The Restaurant Guys

Wine, Restaurant Culture and What Makes Great Barbecue | Live from Aspen | Part II

The Restaurant Guys Episode 212

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0:00 | 1:02:37

Recorded at the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen, Mark Pascal and Francis Schott continue their conversations with three people who know how to make complicated subjects feel immediate: sommelier and wine communicator Amanda McCrossin, Master Sommelier and restaurateur Bobby Stuckey, and chef, author and television host Andrew Zimmern.

Why You Should Listen

Amanda McCrossin

  • Why wine should feel fun and accessible—not like knowledge you had to inherit.
  • The case for putting ice in wine, trusting your own taste and keeping “wine-tainment” accurate.

Bobby Stuckey

  • Why strong restaurant culture still depends on standards, systems and “constant, gentle pressure.”
  • How growing a restaurant group can create meaningful opportunities for the people who helped build it.

Andrew Zimmern

  • What convinced him to enter the competition-show world with Food Network’s Pitmasters.
  • How regional barbecue is evolving through Japanese, South Asian and other cultural influences.
  • Why great barbecue depends on balance, excellent meat and precise doneness—and why live-fire cooking is not automatically barbecue.

The Guests

Amanda McCrossin

Amanda McCrossin is a certified sommelier, wine personality and creator of SommVivant, where she makes wine approachable across Instagram, TikTok and YouTube. A former sommelier and wine director at PRESS Restaurant in Napa Valley, she now hosts the Wine Access Unfiltered Podcast, contributes to Wine Enthusiast and speaks at major food and wine events around the world. 

Amanda’s site

https://www.amandamccrossin.com/


Bobby Stuckey

Bobby Stuckey is a Master Sommelier and founder and partner of Frasca Hospitality Group. After working at The Little Nell and The French Laundry, he co-founded Frasca Food and Wine in Boulder, inspired by the hospitality and cuisine of Friuli-Venezia Giulia.

The group also includes Tavernetta, Sunday Vinyl, Pizzeria Alberico, Osteria Alberico and Tavernetta Vail. Stuckey is also a winemaker, cookbook author and longtime advocate for independent restaurants and hospitality professionals.

Frasca Hospitality Group

https://www.frascahospitalitygroup.com/team-member/bobby-stuckey/


Andrew Zimmern

Andrew Zimmern is an Emmy- and James Beard Award-winning television host, chef, writer, teacher and producer best known for the Bizarre Foods franchise. He is also the host and head judge of Food Network’s Pitmasters, a competition in which teams manage fire, fatigue and continuous barbecue challenges over an extended cook. His other projects include Wild Game Kitchen, books, culinary travel experiences and media companies Food Works and Intuitive Content. 

Andrew’s site

https://andrewzimmern.com/


Timestamps

0:00 The small restaurant world—and the second round of conversations from Aspen
2:10 Amanda McCrossin: Making wine less intimidating and more fun
10:30 Ice in wine, personal taste and the controversy of la piscine
15:30 The ten-year road to becoming an “overnight” wine-media success
22:30 Bobby Stuckey: Building destination restaurants outside major dining capitals
29:30 Growth, restaurant culture and the systems behind great hospitality
37:00 Andrew Zimmern on Pitmasters, open-fire cooking and luxury ice fishing
44:30 Regional barbecue, global influences and what separates great from merely good
56:30 Andrew discovers the unofficial appetizer hiding at the end of the skewer

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Speaker 12

Hello, everybody, and welcome. You are listening to The Restaurant Guys. I'm Mark Pascal and I'm here with Francis Schaaf. Together we own Stage Left and Catherine Lombardi restaurants in New Brunswick, New Jersey. We're here to bring you the inside track on food, wine, and the finer things in life.

Speaker 13

Uh, hello, Mark.

Speaker 12

Hey, Francis.

Speaker 13

I'm excited that we are today in, uh, our second in the series of, episodes that we recorded at Aspen Food and Wine in Colorado.

Speaker 12

Talk, talk about the finer things in life.

Speaker 13

Yeah, indeed. but you have a story about something interesting that we found out when we were down there.

Speaker 12

Yeah. So, you know, you start talking to people and you realize you have all these connections. You know, you heard the, the Marisa Parella connection from the last show. You start talking to people and Bobby Stuckey, is currently employing my maid of honor, and I didn't find that out until we were talking down there, uh,

Francis

yeah, small restaurant world. In fact, you know, that's kind of a theme of the whole Aspen Food Wine. we met a lot of super, enthusiastic people who go to a lot of festivals and love restaurants. we met some people who had also been to the Charleston Food and Wine Festival. Mm-hmm. But the amazing thing is all of the chefs and bartenders and young people that work in the, in the industry that go there and work it and get together, it really brings a small world even together. Y-

Speaker 12

you know, I have to mention that group from Good Night Hospitality in Houston, those guys are fun, Felipe Riccio- Yeah and Austin Wader, and June Road, all those guys. they were a little epicenter of fun for the whole festival, the whole time I was there.

Speaker 13

Yeah, restaurant people are fun. And the nice thing about this is if you like to hang out with restaurant people, uh, consumers and restaurant people really do mix at these festivals. Especially like- Mm-hmm in the after party. Even it's not really an after party, it's just you go to a cool bar and you run into a lot of folks, and everybody's friendly. Anyway, we're gonna continue on with the interviews that we've done. today we have Amanda McCrossin, wonderful wine professional, Bobby Stuckey, a master sommelier who runs a tremendous restaurant group down there. And then we're gonna finish up with a rip-roaring time with Andrew Zimmern, who we interviewed on the grounds of the Aspen Food Wine Classic. It's lovely to have him back on the show again. He's just a riot every time. So stay tuned and stick with us till the end, 'cause that's where Andrew Zimmern's gonna be. We'll be back in just a moment.

