Food For Thought

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It never fails, about once a month or so my wife is scrolling through our shared photo directory on Amazon Prime where our phones back up their photos and she says "there's a lot of food photos in here". It should come as no shock to many of you that I like food. I like grilling food, I like photographing food, I like talking about food, I like eating food.

At one time HIVE seemed to like food a bit more than it does now as well, but unfortunately, many of those communities have fallen off or dissolved. I still have my grilling and smoking community, but even I haven't posted in that in quite some time because honestly, how many times can I tell you how I grill chicken?

I keep taking the photos however, because as I said above, I like talking about food.

I started to realize a while ago that there are certain things that I just prefer to have at home. It's pretty rare (pun intended) to find a place that has a steak better than anything I can grill myself at home. The cost to benefit ratio just isn't there. On the other hand, there are things that restaurants do really well.

As much as I live the grilled pork chops that you see in the opening photo, I just can't seem to get mine as tender as the local pub down the street. They do something magical with their pork chops that make them so tender you can cut them with a fork!

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Along with talking, photographing, grilling, and eating food, I also like thinking about food. Which leads me down a long and winding journey through my brain that serves as the inspiration for this post. @mrsbozz is an amazing cook. If I haven't said it before, I will shout it loud right now. She probably doesn't think so, but I certainly do. However, there are a few things she makes that I feel stand above the rest.

Things that I occasionally tell her, if I had a restaurant, this would be on the menu. One of them is a tortilla soup that at least in my head seems like it would be fairly easy to replicate on a large scale. You throw a bunch of chicken and other stuff (jarred or fresh salsa, chicken stock) into a pressure cooker, let it cook for ten minutes or so, then add some other stuff (fire roasted veggies, cream cheese), shred the chicken, and boom you are done.

It's rich, flavorful, and amazing!

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Given our work schedule, we also eat a lot of casseroles. @mrsbozz puts them together on the weekend and puts them in the refrigerator. Then we just need to pull them out on weeknights, heat them up, and dinner is served. There is one that uses ground chicken, bacon, an egg, and some other stuff that basically is a chicken cheeseburger casserole sort of thing. It's amazing, and I was thinking the other day, if I had a restaurant, this would be on the menu.

Which led me to ask the question why more restaurants don't have casseroles on their menu.

Google to the rescue again, and after a few minutes, I had a handful of answers.

Let me break them down:

The first reason was attributed to the general belief that casseroles are seen as "peasant meals" or not high class or fine dining. While I don't argue with the belief, I do argue with the basic premise. First of all, plenty of restaurants serve meatloaf and that could also be considered peasant food.

The fact is, if your chef is good enough, they should be able to transform or elevate what would normally be a "basic" dish into something absolutely amazing. Meatloaf being a perfect example of that. I have had some pretty amazing meatloaves at establishments all across the country. There is a lot of wiggle room in terms of protein, seasonings, binders, etc. You can really elevate a standard meatloaf into something phenomenal.

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The second reason on the other hand, I can understand a bit more than the first one and if that had been the only reason given, I probably would have accepted it. It was posited that the main reason restaurants don't typically serve casseroles is because the overhead is just too high. You can only get a pan so big to make a casserole. Plus, you basically have to bake off the whole thing and then what if only a handful of people order it that night?

You are suddenly sitting on a whole lot of wasted product that you can't necessarily serve again the next day. That's fair. I understand the bottom line is important and I can respect that very valid point.

However, I think done properly, a restaurant could potentially thrive on scheme like this.

My wife makes a breakfast casserole where you can cut it up into individual servings and then heat those up one at time for a serving. I think if they specialized in casseroles like that where you can individually fire them, then dress them with some herbs and maybe sauce at the end, it might be a winning concept.

Of course, I think they would have to stick to just three or four different casseroles to keep things simple and do those handful of things very well. It's possible though...

What do you think? Would you eat at a place that serves elevated casseroles?

Thanks for taking this long winded trip through some of the things I spent my brain power on. If only I could focus that into something more worthwhile, I could change the world!


My Sports Account - @bozz.sports


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All pictures/screenshots taken by myself or @mrsbozz unless otherwise sourced



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35 comments
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You received an upvote of 100% from Precious the Silver Mermaid!

Please remember to contribute great content to the #SilverGoldStackers tag to create another Precious Gem.

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Oh, I guess I should publish in the grilling community next time I'm having a barbecue :)

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You definitely should! I'd love to see that community get some more activity. I know there are different styles and methods of grilling all across the world!

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Much like you I enjoy making food, eating food, seldom write down recipes which I suppose I could do, but don't. Seldom photograph except on rare occasions....

