused
the wine, garlic, green onion, all that in the sauce, the cocavine, I really,
really like this lobster.
I went eight out of ten.
Yeah, I think for seafood, it's boiling as good.
It reached the level of great.
I would call that a great lobster tail.
Nice.
Not the best I've ever had, but very good.
Surprisingly good was the raw mushroom to boil in there.
I did enjoy the mushroom.
That soaked up a lot of flavors, very savory.
I had it at the very end where it had all the juices to pull from from all the meats
that had been cooked in there.
It's a very flavorful mushroom.
I'm probably going like seven out of 10 on that one mushroom.
I'll go seven point five.
And then on the potatoes, they were the dates were a little, they were dumb.
They were dumb.
There were so many better potatoes I've had in my life.
It was like, because of, again, the way it in my life It was like a because of again the way it's cooked
It was like kind of melee in the middle. It's just like come on
Yeah, I went five and a half on the potato you want an oven bake potato. You don't want a boiled potato
I mean a potato is a potato as long as it's like technically cooked right and
Unless you're boiling it for a long long time like in a stew and it like melts in your mouth
But if you're doing a quick boil on a potato,
it just does not turn out.
I liked it though, yeah, five and a half.
Next, lightly above mediocre.
Okay.
Give a number.
Yeah, I'll give it a four.
Are you trying to show me your nipple?
What are you doing?
BEEP.
If I say BEEP is over a prolonged period of time,
are you gonna bleep the whole thing?
But I'm just like,
sh**.
I'll bleep the part where like you close the word
with the letter S,
like how they bleep hole on asshole,
but you still hear ass.
So lastly, we get to dessert.
Yeah, this was the star of the show.
So we got the Rocky Road chocolate fondue,
this had dark chocolate with marshmallow cream,
and it was flambéed over candied pecans.
Yes.
And the flambé, they are server literally lit the pot on fire
because I mean, that's what flambé is.
And he told me, like, hey, take your tongs, stir it up.
And he's like, eh, you want to be interactive
and encouraging me to put my hands towards an open flame.
And I got a little nervous.
I got a little, my heart was racing
as I'm trying to stir the flame into the rest of the thing.
Your heart was a flutter on date night.
This was super good.
And it came with a platter that had shortbread,
it had rice, crispy treat, a chocolate marshmallow,
a graham cracker covered marshmallow,
banana, strawberry, a brownie, and a chocolate chimplondie.
Yeah.
I loved this.
I thought most of the dippers were at least good.
Yeah.
Like the shortbread didn't have enough texture
to really stand out, but it was still good.
But like strawberry and banana, strong things to dip chocolate in.
I really like those. Yeah, it can't go wrong. The like Strawberry and Banana, strong things to dip chocolate in.
I really like those.
Yeah, it can't go wrong.
The blondie I thought was my favorite thing.
Yeah.
Just cause it had a texture where there were actual chocolate chips in it.
So it's covered in this rocky road, Marshmello chocolate fondue.
Yeah.
And then you get the texture of the crunch.
It was close to perfection.
Yeah.
Given just the variety of dipobles,
I'll say like the best one I had,
which I would say is the blondie.
I gave like a nine out of 10 to the worst,
I would probably call the shortbread.
And that was like a, still like a seven out of 10.
So between a seven and a nine on this,
sure.
Very tasty.
Sure, I mean, I thought it was phenomenal,
but only because I'm leaving room for like, even more fantastic desserts that I've had,
I'm gonna stay in eight.
Yeah, this was a great way to close out the meal,
and we were pretty full heading into it,
but at no point were any of us like,
I've got reservations, and he gave us an out.
He was like, okay, is the chocolate
is this gonna be for two, or is this gonna be for three?
Our server like, we just don't know who he was giving me out to.
Yeah, one of you gets an out,
but two of you have to stay.
Yeah.
Overall on the food, I'm gonna go one thumb up,
and it's a pretty firm one thumb up.
Like the food here was good.
Yeah.
The stress level of all the dipping,
specifically with the meat, that kind of knocks it a little bit. The steak level of all the dipping specifically with the meat,
that kind of knocks it a little bit.
The steak quality wasn't as good as I would want as,
you know, as I would have wanted more.
It's like a $40 meat selection.
Yeah, yeah.
Of course you expect more.
If I was going again, I would stick with only the sh**s
in the chocolate.
There's no reason to go meat.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, I would absolutely go meet again.
Well, because you like just,
I might just go lobster.
Right.
I might be like, you know what,
let's just do the thing that I am confident that I like.
A boilable meat like seafood, yes.
Yeah.
There's no reason to boil other kinds of meat.
They did actually have a full seafood offering
that had salmon.
That would be the way to go, I suppose.