Speaker 26

So our next guest at the Aspen Food Wine Classic is Amanda McCrossin. She's a professional sommelier, wine personality, writer, producer, content creator. She's built a massive audience, uh, making wine approachable and entertaining through her Somm Vivant brand across Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and podcasts. She hosts the Wine Access Unfiltered podcast, contributes to Wine Enthusiast, speaks at major wine festivals like this one, and we are thrilled to have her here with us on The Restaurant

Speaker 16

Hi, Amanda. Welcome to the show.

Speaker 36

Man, when does she sleep?

Speaker 37

I know,

Speaker 26

Welcome to the show. Hello. Welcome. Man, when does she sleep? I know. I know. Evidently not at all. Funny story, so- She

Speaker 37

like, 80. I'm sorry. All those accomplishments. So we're gonna start with a

Speaker 26

No, so, uh- Right? With all her accomplishments so we're gonna start with a little bit of an adventure that is totally wine unrelated. I w- I sat down on the plane to fly in on the, on the connection from Chicago, uh, here to Aspen, and, um, I was talking to the woman next to me who's, works as a rep. She's like, "What do you do?" And I said, "I, I have a little podcast." And from behind me I hear someone say, "I think I'm gonna be on your podcast in a couple of days." And that was you.

Speaker 36

It was me. I tapped you on the shoulder. You. And it was so funny because when you first started speaking to your neighbor-

Speaker 37

Uh-huh

Speaker 36

I was, you know, people who talk to other people on planes- Mm. Mm this is like, this is a thing, right? Like, you're either- Right someone who is quiet- Right, right or you're someone who's not. And it was so interesting 'cause you sat down and immediately you introduced yourself to this person. Right. And I was like, how is this gonna go? Is this gonna be a good thing or a bad thing? But it was a great thing. And I wonder, is this, like, a consistent- And

Speaker 26

you joined in. We had a

Speaker 36

did. But I wondered,

Speaker 26

but I wondered if-

Speaker 36

is this a consistent thing for you on planes?

Speaker 26

planes? I think the way to handle an, an airplane ride- Mm-hmm is I always sit down, I introduce myself, and I shake the person's hand, and you know then whether they're a person that wants

Speaker 16

that wants to- Yeah, guy next to me on the way out, headphones on, face towards the window, and I, You may not know this about me. I'm a pretty outgoing, out there kind of guy, but did not do any of

Speaker 26

But I, I also keep headphones handy and the book handy 'cause sometimes people wanna talk more than I want to. I think it's perfectly acceptable to say, "Okay, well, I'm gonna read, I'm gonna do my work now. I'm gonna read my book. I'm gonna take a little nap," and put the headphones in and go off but I always introduce myself

Speaker 37

it's- I

Speaker 36

think that's lovely and wonderful, and it was, uh, it was very, if I can say, sort of old school. Yeah. I thought it was a beautiful thing and a great way to enter Aspen, and I'm so glad I said hello.

Speaker 26

Yeah, I am too. And it's funny because through the whole flight I thought, "Well, I'm not gonna talk to her 'cause I wanna save that all to, for

Speaker 37

the

Speaker 26

podcast. I don't wanna

Speaker 16

are we gonna talk about wine or

Speaker 37

anything- Yeah. Okay while,

Speaker 16

we're

Speaker 26

Only everything.

Speaker 37

Only airplanes. All right.

Speaker 26

All right, so listen. you're a media personality now. Yes. Right? And so you came from a Somm background, from an on-the-floor sort of reminded people learning about wine background. Um, and what's really interesting, what I see that you're doing, or what Mark and I both see that you're doing with your various social media outlets for Somm Vivant and when you are speaking, you're a wine educator. Yeah. It's just that your medium is not only holding classes at a school or whatever. everything that you do, seems to be to teach people about wine. And is that the case?

Speaker 36

I think so. Yeah. I didn't come from a wine drinking background. our wine situation was, was grim in a word, right? Mm-hmm. My, my parents were not into wine. So when I got into wine eventually, I have a theater and film and TV background. Mm-hmm. And when I got into wine, I was like, "You know, I think, I think there's an opportunity for someone to teach wine in a way that maybe speaks to people like me that like I don't necessarily wanna sit in a classroom Mm-hmm "and go through textbooks." Like, I just Right I want someone who maybe looks like me and can teach me through experience. And so really the channels are just to help educate people through lived experience. So less of the, you know, 101 stuff and more of the like, hey, if you're out and about at a restaurant or at a wine shop or if you've been in this situation before, here's how you should handle it, and then we kind of like dial it back from there and give a little information to substantiate the claim.

Speaker 16

what I see you doing is just trying to make this less intimidating for people, right? For so long, you know, when we got into this business, it was about, people using wine to separate themselves, right? People using wine to

Speaker 26

Set themselves apart.

Speaker 38

Yeah,

Speaker 16

Set themselves apart yeah, set themselves apart. You know, "I know about, white Burgundy and you don't, so I'm, I'm a superior individual to you." And, you know, that's, that's never what it should have been about. No. Uh, so we need people like you to say, uh, "You wanna drop a couple ice cubes in your wine? Go

Speaker 38

ahead."

Speaker 36

Oh. Well- Oh, the ice skate of 2026 Yeah. Yeah, yeah. We can

Speaker 26

another day. Yeah, yeah. We're gonna rumble about that in a minute or

Speaker 36

we can rumble. But I, you know, the other thing I'll say on that is, a- and I talk about this a little in my seminars here at Aspen, when I got into wine, or I guess before I got into wine, to your point, I always felt like wine was this sort of thing like generational wealth. Like, you had to be born into it. Mm. Mm. Like, you had to have a grandfather teach you it or it had to be inherited in some way. It always just felt like this thing that you had to be invited into, or born into. And so when I started getting into wine, I quickly realized that that wasn't the case. And so yeah, I think there is some barrier that

Speaker 30

is

Speaker 26

some barrier. You know, I said something to you on the airplane and I said, You know, it's kinda like what we do with the OGs." And you're like, "I'm not an OG." And you looked at me

Speaker 37

looked at me like,

Speaker 26

what I meant was Mark and I as OGs walked into a world that Kevin Zraly started turning

Speaker 37

around in.

