Where restaurants serve Asian cuisines in the U.S.

You can find Asian restaurants in most places in the United States, but the type of Asian food choices varies. For Pew Research, Sona Shah and Regina Widjaya mapped the distributions of eight major cuisines.

Whenever I’m in a new place, I like to check out the Chinese restaurants, because they’re everywhere. It’s fun to taste the area’s version of universal Chinese dishes. I’ve been to Queens. Now I’m curious about Portsmouth City and Whitman.

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Where restaurant chains dominate

Researchers Xiaofan Liang and Clio Andris estimated the percentage of restaurants that are chains and independent to identify “McCities”:

These high chainness McCities are prevalent in the Midwestern and the Southeastern United States. Independent restaurants were associated with dense pedestrian-friendly environments, highly educated populations, wealthy populations, racially diverse neighborhoods, and tourist areas. Low chainness was also associated with East and West Coast cities.

Check out the interactive map here.

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Breaking down the higher price on a restaurant receipt

If you’ve eaten at a restaurant lately, you might have noticed a substantially higher bill than you’re used to. You’d be right to assume that it’s because of things like inflation and pandemic-induced prices, but you might not realize how much the cost of ingredients, labor, and a new takeout business model has gone up for restaurants. Priya Krishna and Umi Syam, for The New York Times, redesigned a single receipt to show a more detailed breakdown.

The receipt presentation and color-coded scrolling are tops. It’s a well-made table that works with the copy to highlight items.

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Restaurant Reopenings, a Comparison to Last Year

Restaurants are reopening for dining across the United States. Some states are doing it faster than others. Read More

Restaurant struggles

The restaurant industry is taking a big hit right now, as most people are staying put at home. OpenTable provides a downloadable dataset to show how much restaurant dining is down:

This data shows year-over-year seated diners at restaurants on the OpenTable network across all channels: online reservations, phone reservations, and walk-ins. For year-over-year comparisons by day, we compare to the same day of the week from the same week in the previous year. For example, we’d compare Tuesday of week 11 in 2020 to Tuesday of week 11 in 2019. Only states or cities with 50+ restaurants in the sample are included. All restaurants on the OpenTable network in either period are included.

It’s red all the way down. Support your local businesses the best you can.

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How many tables restaurant servers have to wait on to earn minimum wage

In most states, there is minimum wage and there is tipping minimum wage. For those who earn the latter, most of their income comes from tips. This is fine in nicer restaurants where tips can be substantial, but in places that depend on high turnover and low prices, restaurant servers need to work more tables per hour to earn the equivalent of minimum wage.

Kathryn Casteel and Charlie Smart for FiveThirtyEight have an interactive chart that shows how many tables servers have to work to make up the difference in different states.

Tables per hour makes the x-axis and hourly wage makes the y-axis, which means steeper slopes represents fewer tables to make up the difference. I’m not sure everyone will get that, but I like it.

That said, I hope people don’t interpret these numbers as servers at some restaurants have to work harder than others do. Service at Denny’s isn’t quite the same as service at a four-star. Rather, the main takeaway is that you should tip your servers. That’s where they make most of their income.

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Your Opinion Matters

The idea of peer review is typically associated with science. My brother feared a mythological villain known as “The Third Reviewer” more than any childhood bogeyman. The food world is no stranger to reviews either. Frankly, science you have it easy.

Not the best I've ever had

In the food world, true peer review, where chefs are reviewing the work of other chefs, is usually reserved for culinary competitions and reality shows. Instead, we have professional reviewers. These are food journalists, akin to science journalists. They are professionals at reviewing and can vary widely in ability. They may or may not have expertise in the actual creation of restaurant food. They generally have spent a lot of time in and around restaurants. They are not exactly peers, but we try to be very nice to them lest you wind up in Guy Fieri’s shoes.

