Restaurant Rewind

Winsight Media

The industry’s past is packed with tales of scoundrels and heroes, big thinkers and pinheads, colossal successes and dismal failures, breakthrough moves and self-inflicted destruction. Few soap operas pack as much color and drama. Yet those yellowed snapshots provide insights relevant to the challenges of today. Join Peter Romeo, a 41-year veteran of the business with a penchant for restaurant history, as he explores those pivotal moments from the past.

  • 8 minutes 11 seconds
    Kentucky Roast Beef? When KFC was in the concept creation game

    Editor's note: This will be the final episode of the Restaurant Rewind podcast. Thank you for listening.

    KFC recently opened Saucy, a chicken fingers concept that aims to compete directly with the fast-growing Raising Cane’s.

    But this isn’t the first time the fast-food chicken concept has created a new brand to compete with a quick-growing rival, and in this week’s episode of the Restaurant Rewind podcast, Peter Romeo looks at some of those brands. 

    For instance, did you know that it once tried Kentucky Roast Beef? Or The Colonel’s Kitchen? Or The Colonel’s Lady Dinner House? 

    None of the concepts amounted to much, but at least one restaurant from this era remains in operation. Yet they provide some interesting lessons as KFC embarks on its latest quest for a new concept. 

    9 January 2025, 9:47 pm
  • 8 minutes 46 seconds
    Restaurants have had their share of true-crime horrors, including these

    Restaurants are no strangers to violent crime, as any reader of local news would attest.
    Occasionally the offenses are so appalling that they snag national attention. And then there are the atrocities that can haunt the public for weeks because of the brutality.
    This week’s edition of Restaurant Rewind looks at two of those nightmarish events, the seven-person murder in the Chicago area that took nine years to solve, and the abduction and killing of four young crewmembers in Indiana. That case remains open after 46 years.
    The situations are a reminder of why restaurants in places like San Francisco and Washington, D.C., truly need the crime protection they’re seeking from local authorities. They’re chapters that everyone connected to the business hope to never witness again. 
    Press Play for a recount of what happened those many decades ago. But please be advised that some listeners could find the content disturbing.

    19 December 2024, 5:46 pm
  • 7 minutes 32 seconds
    How much updating can Chi-Chi's stand without losing its soul?

    Before burritos became as commonplace on menus as sandwiches, Chi-Chi’s was selling the Mexican staple as something called a burro, a novelty to the consumer mainstream those many decades ago. 
    The option shared space on the bill of fare with a chili pie, an item that’s hardly a must-have today for Mexican chains. If a Chi-Chi’s customer wanted something more familiar nearly 50 years ago, they could always go for the french fries, maybe washing them down with a margarita, available at the time in a lunchtime-sized serving.
    Those menu listings seem like an anachronism today, when many consumers can cite the differences between Sonoran and Oaxacan cuisine. The public’s knowledge of Mexican fare, and its appreciation of quality executions, have come a long way since Chi-Chi’s introduced many Americans to South of the Border fare in the 1980s and ‘90s.
     
    This week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind looks at how far consumers’ familiarity with Mexican food has come and why that education poses a challenge for Chi-Chi’s in its attempt at a rebirth. Can it catch up with popular tastes and find favor with fans of Chipotle or Taco Bell?

    Give a listen to decide for yourself.  

    12 December 2024, 4:21 pm
  • 10 minutes 7 seconds
    Meet the U.S. father of mac 'n cheese. You know him as Thomas Jefferson

    Enough with all the adulation of Thomas Jefferson as a Founding Father. Don’t people realize he was also the hero brought mac ‘n cheese to the American dinner table?
    The safe answer is an emphatic “no.” Yet as this week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind reports, the author of the Declaration of Independence came to love the dish while serving as the fledgling United States’ second ambassador to France, after Ben Franklin, and he was determined to share it with his countrymen.
    Jefferson brought the recipe and a machine to make the macaroni back to the States with him. The New World’s first exposure to the comfort staple likely came during dinner parties at our third president’s Monticello estate. And his effort to win a following for the dish didn’t end there.
    But see for yourself. This week’s podcast traces how mac ‘n cheese became a quintessential American dish. Press Play to learn how a selection intended for the fanciest of tables became the most democratic of meals on this side of the Atlantic. 