Speaker 26

in. And Robert Parker, though that kinda went off the rails in a way in the end, started to make things... He started trying to make wine more accessible to people. And to move it out of the wine world you had to be born into and, fancy sommeliers walking around speaking a language you barely understood and paying a lot of money to, for the privilege. Mark and I were talking about, you know, sh- should we write a book? What should we do? Kevin said to me once years ago, he said, Listen." We were thinking about maybe going for a degree. And he said, "You know, there, there is a place in the wine world for people who wanna train master sommeliers and masters of wine, and there's a place in the world for them. Do you really wanna do that or do you wanna teach people how to enjoy wine and then serve them some wine and, and see them enjoy it?"

Speaker 16

maybe read a label or, or,

Speaker 26

a book that, you

Speaker 16

make it less intimidating and-

Speaker 17

And he said

Speaker 26

Just get people un-intimidating. And what he said was that was, that's wine education, but it's also wine-tainment. and that brought a whole crew of people in, but then it sort of rarefied again. And then the new, the new taste of venom around the sommelier's neck was the 100-point wine that you can't afford. And all the wine press was writing about wines that became increasingly less relevant to people 'cause you can't afford them anyway.

Speaker 27

Well,

Speaker 16

can't afford them anyway. Well, you can't afford them, and they made 600 bottles. Yeah.

Speaker 26

yeah. So.

Speaker 16

Good luck

Speaker 26

And so then I think... And, and young people have stepped away and taken a pause and, and I think we've all gotta straighten up our act. I don't think Mark and I ever did that, but, but you're... What I

Speaker 16

up our act? No, we definitely

Speaker 26

up our act? No, we definitely have you're the next generation bringing people, making it accessible to people again. And I see that we, we did that once before in the '80s. Yeah. And now it needs to be done

Speaker 36

Yeah. Well, I think we all forgot that wine is fun. Yeah. Yeah. Right? Like, we all kind of forgot that the point of drinking wine is obviously to enjoy it, but it's also to sit down or stand up and just, like, have a good time. Yeah. And I feel like w- when we lost the plot on the fun side of things is when things really started to derail, and that's where I think social media has had a really big hand, at least for me, in introducing the fun back into wine.

Speaker 26

derail, and that's where I think social media has had a really big hand, at least for me, in introducing the fun back into wine Well, I, I, I, I do wanna... And then, like, I'm not- I'm breaking my arm, uh, patting you on the back for this, but I- Yeah here's something about making wine fun. There's a lot of silly channels out there who, you don't really learn anything, or you learn wrong things by listening to them, and I've watched a lot of your content, and every time I watch your show, there's nothing you say that's wrong. Mm. And it's things that if the people don't know those

Speaker 16

can I just tell you? You broke into a little Jersey accent when you said, "There's nothing you say that's wrong." Yes. So,

Speaker 36

Listen, I'm a Philly girl. I'm here for a Jersey accent.

Speaker 37

No, so, so,

Speaker 26

there's a lot of silly wine people that wanna make it fun and happy, but they get shit wrong. Yeah. Whereas you wanna be like, "Hey, have some fun and maybe learn something. And if you don't learn something, that's okay, but you have to have fun." Yeah. "But I'm not gonna teach you wrong shit."

Speaker 36

Yeah. well, I appreciate that. Thank you. I, there's nothing I hate and love more than some internet banter. Um, the one thing that I don't wanna be is wrong, right? Yeah, yeah. On the internet. Like, if I'm already sticking my neck out there. Right. I'm already making myself available for public scrutiny. Mm-hmm. Um, I would rather not be wrong while doing it. Yeah. And so yeah, I mean, there is a lot of research and, I make sure that what I'm saying is at least to the best of my knowledge, accurate and correct, hopefully fun. You know, I'm here for fun content, and obviously, as it turns out, the internet is not always the most-

Speaker 38

Receptive to that.

Speaker 36

Well, they're not receptive and, you know, not all the content out there as we know across not just wine, but every, genre, it's not always accurate, right? Mm-hmm. You can't always trust the internet.

Speaker 37

Okay, well

Speaker 26

now it's t- Really it's, it's ti- it's time to take the gloves off. Uh-

Speaker 36

let's take them off. I'm

Speaker 26

I'm ready. Um, what do you mean ice in your wine?

Speaker 37

well-

Speaker 26

tell, tell us about Ice Gate for you.

Speaker 36

Ice Gate happened because last year, uh, I, I did some content with Wine Enthusiast, and one of the things that we had talked about was this idea of putting ice in your wine. Mm-hmm. And I sort of, uh, substantiated it, I guess, by saying there is this thing called la piscine. It exists in the South of France. Mm-hmm. It's something that you do where you literally put ice in either your sparkling wine or your still wine, and it's called la piscine. A la, the pool, right? And so I made this video, um, and then, and I truly did not know that it was going to explode in the way that it did. And not only explode, it was probably the most polarizing thing I've ever seen in my life. And it, it's, it was, it was reposted again this year, um, with the same sort of response, and I have a lot of feelings about it. I try to stay out of the conversation because ultimately a keyboard warrior only wants- That's right a little more fire. Wants it. Yeah. Exactly. Right? Um, so I, I try to stand back a little bit and just let people fight their fight because I stand by my claim that if it's your wine, you are welcome to do-

Speaker 16

I, see,

Speaker 36

Oh, 100%.

Speaker 38

I, see- whatever you'd like see-

Speaker 16

where you'll never get a fight from Francis and me is when you say, This is how I like it."