Meatloaf as you refer to perhaps try this for a twist, prepare meat to your liking and consistency then roll onto sheet of wax wrap, flatted out like a square pizza. Grate cheese with some herbs for additional taste if you so desire all depends on meat. Spread grated cheese across flattened out meat, grab edge of wax wrap and roll like Swiss roll, top with bitsy bacon, cheese, slice of tomato if you feel lavish and grill, ready to eat, makes a great meal with mash, gravy and salad.

Your tantalizing meals always look delicious and would only imagine Mrs has a trick or two up her sleeve to make other dishes, we all appear to have something in food we really enjoy making.

!BEER

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That does sound like a really great preparation for meat. I will have to remember that! Food is just so great to talk about!

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Makes a difference, using approx bread size pan or dish to bake in it holds shape pretty well.

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I agree, my steak is also about as good as any restaurant steak that I have tried, even at the most fancy steakhouses. So I never order stake at the restaurant anymore, however we cannot cook India food as well as the Indian places do, plus Indian restaurants are a bargain compared to the seafood places or the stake houses...

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I actually had a steak at a restaurant this past weekend and it was pretty good. Still probably not as good as what I could do at home, but it was good. I really had planned on getting something else until I saw it on the menu. Probably the most expensive dinner I have had in quite some time. Meanwhile, I just got gas for $2.50 per gallon this morning...

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I just filled up at Costco an hour ago at $3.98 over $100 spent...

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Still, $4 isn't $5!

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That is because it is Costco :) Everywhere else it is $5+

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I am with you on steaks. I like mine blue and the amount of times I have sent back a steak for being rare and overdone was ridiculous. So yeah no steak unless I cook them lol

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Oh yeah, I don't like mine like that. I just don't feel like the flavor is ever as good. That being said, I had a pretty good one this past weekend. I'll write more about it later!

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Who among us does not love food? Food brings joy and happiness. It is truly wonderful😋🍗🍖.

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It really is! So good!

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That's some great grilling there! I do wonder how they get those chops so tender, they must have some sort of tenderizing marinade that does the magic. That chicken tortilla soup looks great! You're wife has a great recipe there and easy to do.

I agree on the steak, it's almost always better when you do it yourself at home with a good cut of meat.

Casseroles could be done in restaurants, they just have to cut them up like your wife and reheat. I used to go to an Italian place that would do their lasagna that way, and it was awesome! It might just be the culture of casseroles are older folks food, my mom used to make them all the time. But nowadays it seems like the culinary palate of the younger generations has moved away from the good old reliable casseroles. And its's a shame!

Never open a restaurant though, very tough business and almost all new ones fail in the first year. I don't the experience in the first place to do so, but a think it's a fools errand! But it might be fun!

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Oh don't worry, I would never open a place like that unless I had the money to make it fully self sustainable. Like paying all the bills and salaries from earnings from a different investment. That way even if it never makes a profit, it is still solid.

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Especially after 2020, the government killed the industry!

!LADY !PIZZA

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yes I will still eat, as long as the food is delicious hehe. your recipe is great, it looks delicious especially with cheese! yay so yummy! 😋🤤

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Yes I will.
I also love grilled foods my favorite ways of cooking.
Grilled foods that are affordable here in the Philippines are most likely sold in the streets (street foods)

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Street food is some of the best food!

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If you like casseroles (or as Minnesotans say, "hot dish") you have to visit Minnesota or Wisconsin's supper clubs. We have a wild rice hot dish that is out of this world. A casserole called "Marzetti" was popular in Columbus. It was Italian-American and very similar to lasagna but with different pasta. We ate that all the time growing up.

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Those definitely sound interesting. I think I have only ever seen a supper club once in my life and it was from a distance when we were visiting Cleveland, OH. We eat a lot of them because they are just so easy to make and reheat. I think we are heading to Wisconsin this summer sometime to camp. That's the plan anyway.

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Se ven muy deliciosas. Espero que la hayan disfrutado mucho. Saludos

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You know I could have sworn I commented on all your posts this past week... I know I read at least this one, because I remember it as I reread it now. Maybe I just forgot to comment? I think I'm losing my mind.

Anyway!

What you write about casseroles makes me think. In Japan, restaurants are much more specialized than in the US. If you want ramen, you go to a ramen restaurant that only serves different kinds of ramen. If you want pasta, you go to a pasta restaurant. If you want eel, you go to a restaurant that only serves eel. And so on. I wonder if this kind of setup would work in the US. A casseroles restaurant?

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It might work, but the casual diner places might suffer a bit. It's funny how we have places that have a little bit of everything on the menu. That BT's I covered earlier in the week was one like that. Burgers, Sandwiches, Seafood, Pasta, you name it, they had it.

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