What scientists generally don’t have is the “everyone else that sits down and orders a plate of food” review. If you are like me, you do a little review in your head every time you sit down at a restaurant to eat. That internalized review might even get shared with your friends and family; but the advent of sites like Yelp have made it possible to broadcast those little reviews to the world.

Peer review of articles and grants can make or break a scientific career. Professional restaurant reviews can make or break a restaurant. So can those amateur, Internet reviews.

In the sciences, peer-review means the reviewer is knowledgeable about the subject matter and has done research themselves that is subject to the review of others. I know that I am not competent to pass judgment on work of my colleagues here at The Finch & Pea who are actively involved in research.

But, you don’t need to have expertise and experience to evaluate whether you like the food you are eating, do you? No, you don’t. We are all entitled to our opinions and tastes. And as they say, there is no accounting for taste.

DE GUSTIBUS NON EST DISPUTANDUM

There may be no accounting for our individual tastes, but, when we post that review of our meal online, someone IS being held accountable for our tastes. It just isn’t us.

In many ways, the work of a critic is easy. We risk very little, yet enjoy a position over those who offer up their work and their selves to our judgment. – Anton Ego (Ratatouille)

Diesel Sweeties by Richard Stevens (Original Strip: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial; Adapted with Permission)

Diesel Sweeties by Richard Stevens (Original Strip: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial; Adapted with Permission)

Being critical can be cathartic, and catharsis is pretty enjoyable. We also have to be aware that a critic – be it a peer, a professional, or an amateur out with friends – has power over those they are reviewing.

Consider the job of a chef. Long days, late nights, working weekends and holidays, cuts, burns, years spent work their way up or thousands spent in culinary school (or both). With very few exceptions, we’re not doing it for the paycheck (trust me, it’s a small one). Why then? Why go through all that?

Because we are passionate about food.

We are passionate about creating, about technique, about the effort required to realize a creative vision, and about the experience of dining.

What are you passionate about? Work, travel, being a parent? Now, ask yourself what it would be like to have your passion critiqued in a public forum. That’s not fun. Now, imagine that your livelihood is wrapped up in that passion. For many restaurants, which operate as small businesses, this is the case. Negative reviews not only cut to the heart of the passion chefs pour into their work, but chip away at the financial foundations of these small businesses.

I am not advocating for an end to negative reviews. Criticism breeds growth and change, and inadequate work deserves criticism.

I am advocating for thoughtfulness. Bear in mind that review you are posting has consequences beyond your feeling of self-satisfaction – consequences that affect the lives of people who are putting their hearts, souls, and often savings accounts into what they are doing.

Before you put your opinion out there for the world to see, ask yourself, “Was the food prepared poorly or simply not to your tastes?” You may also want to ask yourself if you have the experience and knowledge to tell the difference. I know that when it comes to my brother’s field of work I certainly don’t have either. My knowledge of my lack of knowledge informs the critiques I am willing to level at the latest scientific research.

Don’t be the author of a three-out-of-five star review who writes, “It wasn’t the best I ever had.” This sad individual must lead a life of constant disappointment if they expect the best they ever had at every meal, even at every expensive meal. The mind boggles at the euphoric experience that would be required to earn five stars in the eyes of such a reviewer.

You want to be the reviewer that provides thoughtful commentary on the level of service with realistic expectations of what the level of service should be in that restaurant. You want to be the person who understands that the true test of a restaurant is not whether there was a problem during your dining (we do try very hard to avoid these), but how it responds to those issues that “just happen” (eg, servers calling in sick, equipment breaking, an error on an order, etc.). You want to provide focused comments on how the food was prepared, not just how well it matched up to your subjective tastes.

Reviews like that not only provide other potential customers a more accurate evaluation of a restaurant (again, I’m not advocating for giving bad restaurants a critical pass), but they help restaurants do their job better. So, next time you’re logging in to pen a pithy and scathing review, take a moment to consider the real costs of your cathartic moment and whether you are using your power as a critic to make things better or just to indulge yourself.