Speaker 36

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 16

Yeah. Once you say, "This is how I like it"-

Speaker 26

Never a wrong answer

Speaker 27

yep,

Speaker 16

Well, then do it the way you like it.

Speaker 26

Yeah.

Speaker 16

now listen, I don't want wine in my, uh, ice in my wine for the most part. But like- I would rather-

Speaker 26

my ice, now that you bring it up, Mark. I think I might actually want that.

Speaker 16

Now you're bringing up a good point. I might actually want that. Uh, but Francis and I are constantly going to restaurants, and especially with red wine, getting wines that are way too warm. Sure. So, so what do you do there? The quick fix is to drop a couple cubes in it, and obviously that's gonna change the wine to, to some degree or another, no pun intended. Uh, I'm constantly getting looks from, I'm using the air quotes, "sommeliers" who bring me an 80-degree bottle of wine, and I decant it and say, "Can, can you just stick that on the ice for 10 minutes?" And they're looking at me like, "Uh, sir, that is a red wine, and I think you maybe have made some kind of mistake."

Speaker 36

it's not a mistake if it's what you want, number one.

Speaker 26

Well, and also, I, I, I have to, I do think that, first of all, the white wine spritzer does exist, and

Speaker 16

Yeah. It's a drink. That was a drink. A lot of people drank it. Some are still drinking

Speaker 26

it's fine. Yeah, I mean, you don't wanna do it with a grand cru Burgundy, but,

Speaker 37

know, you, you, you- But here's

Speaker 36

the thing. Why not? Like, the thing is, why not, right? I think that we have And if we're gonna talk about making wine less intimidating- Okay. Okay right? All right. Okay. And we are trying to democratize wine, why not? Why because something is more expensive or more revered- does it make it less acceptable?

Speaker 37

I, I,

Speaker 26

make it less acceptable? I, I, I have an answer. It is completely acceptable if you have bought that bottle of wine. And I

Speaker 37

should mention this- Right. We're

Speaker 36

only, we're only talking about this,

Speaker 37

right? Right. Right.

Speaker 26

So I'm not saying it's not what you should do. I would say it's, not what I would do, and it's probably not the way to appreciate all of the things that went into making that wine because texture is part of what makes that $100 bottle of Chablis $100 a bottle. And when you introduce more water into that, you're changing that texture that they very carefully, made. But if you wanna throw it in the blender and make a frappe out of it- Yeah have, have at it. Have at it

Speaker 17

at it

Speaker 36

Yeah. I mean, I My job on the floor as a sommelier when I was at a restaurant was to guide people according to what I knew, right? Uh-huh. Sure. Whether they chose to accept that guidance- 100% was their choice, and I s- continue to stand by that today. And I think if, you know, is it going to be my choice to put a Grand Cru Burgundy on ice? No, that's not personally what I would like to do. Mm-hmm. But I also think that if that's a bottle that you purchased- Yeah and it's how you enjoy the wine and it's what amplifies it for you, I think it's our responsibility as people who want to democratize wine to say, "That's not, not only okay, we encourage that. We want you to do and feel comfortable doing what is delicious for you."

Speaker 38

gonna, I'm gonna

Speaker 16

Yeah and it's how you enjoy the wine, and it's what amplifies it for you, I think it's our responsibility as people who want to democratize wine to say, "That's not, not only okay, we encourage that. We want you to do and feel comfortable doing what is delicious for you." I'm gonna t- I'm gonna tell you one step further. If my mother-in-law's in my house,

Speaker 38

she wants- You can

Speaker 36

stop at mother-in-law.

Speaker 38

And she wants to ho- and

Speaker 16

she wants to drop a couple of ice cubes in her wine, Go ahead. It may affect the type of wine I serve you in the future. Yeah. But go ahead. I don't ca- You know, it's your wine. You're gonna drink that glass of wine.

Speaker 26

is not like food. I remember, Mark, years ago when we, we had an, a chef who was with us for a very short time, one of our shortest tenure chefs. And I had left the floor for the evening, and all the entrees were out, and desserts were starting to go out, And, uh, the waiter came down, because they know our philosophies, you know, give people what they want. And this is 25 years ago, and they said, "Um, so table 12 asked for chocolate ice cream with the chocolate cake instead of vanilla ice cream with the chocolate cake." I'm like,

Speaker 37

"Okay.

Speaker 26

We have chocolate ice cream?" "Yeah." "Okay, what's the problem?" "Uh, chef said he won't do it." And when I put my head back on my shoulders- I walked up and I said, "What are you doing?" I said, "Listen, if they want it in a blender with carrots, that's what we're gonna do for them. It's their chocolate cake," what are you doing? Right. You know? But it's the

Speaker 37

with wine. Same with wine.

Speaker 38

Yeah,

Speaker 26

So how did you become, such a phenom so quickly? I mean, a lot of people out there trying to, get people's ears and eyes in the wine and the food field, um, when they are not listening to The Restaurant Guys, they sometimes listen to other

Speaker 17

success that

Speaker 26

did you, uh, how did you rise so quickly? So how, how did your star rise so quickly?

Speaker 36

The o- the overnight success that was 10 years in the making? No, no,

Speaker 37

yeah. It

Speaker 16

We understand,

Speaker 38

that. We understand,

Speaker 16

We opened our restaurants 34 years ago. We

Speaker 26

Yeah. We opened our restaurants 34 years ago. Yeah. So what,

Speaker 36

no. So

Speaker 37

how did

Speaker 26

yourself apart. So how, how- Yeah how did that happen?

Speaker 36

Well, I, I started early. And I will tell you, my first f- few years making content were not always the sunniest. I think when I started making content, it was around 2015, 2016, in the very nascent stages of Instagram. It was before Instagram even had video capabilities. It was before- Wow TikTok was a thing. And I started making YouTube videos and posting some of the things that we were serving at Press because I thought it was really interesting and there was stories to tell behind some of these bottles.