But even salmon, I wouldn't boil
Nah, yeah, I don't know and maybe it goes better with a different
Boyleable you want like a big-luxon style and lobster like a seafood boil. Yeah, but I liked it
I mean this was a good dining experience sure safely good want them up. Yeah, I'll join you on that
So we went one thumb up across the board in every category
We got to put it all together into a rating, but before we do that
We got to head to Yelp and see what other people think of the melting pot in this week's Yelp from strangers
We need a little Yelp, a little Yelp from strangers
One star two star three star four by yine
So get a little help a little help from strangers
Give us those complaints while you literally white and dye
Yelp
All right, this is Yelp from strangers the segment where I go to Yelp and read out my favorite
1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 star Yelp reviews from this very melting pot location.
Ryan, you did the research on these, you sent me the reviews, literally as the words
come out of my mouth will be the first time I've seen these reviews I'm gonna read a five star review. This is from Lance L one year ago
He's written 583 L reviews and added over 4,000 pictures
The United States of America is described as the great melting pot because of all the cultures
Can I hear this in a more at the Borat accent in a motion? Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion?
Can I hear this in a motion? heritage, values and way of life, a little bit richer, sweeter, and definitely more complex.
I feel like he misunderstood the assignment and he's writing about America because he
has not gotten to the restaurant yet.
The book reported about America.
Like our beautiful country, the melting pot, chain of restaurants, is figuratively a representation
of all the things described above.
But instead of culture and nationalities being melded together, it's the melding of flavors and aromas
They make your meal richer
Chips and meat and fondue or sweeter chocolate dessert fondue. I like how twice he's capitalized richer and sweeter
Look the dudes got branding to do okay
He's trying to get something over with us
Yeah
And the best thing about the melting pot experience besides the chocolate fondue, of course,
is that you get to do all the cooking yourself
at your own pace and there's no dishes to wash
after your meal is complete.
Is that our typical restaurants for him
involving dishes to wash?
Yeah, yeah.
He usually washes his own dishes.
I'm over 40 episodes into this podcast, okay?
I know all about having to wash dishes
at Chain Restaurant, it's the norm. For those of you know all about having to wash dishes at Chain Restaurant.
It's the norm.
For those of you who've yet to experience the magic at the melting pot, this is a great
place to recognize all of life's moments, celebrations, and come for those who just love
to eat.
Thank you, melting pot, 1,000 oaks.
For giving us a great celebration for my mom's birthday this year and in years past.
Cheers and happy holidays.
Wow, it's the first time he mentioned that the reason was the mom's birthday.
The rest of it was just an ode to this great nature.
What a patriot.
One star with you.
All right, Ryan, if you want to continue us with a one star review,
this is going to be from Alexandra R from two months ago.
And she's real new to this. She's only given six reviews total. She says, that experience,
this place is extremely dark, maybe intending to appear romantically lit, but most likely
to hide how run down it is. I mean, after what we saw in that hallway,
agreed. I agree. Yeah. The restroom was smelly, dirty, and disgusting, with a stopped-up toilet.
You.
The hallway leading up to the restroom looked dirty and had a fan blasting on the carpet.
Why was there a fan blasting on the house?
Maybe there was like a spill or something and they're trying to air it out.
She says maybe plumbing issues?
We were hoping to enjoy a nice evening for my daughter's birthday,
but it didn't quite work out that way. After stirring the chocolate in the fondue pot,
the server said, who's gonna be the lucky one and handed my daughter a hot spoon? She burned her
fingers. They gave her some burn ointment while sarcastically saying, and here's my birthday gift to you.
I don't think that's how they said.
I don't know how nasally the server was, but...
Okay, I'm taking some artistic literature.
They're trying to make light of putting burnoyment on her to frame it as...
This is a gift to you.
Yeah, ex.
Her fingers are hurting and blistered.
The manager apologized, but didn't seem to care.
Also, one person in our party has silly act disease. and blistered the manager apologized but didn't seem to care.
Also one person in our party has silly act disease and we had heard that this place is
a certified gluten free and safe that even have a sign on their window, we clearly explained
that part of our order needed to be gluten free.
The food with gluten, poisonous to one person in our party party was all on the same tray with the gluten free food.
Then the sauce tray included one with gluten on the same sauce tray and the server simply said, oh just don't touch that one.
I had asked them to bring out one with no gluten near it. We were a party up for and paid over four hundred dollars food only no alcohol.
Wow her reading cadence is there her reading cadence is crazy.
Her writing cadence is crazy.
Yeah, these aren't great.
I mean, her daughter was injured.
And they were poisoned by gluten.
The poisoned?
Poisoned.
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 all of our thumb ratings together, package it up into a little score for you.
And then figure out where does the melting pot go on the Chachki of mediocrity?
Is it going to be the perfect five point double zero experience that ends the podcast?
Or is it going to be somewhere else? Ryan, I will let you go first.
Sure. I'm going to go with a seven point.25 because it definitely wasn't getting into greatness of eight
and above.
But, you know, it was pretty good.
If I were factoring in price, it would probably knock it down even further just because
it was so expensive.
But, um, yeah.
We're actually very close.
Now, I've been rating restaurants a little bit longer than you.
My decimal points are a little bit more honed.
You went just with a round basic ass 7.25. A nice, a nice, fractional number to 7.25.
