Why Your Food Tastes Better at Restaurants (and How to Fix That at Home)
Print đ¨ PDF đYouâre not imagining it..Restaurant food really does taste better sometimes.. and itâs not because those angry kitchen…
Youâre not imagining it..
Restaurant food really does taste better sometimes.. and itâs not because those angry kitchen chefs have secret ingredients youâre not allowed to know about.. Itâs because they do a few very specific things⌠unapologetically.
The good news: none of these cooking hacks require culinary school, special equipment, or turning your kitchen into a production.
Essentially: You just have to stop being so polite with your food.;)
Restaurants Use More Salt Than You Think
Not reckless amounts. Just⌠enough.
Home cooks tend to under-salt because weâre cautious. Restaurants salt confidently, early, and often. That doesnât mean everything tastes salty, it means everything tastes alive.
Salt doesnât just make food salty. It makes food taste more like itself. If your food tastes flat, dull, or vaguely unfinished, itâs usually not missing an ingredient. Itâs missing seasoning. Take a look at our Guide for Cooking with Epic Salts to learn all about the different types of salt and how to use them to elevate your cooking!
They Are Not Afraid of Fat
Butter. Olive oil. Cream. And sometimes all three;)
Restaurants use fat because fat carries flavor and makes food feel complete. At home, we often add just enough to keep things from sticking⌠and then wonder why it tastes basic.
This doesnât mean drowning everything in butter. It means accepting that fat is part of why food tastes good.. not an accident, not a moral failure, just reality.
A small hunk of butter at the end of a soup or sauce can do more than five extra ingredients ever will. My late father, a chef, often said that “the difference between a good chef and a great chef is a pound of butter.” đ
They Cook Hotter Than You Do
Restaurants are not gently coaxing flavor out of food. Theyâre using heat with intention and passion!
High heat creates browning. Browning creates depth. Depth creates that âwhy is this so good?!â feeling.
At home, we tend to keep the heat low because weâre multitasking, nervous, or distracted by an amazing Dateline episode. Thatâs how food ends up steamed instead of cooked.
Let the pan get HOT, let things sit and brown like a boss! The flavor difference is unmatched.
They Let Food Finish Itself
Restaurants give food time to rest, settle, and come together. Theyâre not rushing soup straight from stove to bowl the second itâs âtechnicallyâ cooked.
Soups, sauces, and stews almost always taste better after a little pause. Flavors calm down. Salt distributes. Texture improves.
If something tastes âalmost there,â it usually is.. It just needs a minute.
And check out this article on Why Some Foods Taste Better the Next Day for all the excuses you need to make things ahead of time!
They Taste Constantly (and Adjust Without Panic)
This oneâs BIG.
Restaurant cooks taste as they go. They adjust without drama. A pinch of salt here.. A splash of acid there. No spiraling, just rolling with it.
At home, we often follow a recipe to the letter and then taste only at the end, at which point fixing things feels stressful and like a missed opportunity. Confidence and flexibility with tasting and adjusting matter because they leads to better decisions throughout the process.
How to Fix This in Your Kitchen
You donât need to cook like a restaurant. You just need to borrow their habits.
- Season earlier and a little more generously
- Use fat intentionally, not fearfully
- Turn the heat up when it matters
- Let food rest before judging it
- Taste as you go and adjust with confidence (a glass of bubbly often helps light a fire under the cooking confidence – and sometimes it leads to epic cooking epiphanies like this red-wine-fueled chicken situation that happened after a bonkers breakupđ
Overall, restaurant food isnât better because itâs fancy.. Itâs better because those chefs run head-first into the above kitchen hacks!