    5 December 2024, 4:24 pm
  • 9 minutes 40 seconds
    If past is prologue, what's next for Jersey Mike's?

    Even after a year of hints that a deal might be in the works, Monday’s announcement of a change in control at Jersey Mike’s was a stunner, particularly for anyone who’s kept close watch on the sandwich chain. Few decisions of import have been made without the active involvement of owner Peter Cancro, the sixtysomething who’s been running the operation since he was 17. What happens now, with a sharp-penciled co-owner having a loud say on the brand’s direction?
    The answer is suggested in both Jersey Mike’s history and accounts of past private-equity mega-deals. This week’s edition of Restaurant Rewind, a podcast that plumbs the past for color on what’s happening in the industry today, zeroes in on those indicators. 
    The episode looks at Cancro’s leadership style and speculates about how that might mesh with oversight from the world’s largest private-equity firm. Give a listen for a deeper understanding of one of the biggest deals in the industry’s history. 

    21 November 2024, 5:30 pm
  • 8 minutes 59 seconds
    Is that the Big Boy driving my Uber?

    These haven’t been the easiest of times for the restaurant business, with chains closing hundreds of units and bankruptcy providing a last lifeline for former powers like TGI Fridays and Red Lobster. But those tribulations are nothing compared to what’s befallen the marketing icons who’ve filled such big shoes for the trade in the past. And we mean literally big. Like Ronald McDonald’s 29EEEs. 

    The career trajectory of restaurant mascots and spokes-beings has taken a decided turn for the worst. It’s a wonder they’ve not pivoted to writing blues songs, given how little marketing work is coming their way these days. If it weren’t for the big smiles painted on their faces, we’d likely see more than a few tears rolling down the cheeks of the former media stars.

    With tongue firmly embedded in cheek, we devote this week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind to the career slide of onetime A-listers like Ronald, the Big Boy, Jack and Wendy. Grab a tissue and listen to why characters who once rivaled Santa Claus in recognition value are now calculating their chances of driving for Uber. 

    14 November 2024, 6:25 pm
  • 7 minutes 31 seconds
    TGI Fridays needs to get its bad rep back

    Plenty of restaurant upstarts pin their hopes on building a better mousetrap. They’re not so much bringing something new to the market as promising an improvement over what consumers already know and love. Look at the better-burger pack, or the now-wheezing fast-casual pizza market. 

    TGI Fridays took a sledgehammer to that approach. It owed its initial success to mating rituals and sheer irreverence. No entrepreneur had dared mine that potential before. Young consumers had never seen anything like it, and they embraced the rebellion with zeal.

    Then the concept spent the next six decades trying to scrub its image and temper its points of difference for the sake of mainstream success and scalability.

    This week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind provides a condensed version of the journey, starting with the now-forgotten days when Fridays raised parents’ eyebrows—along with young adults’ hopes for a hookup. 

    It’s also a reminder of the challenges that face heavily themed restaurant operations as they age. 

    So pull up a barstool, top off the Harvey Wallbanger and give a listen. 

    7 November 2024, 4:48 pm
  • 11 minutes 34 seconds
    Decades later, Jack in the Box's E. coli outbreak is still being recalled. Here's why

    More than three decades have passed since the Jack in the Box E. coli outbreak, yet it’s still the yardstick used to gauge the impact of a food-safety crisis. Hours after McDonald’s revealed its problems with Quarter Pounders, commentators were already recalling the contamination in the Northwest that left four children dead, another 200 persons permanently impaired and nearly 750 sickened in total.

    The numbers, though daunting, don’t capture the full import of the catastrophe. Indeed, more consumers were stricken in the series of food-safety calamities that badly tarnished Chipotle starting nine years ago. The Jack in the Box crisis was an industrywide wake-up call, the catalyst that elevated food safety from a mild concern to a top priority for the business. 

    What exactly happened at the 73 Jack in the Box restaurants in the Pacific Northwest? This week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind looks back at what’s near-universally seen as a turning point for the industry. Give a listen for a deeper understanding about why the whole business gulped when a deadly bacteria made its return.