Speaker 38

I'm

Speaker 16

There were stories to tell behind each of these bottles I'm sorry, we just need to say Press is one of the great restaurants in Napa Valley and has maybe one of the best Napa wine lists in the world.

Speaker 36

the best, but yes.

Speaker 26

yes. Yeah. Well, it is the most extensive. I mean, it's, it's- Yeah the largest Napa collection of wines, right?

Speaker 30

Yeah. It, it-

Speaker 36

It, it, it was at the time and I, I believe still is the largest, deepest collection of Napa Valley wines in the world. It was developed by Kelly White and Scott Brenner at the request of the late Leslie Rudd, who was a great wine collector and wine lover. And it was a beautiful, wonderful list to work with. And coming from New York, where at the time Napa Valley wine wasn't, uh, it wasn't looked at in the same way that maybe it is today by New Yorkers. Mm-hmm. Yep. And when I went to Napa Valley, it was very much like, oh, you're not gonna serve or drink Burgundy or Bordeaux or Italian wines. You're only gonna be working with Napa. And at the time I thought it might be a little bit limiting. And then getting there and exploring that list, it was incredibly clear that it was not only not boring, it was some of the most incredible history- Mm-hmm, mm-hmm of wine really encapsulated by this list. And so every night we were opening wines from the '50s, '60s, '70s from the greatest producers in perfect conditions because a lot of these came from the cellars themselves directly. Just a

Speaker 38

small interjection.

Speaker 36

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 16

So many things that are wrong with wineless in America for me are we are always forced to drink wines too young. Yes.

Speaker 36

Yes.

Speaker 16

uh, especially American wines, we're always forced to drink them too young. I'm sorry to interrupt

Speaker 36

Not at all. No, it's, I think it's absolutely true and, and I think it's what made it such an honor and a privilege to work with that list because as sommeliers that is, that's the dream, right? Mm-hmm. To, to look at how, you know, what age can do to some of these wines. So I started posting some of these wines and their respective stories on Instagram, and then I also decided to start going around to wineries and filming some of the, you know, what it was like to visit these places. A lot of it, a lot of the impetus for that was because I was on the floor and I was brand new to Napa Valley and people were asking me night after night, "Where should we go visit?" Right. Sure. You know, "What are the great producers?" And so I decided that I was gonna take what I knew from my film and TV and theater background, and what I was learning with my wine journey, and I was gonna film all that and start putting it out on YouTube. And I will say the early stages were, um, less receptive than they are now.

Speaker 38

Uh-huh.

Speaker 36

Um, and it was not the easiest few years but, uh, I stuck with it. I st- I, I went to a different winery every single day for a month straight. Jeez. Um, I filmed in the morning, uh, at a winery. I'd go home. I would upload the content, and I would start to edit it. I'd go to work at night. I'd come home and I'd finish the edit, upload, and continue.

Speaker 16

Yeah, I think the part that you left out of the beginning of that story was, "And I had a full-time restaurant

Speaker 36

And I had a full-time restaurant job. Yeah. Yes, yes. Wow. I was really committed and I, I learned very quickly. I think, you know, I'm someone who learns by doing. but I just loved it, and the reception, you know, it was good but, you know, it's, it takes time to build an audience and it takes time to build trust. And so year after year I would continue to iterate and figure out what people were enjoying, what they wanted more of or less of. And so, as Instagram continued to grow, so did I. And then in, in 2020 I had, moved up. Kelly and Scott had left the restaurant. I took over as wine director. And after about a year and a half, two years, I realized that the content creation was really in a place where I wanted to take it full time. And so I took it full time February 28th of 2020.

Speaker 38

Wow.

Speaker 16

Nice

Speaker 38

Wow, that's great.

Speaker 36

So I gave my notice that day, and of course, we all kind of know what happens after that.

Speaker 16

in the re- you were not going to be working in the restaurant three or four weeks

Speaker 36

were you? I was not, no. as I say, I kinda stuck the landing on that one. That's

Speaker 38

You did.

Speaker 36

Man, that's

Speaker 38

amazing.

Speaker 36

Um, yeah. So I, I went full-time in 2020, and I've been full-time ever since. And so, I guess to answer your question in a very long-winded way, how did I become an overnight success, I just kept getting up and doing it- Yeah for 10 straight years now.

Speaker 26

So I, I just wanna ask you one question about your brand, your videos, we see you on with all sorts of interesting people who aren't necessarily in the wine business. We just saw you recently- Oh, yeah we- Brian Callen is a friend of ours, we met him when he was playing comedy gigs in our city, New Brunswick, New Jersey. Dined with us a few times, and then we were on his show, Best Of, where he,

Speaker 17

he-

Speaker 26

he, he talked about the restaurant, And then, when we relaunched The Restaurant Guys two years ago, Brian Callen was kind enough to come on one of our shows to help us launch, and then we see him recently on your show. How did that happen?

Speaker 36

Yeah. he was on the show a few years ago. I, we had Steve Byrne on the podcast, who's a fellow comedian and a friend of his. And Steve said, "You should meet my friend Brian. He's really into wine." He is. And, um, yeah, it took us a little while to make it all happen, but yeah, we, we brought him on the show. I guess it was probably back, we're in 2026, so probably back in 2023, somewhere in there. And yeah, he was a hoot.

Speaker 26

as you see all these different people on your podcast, how do you decide who's, who's coming on your show that you're gonna sit and talk to?

Speaker 36

Well, I think there is some luck involved, for sure. Uh, but you know, the wine industry is very small in a lot of ways, and I think sometimes it can be a backdoor, right? Right. Yeah. I think the wine, uh, the wine world is a place that still intimidates a lot of people and in some ways sort of levels the playing field. I think one of the things that I saw a lot at Press was we saw celebrities every single night. Right. And the one thing that we saw consistently was they were just like any other guest when it came to wine. Mm. They were just as, like-

Speaker 26

is a great equalizer, isn't it? Yeah. 'Cause you can both be like, "That's fricking delicious." Mm-hmm. Amanda, this has been great. much better to have you on the podcast than to just sit in front of you on an airplane. Oh. and you're a Philly girl, so we should run into each other again. We're not that far away.

