#864 Mastering the art of the all-you-can-eat buffet

Keeps your pancakes foamyMunch lunch at a Chinese restaurant, brunch at a Holiday Inn, or dinner at a wedding reception, and chances are good you will come face to face with the The All-You-Can-Eat Buffet.

If you’re a Buffet Amateur like me, your pupils dilate and your mouth starts watering as soon as you spot the long table full of steam trays and criss-crossed table cloths. Soon it’s game on, and you grab a plate and pile it high with some bread, a few salads, and a couple rolled-up salamis or a bowl of Won Ton soup. For plate number two you tackle the entrees, scooping up sticky heaps of Kung Pao chicken, soggy French Toast, or paper-thin slices of roast beef soaking in dark mushroom gravy. Then you go back for a third plate, this one featuring a tipsy mountain of desserts — maybe some assorted squares, a thick, gummy slice of cheesecake, or some fluorescent pink, freezer-burned ice cream sliding around your plate.

It begins

Then as you lay bloated on your chair, your buttons bursting, your eyelids drooping, you face a final decision: Do you go back for The Fourth Plate?

The Fourth Plate is almost always a good idea before you do it and a bad idea afterwards. It’s the helping after the helping after. It’s the Greatest Hits Plate, a star-studded collection featuring the most popular items from Plate 1, 2, and 3, coming together for the reunion tour, the last hurrah, the final dance at the dinner table.

The Fourth Plate is also a famous mark of a Buffet Amateur, because it can be the sign of someone who realizes that Plate 2 was the best plate and they really just want more of Plate 2. For years, I scarfed down The Fourth Plate at the Indian buffet near my college. Buttery, pillowy-soft naans piled high, thick and creamy Butter Chicken, and spicy, simmering lamb in a hearty broth. It was just too much. I caved in every time and walked away with a curry-busting gut and a samosa hangover.

Since then I’ve been tutored on the art of mastering the all-you-can-eat buffet. Everybody’s got their own techniques, but here’s what I’ve learned over the years:

Be a Sherlock and do a walk through

1. The Walk-Through. Don’t do what I used to do and blindly take a spoonful of everything. No, you’ve got to do your Walk-Through First. You’re a detective, popping open steam tray after steam tray, looking for recent fill-ups, traffic around popular items, and sure winners like omelet stations or a guy in a chef’s hat slicing big slabs of meat. Now’s also time for some Belly Space Analysis, where every item’s Tasty Deliciousness is weighed against it’s Projected Stomach Volume. Bread, soup, and salad rarely pass the Belly Space Analysis test. Skipping those means you just gained an extra plate and are on your way.

2. Drink Later. Sugary drinks just fill you up with carbs and cost extra. If you can postpone your Pepsi, then you’ll save belly space for the hot goods.

The Sampler takes willpower and strength

3. The Sampler. My dad is famous for the sampler plate. Within minutes of arriving he’ll dot a big white plate with small portions of every entree and proceed to say “Hmmm,” a lot while scooping up tiny forkfuls of each to see what will make the cut. You have to have willpower to pull off The Sampler, but it can be very rewarding. You know you aced it when your next plate is just piles of your two favorites. Good on ya.

4. Staggered Trips. If you’re with friends, don’t wait until everybody is done their first plate before uniformly filing up for a second trip together. No, go separately and act as each others eyes and ears out there — whats new, what’s hot, what’s fresh, what’s not. Your friends are doing their job when you see them running back to table to scream “They just brought out more coconut shrimp!” Also, be sure to designate someone at your table to be The Lookout. They should be seated with a clear view of the buffet and raise alarm whenever they see someone coming from the back with a new steam tray.

the-lookout-doing-his-job5. Big Plates Always. Be watchful of the small salad and dessert plates lurking about. Find your secret stash of full-size dinner plates and use them, know them, love them lots. The big plates will let you spread your meal around, and avoid piling things high, which generally results in meat gravy getting all over your salad.

One more egg roll

6. One More Egg Roll. When the check arrives, take your time. Slow it right down now and see who still has room. Since you’ve been so busy scarfing your food and staggering trips, now really is the best chance to catch up with your friends. Then after ten or fifteen minutes, someone will likely cave in and say “Okay, one more egg roll.” This is buffet victory.

With these tips plus your personal experiences, you too can master the art of the all-you-can-eat buffet. After that, there’s really no stopping you. So eat all you can, my friend.

Eat all you can.

AWESOME!

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Photos from: here, here, here, here, here, and here

13 thoughts to “#864 Mastering the art of the all-you-can-eat buffet”

  1. I’ve been to maybe two all-you-can-eat buffets before, but on both those occasions I had 5 platefuls aha…. Don’t know if 16 year old girl is a bigger eater than Neil, or the Miss Maud’s dinner plates are smaller, or if he piles his food high! I’m a very slow eater, so it takes me longer to get full because I’ve already digested some of my food from the start of my meal when I reach the very end, and I don’t pile my food so that must be it! I do like all the salads so I generally go 1. salads, 2. seafood/cheeses/breads, 3. meats/hot dishes, 4. cakes/slices, 5. fruit.
    Works every time! July was the last buffet I went to, and I tried caviar! I was extremely hesitant to because my auntie said a friend had spat it out straight away, and I eventually gulped it down and it was just very fishy taste, although it wasn’t in my mouth long enough to taste any more than that… thank god! But that was my victory. I was the last one eating but I definitely got my money’s worth of both food and coke so it was great :D

  2. All you can eat buffets always disappoint me because I see all this food that looks really good and I know in my head that it usually doesn’t taste as good as it looks but I always have some anyways just in case. I try not to eat that much so by the time that I have finished everything I originally tried I don’t have room for the good stuff. Plus I get that icky I-have-eaten-WAY-too-many-calories feeling when I take more than one plate. Someday I will master my own technique in which I will figure out which foods will taste good and have the will power to leave the others behind :)

  3. My Buffet Strategy basically involves a walk-through, a selection of foods that pass as a small but decent meal, then DESSERTS, BABY. Soooo many desserts…

  4. You totally forgot the best buffet of all… the dessert bar – twirling a perfect ribbon of soft serve ice cream into a ball, and then covering it with sprinkles, nuts and a sample of any other available topping. AWESOME!

  5. I love buffets. They’re so much fun! You just get to walk around, getting all the food you want. I also do the Walk-Through, getting tiny wee samples of everything that looks good. I once went to a buffet that had a lot more food than I expected, and I just stood in the same spot for about 10 minutes, overwhelmed with choice. I got a lot of weird looks.

  6. I always do a walk through, then load up on all of the yummy-looking foods…but, like Heather, I typically find that most buffets don’t measure up to my expectations. There is one local one that has the best salad bar and dessert bar, so I make a gigantic salad and then make my dessert in a soup bowl! Talk about big plates, baby!

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