    31 October 2024, 4:50 pm
  • 9 minutes 36 seconds
    The pioneer of daytime dining is a chain you've likely never heard of

    The widespread closings announced this week by family-dining chains underscore the transformation that’s underway in that venerable segment of the restaurant business.

    Old-guard brands are hacking off the dead wood of their systems in hopes of clearing the way for fresh growth. They’re striving to recapture the momentum that kept them kings of the sector for decades. The greybeards are painfully aware of the challenge for market dominance that’s coming from a pack of bright, fresh upstarts that serve only breakfast, lunch and brunch.

    The rise of those daytime dining concepts seems recent. But as this week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind reports, the notion of a restaurant ending its business day mid-afternoon has been with us at least since the 1970s and possibly from the '60s. The pioneer is still in operation today, with about four dozen restaurants open, yet few in the business are familiar with Le Peep or the historical role it played.  

    Nor do they likely remember the character who briefly made the brand one of the industry’s hottest concepts. 

    Press play to learn about Le Peep’s 14 minutes of fame and the man who turned the spotlight on it, Allen Bernstein. 

    24 October 2024, 6:14 pm
  • 9 minutes 1 second
    Don't be surprised if your kids may follow you into the restaurant business

    If the restaurant industry is such a horrible place to make a living, why do so many youngsters follow their parents into the business? 

    It’s a question that blunts dismissal of the field as the career choice of last resort. The second generation knows exactly what the work entails, having witnessed it firsthand, drawbacks and all, in the people they love. 

    Yet they plunge ahead, also appreciating the enormous positives that are seldom factored into the public’s perceptions of the trade. It’s why family trees with roots in the business often sport children, grandchildren, nieces and nephews who followed their elders into the field. Why, for instance, has the Brennan clan become synonymous with New Orleans’ celebrated restaurant business?

    Sure, sometimes it’s a matter of the echo generations having a money machine handed to them. It’s easy to see why three generations of Snyders have stuck with In-N-Out, or why a Marriott is chairman of the lodging empire his grandfather founded. 

    But Russ Bendel doesn’t own The Habit, and his son is following in the industry veteran’s footsteps. And there are enough similar examples to disprove the generalization that second-generation restaurateurs had their fates sealed by the success of their parents. As this week’s edition of Restaurant Rewind reports, youngsters following in the path of their elders often prove they’re the ones who turn a so-so operation into a success. 

    The episode examines the phenomenon of multi-generational restaurant families and why the industry has fostered so many outright dynasties. The sheer number of examples—from the Grotes to the Ingrams to the Karchers to the Berkowitzes—shows there’s something about the business that often keeps it in the family. And it’s kryptonite to the widespread perception that the restaurant business is a career path of last resort. 

    17 October 2024, 4:32 pm
  • 9 minutes 29 seconds
    Hurricane Milton was expected to be nearly as bad as Katrina. Here's why the comparison should scare restaurants

    The devastating force of Hurricane Milton has drawn comparisons to the fury Hurricane Katrina unleashed on New Orleans and its famed restaurants nearly two decades ago. Indeed, the 2005 storm has become the benchwork against which all major hurricanes have been gauged in the years since. And there’s no doubt Milton was a major one.

    Initial assessments say at least six people in Florida were killed in the storm, which struck the state's west coast Wednesday night. About 3 million homes lost electricity. Media coverage shows first responders wading through chest-high standing water to rescue stranded residents, and many residential areas look as if they were bulldozed. Veteran weather reporters are already predicting some parts of the state, the nation’s third largest restaurant market, will need weeks or months to recover a semblance of their pre-Milton conditions.

    Early on-the-ground reports from government and safety officials suggest Milton was not as devastating as Katrina, which left about 1,400 dead in its wake, but a full assessment of the damage may not be completed for some time. Ditto for the impact on the restaurant trade in particular. 

    The potential is addressed in this week’s episode of Restaurant Rewind, the podcast that delves into the industry’s past for more color on what’s happening today. Here’s a look at how restaurants fared in the Big Easy during what’s become the yardstick of how damaging a single weather event can be. 

    It’s not a pretty picture, but it’s a testament to the industry’s resolution. New Orleans’ dining scene came back bigger and better than ever. Here’s to the same happening in Florida. 

    10 October 2024, 6:05 pm
  • More Episodes? Get the App