Speaker 36

true. So that's gonna happen, yeah. That's true. Yeah. That's good. Philly born and raised. Happy to be back there. Go Birds.

Speaker 26

Yeah. Well, thanks again. Uh, we'll be back in just a moment. You can find out more about the Restaurant Guys at restaurantguyspodcast.com.

MIC3

Okay, so here we are in the main festival concourse. It's going on all around us, we've pulled a really special guest today to hang out and talk to us for our next, contestant here on The Restaurant Guys is Right. Um, few people have done more to elevate hospitality in America than Bobby Stuckey. Master sommelier, co-founder of Frasca Hospitality Group, champion of Colorado dining, and one of the sharpest thinkers in the business, Bobby has spent decades proving that world-class hospitality doesn't have to happen only in New York and London and San Francisco. It can happen anywhere people care deeply enough to get it right, places like Boulder, Colorado, or New Brunswick, New Jersey, and we couldn't be happier to have you on the show with us today.

MIC1

Bobby Stuckey, welcome to the show

MIC2

you. Thank you,

MIC1

...so much. Thank you. Thank you. So glad to have you here

MIC2

for having me.

MIC3

show. Thank you. Thank you, guys. So glad to have you here. Thanks for having me. So you are a wine guy who then went on to open restaurants and, and have entered from that angle. we started our place in '92. We're not chefs. We entered from the be- beverage angle as well. I'm a wine guy. Mark and I are both bartenders. Mark's a beer guy, and we're both spirits guys. that's a really interesting way to enter the business, and you don't really see that anymore.

MIC2

Yeah, it's interesting. I think our generation, if you think about it, yes, technically, if you look at the, my resume, it says master sommelier, wine director at Little Nell, The French Laundry, but I started in 1983 tables.

MIC1

Yeah, of course

MIC2

funny, I was bussing tables, uh, Wednesday

MIC3

night. Yeah.

MIC2

Um, so a lot has changed, but a lot hasn't. But, but what, what's interesting is I'm from that generation is I didn't get to become a wine guy until after I was a bus person, waiter's assistant, a server, a captain- Helped out in management. And even when I was at the Little Nell, one of my last years there, we lost our GM, and I got put in charge of the room for the rest of that year. Um, so those skill sets I was doing I, like, opened my first key of my own restaurant. And I think That's helped me a lot.

MIC3

be front of house based." Mm-hmm. I... You know,

MIC2

100%. And it's funny that you say that. I'll have young chefs go, "Well, this restaurant is run by the front of the house." I said, "No, we're a

MIC1

We hear that too

MIC2

I just happen to be front of the house based.

MIC1

Mm-hmm.

MIC2

Mm-hmm. I... You know, it's funny, I never thought when I worked for Thomas Keller there was a back of the house restaurant. I thought it was Thomas Keller's

MIC3

Keller's restaurant. Right. Exactly.

MIC1

Absolutely. Uh, so I wanna just tell you a funny story. So one of the things we do before we go to a city is we put something out that says, "Hey, we're gonna be in Aspen for the next few days," and we put it out and ask people to comment on where we should go. And so the first comment that popped up from somebody else in the industry is, "You should go to Frasca." And I was like, "You, you know Aspen is four hours from Boulder, right? You know, it's, we're, we're probably not going to Frasca on this trip, sorry to say." But,

MIC2

love-

MIC1

thought that was a pretty good compliment. I thought that was a pretty good compliment to, uh-

MIC2

pretty good compliment to, uh- It warms my heart. That'd be like if you

MIC1

Delaware. I

MIC2

to New York

MIC1

love

MIC2

and someone said, "Uh, no, you should go to-"

MIC1

that

MIC2

this re- yeah, this restaurant in Delaware." I love that.

MIC3

We're probably going to Frasca on this trip, sorry to say." But I love- But, uh, I thought that was a pretty good compliment I love that someone said that. That made, that warms my heart I thought that was a pretty good compliment to, uh- It warms my heart. That'd be like if you were going to New York City and someone said, uh, "No, you should go to- Delaware this re- Yeah, this restaurant in Delaware. I love that. I love that. I'll tell the team. You know, it's funny because, uh, so this podcast started a long time ago, and a long time ago we had listeners around the world, which was great, but it, we had to, like, take a break and we started it again. And of our, we've met a bunch of friends who are regular customers who came from Chicago, some people have come from Australia, and they're going to New York, but we get them to come to New Brunswick, New Jersey, or they come to see us as part of that trip, 'cause we're a lot closer to New York City than we are to Boulder right here at Aspen Food Wine. But I think one of the things that we've l- long admired you for is when we went to open the restaurant we wanted to open, when we opened our first restaurant in 1992, our friends were like, New Jersey? In the

MIC1

You're gonna open in New Brunswick, New Jersey, what are you thinking? The- nobody'll ever go to a nice restaurant in New Brunswick, New Jersey

MIC3

and you did the same thing in Boulder. Talk to us about what, uh, why you opened there and you stayed there. You've branched out of course, but you've, you've kept your base there in Boulder and, and did you have to build a whole community around your restaurant?

MIC2

Well, it was interesting. I was leaving the French Laundry. I was wor- I, I don't think I ever thought I'd be an entrepreneur. I loved working for Thomas Keller. But my wife's mom passed away, and her father was living in Golden, and we picked Boulder. Lachlan, my business partner, my wife Danette and I, hilariously, we th- we picked Boulder because it was the, um- perfect distance for my father-in-law, for me to be a great son-in-law, my, but he still had to call before he

MIC3

came over. That's how we chose Boulder.