Yeah, to quarter.
To quarter. But this wasn't quite there for me. This, to me, was the epitome of a 7.23.
Oh, it's a text book. 2.3.
It was a textbook 7.23. You got like little a textbook. 6.23. It was a textbook 7.23.
You got like little, little metal detectors in your tongue.
When we average together our scores,
the melting pot goes up on the Chachki of mediocrity at 7.24.
And that means the melting pot is decisively better than mediocre.
decisively better than mediocre. Wow.
Which actually, it's a little bit of a desert right there.
Its nearest competitor is more than 0.2 away that being Outback Steakhouse.
Dear Lord, I mean, that's...
That's wild.
I love me some Outback, dude.
Sure. I really do.
I would agree that Outback is a little better.
Like, if I had to ask you,
would you rather go to a melting potter and Outback?
Outback.
You're going OB.
It's because of that awesome blossom.
Blooming on you.
I was gonna say, jeez, how could you say the AB word?
I regret it.
Canceled.
This is some carcyism right here.
So because I didn't find the most mediocre restaurant
this time, the search continues.
I gotta know, where am I gonna go next time
in search of the most mediocre restaurant?
To determine that, we gotta play a little game, Ryan.
Ooh, we gotta play a little game, Ryan. We gotta play the headline game!
The rules of the headline game are as follows.
Michael will present three headlines to his co-host that include this week's restaurant.
They can be made up, or they can be actual headlines.
If the co-host can correctly guess if at least two out of three are real
or fake, they will get to select next week's restaurant. However, if Michael stumps them,
he'll select again. Are you ready to play, fellow? I'm ready.
Alright, headline number one. The melting pot divides critics with two new
sh**s-infused cocktails.
Divide critics with two new ch**s.
Yeah, that sounds pretty legit to me.
Alright, so you're going true?
Yeah, true.
Headline number two.
Cops jump into large street brawl outside melting pot.
No, I'm thinking the jump into large street probably it sounds too
Too forced I'm saying false. All right headline number three man arrested at New Jersey melting pot after multiple attempts to burn wife's face
I think we're Florida maybe
New Jersey. I want to go false. I feel like you don't know that much about New Jersey if you're skepticism here.
All right.
So first headline,
The Melting Pot divides critics with two new
sh**s infused cocktails.
You said that's true.
I made that one up.
That one is false.
Nice.
headline number two, cops jump into large street brawl,
outside melting pot.
You said false.
That one actually was true.
Wow.
And last one, man arrested at New Jersey Melting Pot
after multiple attempts to burn wife's face.
You said false and you did, in fact, correctly sus out.
I made that one up.
Okay.
So you went one for three, which means I get to pick where I'm going next time.
I want to pick.
I get to pick.
Sorry.
Okay, that's the rules.
That's the rules. So I'm going to go to
Gordon Beersh Brewery. What? Gordon Beersh Brewery. Is that a
chain? Yeah, they're kind of all over the place, but spaced out.
Is he Germanic? Is he Austrian? I will do some research and learn
all about that. And then you guys can learn why it's called
Gordon Beersh.
On the set of time.
On the set of time.
Well, you're gonna have to wait for the next episode
of the fun guy who's survived.
He's survived.
I don't know yet.
I haven't done the research.
Beersh's borched.
Ryan, thanks for coming on.
Oh, thanks, man.
Did you have a fun time?
Absolutely, I had a blast.
You have a good meal, a good, good,
I mean, more than mediocre.
I've got a belly full of dippers.
Ryan, is there anything you want to plug
or have people follow you on any specific social media
or follow you in real life?
I recently guested on this podcast
to searching for the most mediocre restaurant in America.
Yeah.
People should check it out.
Go back to the beginning of this episode.
www.google.com and then into the search bar type show me different podcasts.
And then follow that.
It's really you to see.
Find dining on page 472 and look for the quotes around fine.
Yeah, it's fine dining.
Okay, it's not like the finest dining, but it's fine.
You know, you get it.
It's fine.
All right, well, we did not find the most mediocre restaurant. The search doesn't fact continue and you can keep up with it on social media
at find dining podcast on Instagram and TikTok. Find dining podcast at gmail.com. We'll see you next time.
Have a fine day. The search continues. We still need the perfect fine, the search continues
Like and subscribe, the search continues
Our journey did not conclude, the mother and the search continues
Rattles and I, to those reviews
And hey, while you're at it, why don't you go ahead and make it five stars?
Come on
Follow us on TikTok
The same on Instagram
All the socials
At Find Dining Podcast
We have a website Find DiningPodcast.com
Buy our T-shirts, then put them on
And don't forget, you can always suggest where we go next. Okay! We're going to find it.
Media crafting.
The search continues.
See you next week!
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!
I heard my throat a little.
Have a fine day!
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
Oh, so you're just gonna do one of these without a job?
Maybe you can do it without your precious, stupid,
you must pull too.
Ah, now let's start storming.
Whatever, the deed is done, I'm gonna go.
Okay, bye.
I'll be back.
you