MIC2

and when we opened there, I remember going there and, and my former boss and mentor, just amazing person, Thomas Keller, is like, "Bobby, I'm worried about you." I'm like, "People don't take reservations there. It's a beer..." It's like- Mm-hmm a beer town, not a wine town. And he goes, "You're opening a restaurant based on Friuli, Venezia Giulia? This is kinda stressing me out." And I love that he cared that much, uh, but that's what we had to do, and it's worked out, and I feel really lucky.

MIC3

But what made you think that it would work? I mean, you, you... Like, a lot of people are like, "Well, I'd like to live there and I'd like to open a restaurant there." That doesn't mean there are gonna be the people

MIC1

A- and also, just so you know, opening a restaurant means you're probably gonna be a crappy son-in-law, okay? 'Cause you're not gonna be around very much

MIC2

but we... You know, originally, we were closed on Sundays, so- Mm-hmm,

MIC3

I

MIC2

could see him. Um, and I have a restaurant named after two of them.

MIC1

Nice

MIC2

Yeah, uh, his last name was Alberico, my wife's maiden name, so we have Pizzeria Alberico and Osteria Alberico.

MIC3

Love it.

MIC2

but I was a little bit of a tough son-in-law, because when we did Pizzeria Alberico, I did ma- He was a Italian-American, sign painter.

MIC1

Mm-hmm.

MIC2

Mm-hmm. And he, his last sign he painted, because he was, uh, dealing with, uh, stage four cancer, was writing his own name on our pizza great.

MIC3

And

MIC2

are like, "Bobby, what are you doing with your 83-year-old father-in-law, making him work?" I'm like, "Look in our family." Yeah. "No one gets a restaurant named after them for

MIC1

There's a restaurant named after him for free. That's right

MIC2

right. You're like, "Get to work, Ricardo." you know, when we moved to Boulder, it was different. It was a you're 100% right. But, we just went for... I, I think also we were younger, and we... I probably wouldn't have the same risk-taking as I did then. Well- But it's worked out. But one thing that helped us is Boulder is such an highly inquisitive

MIC1

That's great. You h- you...

MIC2

was it.

MIC1

Having people that wanna learn the things that you know i- is such a boon to, to your business. But, getting yourself out there, putting yourself out there, taking those risks. So people talk about the first restaurant being the risk. That's not the risk. The risks come later- Yeah as you actually have things to lose.

MIC2

100%. I think on... Another thing on this podcast we should discuss is journalism has it all wrong. Journalism and the romance of one restaurant forever without doing other restaurants. Mm. It's almost like a restaurateur gets dismissed. And quite frankly, that's bad hospitality. Mm-hmm. Because if you're gonna have team members that you want to be with you for a long time, you have to grow to give them growth.

MIC1

Absolutely

MIC2

have to take risks. You have to be uncomfortable so Carr, who was on my panel today, can be the beverage director for our whole company, not just-

MIC1

Mm-hmm.

MIC2

in one restaurant. to do that, you have to take risks and grow so your team can grow.

MIC3

When you go to open multiple restaurants, every restaurant's its own story, every restaurant's in its own community, To what extent are you telling the same story in each restaurant, the story of your hospitality in each restaurant? And to what extent is each restaurant a, an individual incarnation telling a different story,

MIC2

All of our restaurants tell their own story, maybe about their space, about what they're, talking about with the part of Italy that they're into. But the ethos of how I, the expectation of my leadership team in using hospitality to leave our, lead our teams and to meet our guests, it should be the same. It's really hard to do that. But to get everyone to understand the ethos of hospitality, and to lead with hospitality, that should be the same goal in every restaurant.

MIC3

hard to do that, but to get everyone to understand the ethos of hospitality and to lead with hospitality, that should be the same goal in every restaurant. How do you get people to do that? Constant

MIC2

Constant, gentle pressure. You have to

MIC1

Expectation, I think is what you're talking about. So you set expectations and, people are more apt to meet those expectations if they know what they are

MIC2

Danny Meyers says something really salient. You have to take the salt shaker and move it back into the middle of the room.

MIC1

Always

MIC3

Hey, it's T.

MIC1

T- Martin's out there. H- hello, T. Hello. How are you?

MIC3

li- a little Rough Tumble New Orleans

MIC1

A

MIC3

a fan of all three. Aw, right back at you, T. T., I love

MIC2

fan of all three. Aw, right back at you, T. T, you're the best. I love you. Awesome.

MIC1

We'll see you later

MIC3

You never know who you're gonna run into at the Aspen

MIC1

the beauty

MIC2

Guys,

MIC3

awesome?

MIC2

those of you who are not right here, T Martin, legend- Legend

MIC1

Legend. Owner of Commander's Palace and, and literal New Orleans legend, which has led her to be national legend

MIC3

wouldn't mess with her.

MIC1

I wouldn't mess with her.

MIC2

No.

MIC3

No. Um, yeah, but you, you were talking about how each place expressed its own hospitality. It's gentle pressure all the time. Um, we all know that, and I think a common theme throughout The Restaurant Guys, when we talk to operators. Osperators? is, you know, culture trumps policy seven days a week. We all know that, right?

MIC2

Yes.

MIC3

but How do you keep that culture consistent, especially when you have multiple units and multiple places to operate? How do you make sure everybody's on the same page? There's key employees, there are policy tricks. What do you do?

MIC2

Well, I think culture is very, very... You said it. It trumps policy. if the teams don't understand the policies- things break down. restaurant industry is not a prodigy industry. can be a prodigy at mathematics, chess, like that kid, he's seven years old, just-

MIC1

Chef like that could be seven years old just- Mm-hmm

MIC2

just beat the world grandmaster at chess. He's seven years old. He has not put in 10,000 hours.

MIC1

Right

MIC2

Yo-Yo Ma picked up a, a cello at four, played at the White House at six. Incredible work ethic, but also a prodigy. In restaurants, we aren't prodigies, so let's quit pretending we

MIC3

The genius of hard work- Yes is that we have. And so as much as you

MIC2

so as much as you have to have the culture, you also have to have the SOPs, or the standards, or the policies to get these great young hospitality people to learn the path. because we can't have them figure it out with 300 tough Friday

MIC1

Right

MIC2

We have to take our thousands of tough Friday nights and g- and help a new hospitality, hospitalian figure that out.

MIC1

And I'm not sure why Friday's the toughest night, but for some reason, Friday is the toughest night

MIC2

you why it is. is, uh, we call it, uh, Friday fight night. Same amount of volume as Saturday. Mm. but they're at home on Saturdays.

MIC1

Mm-hmm.

MIC2

Mm. That first turn is easier on Saturdays. Friday nights, people are coming and going from work, they're more stressed. Yep. It adds a friction.

MIC1

I try, I try and explain it to my staff when I talk about Fridays and how they're gonna operate, is realize that that guy who is gonna come to us for an early dinner, then he's gonna go to the theater, has been thinking about from the time he got up today, "I need to get out of work a half hour early today because I gotta get home, I gotta take a shower, my wife's gotta get home. She's gotta take a shower. We gotta connect. We gotta get to the restaurant, and that's all gotta happen in a half hour early." And so at his 10:30 meeting, he's thinking, "We gotta end this meeting soon because I gotta be a half hour ahead," and that's the, substance of his whole day. So when he walks into your restaurant, he's been pushing to save that half hour all day long, and now you've gotta say, You're in our hands now. You can relax. We've got this," and let him decompress and, and give him a place where he can decompress, but that doesn't happen instantaneously.

MIC2

No. You need to be able to give that person a bear hug of hospitality, 'cause they've gone through war to get to your restaurant. Yep.

MIC3

so I wanna turn the conversation, 'cause I know we don't have a lot of time left, but, uh, you're a wine guy, and I wanna ask, happening in wine today? What's happening in wine in your restaurants today? We know there's a contraction in wine, fewer people are drinking. It's kinda harder to keep that up. What are you seeing in the wine world?

MIC2

you know, I'm not as Debbie Downer as everyone's saying. I think, uh, our group, people are, are drinking beverages. I think We got so addicted to the volumes of consumption during COVID. But if I think about, I worked at the Little Nell right across the way here 31 years ago in 1995. was a young guy. My friends that I grew up with, they didn't drink wine like I

MIC3

1995. I was a young guy. My friends that I grew up with, they didn't drink wine like I did. Yep.

MIC2

in the profession. of my friend... They were drinking Zima. Yeah.

MIC3

was in the profession. None of my friend- they

MIC1

Yep.

MIC3

Yeah. Zima,

MIC1

You were absolutely right

MIC2

Light we weren't, we were not having a chaos of young people aren't drinking wine. No, they weren't yet. We got lucky that we had a moment, a blip, around COVID that people were all drinking. Mm-hmm. But we're just back to basics. Yep. People gotta play Little League, put the ball in the glove, throw to first base. It's gonna be

MIC3

okay. All right, man.

MIC1

Bobby, thank you so much for joining us here in Aspen at the Food Wine Classic. It's been a treat getting to meet you. You are a legend. We appreciate you so much.

MIC3

Thanks for taking the time, man. You guys Thanks, brother.

Speaker 50

next guest is a little-known guy trying to break into the business. His name is Andrew Zimmern. Uh, he is a chef, writer, TV host, educator, and raconteur whose stories happen to involve some of the best meals on Earth, and some of the most unlikely meals on Earth. Along the way, he's eaten just about everything, met everyone, and somehow he remains endlessly curious, and that is to all of our benefit. He was our guest in one of our live shows at the New Brunswick Performing Arts Center. I heard somewhere he considers that the pinnacle of his career thus far. Correct. Um, his

Speaker 41

Uh, you heard me say it, I think,

Speaker 50

that's where I heard it, for sure. His new show is Pitmasters, and we are thrilled to catch up in the mountains of Aspen at the Food Wine Classic.

Speaker 41

Andrew, welcome to the show

Speaker 58

is Pitmasters, and we are thrilled to catch up in the mountains of Aspen at the Food Wine Classic. Andrew, welcome to the show. Great to be here.

Speaker 41

to have you

Speaker 58

I'd forgotten, you know, you make a TV show, and then you come here, you know, and I'm doing this work here, and I'm focused on this, and I'm thinking about my demos, and this, and that, and other stuff that I have to do. Pitmasters, which is a new competition show on Food Network, I swore I would never do a competition this is your

Speaker 41

first, right? This is your first

Speaker 58

done one ...competition show? Never done one. And, uh, and I'm a host, and the head judge- And you were a guest judge, obviously ...or whatever. Yes, yeah. And I, I enjoy guesting on my friends' shows, but I really, you know, there's so many competition shows, and I like to do things where I'm an only- Yeah. Not where I'm one of many. And, uh, a buddy of mine, um, Dan Cutforth and his partners who own a production company, he started Magical Elves- Oh, yeah ...and started Top Chef-

Speaker 41

Yeah,

Speaker 58

Runway, and all this, I mean, incredible stuff. And I've known-

Speaker 59

They were very

Speaker 41

g- just so you know, they were very good to the restaurant guys in, in '05 when they started. They really helped us get our

Speaker 58

So I respect him immensely. If I'm not gonna work with my own production company, I'd wanna work with Dan and Alfred Street. And w- uh, we created something incredibly new. So if you've not caught- Food Network's Pitmasters, it is unbelievable. The, the chef-testants come in pairs, and they have to cook for eight days straight, 24 hours a day. The fire never goes out. Wow. So you can pick and choose your nap times and your rest times, or your sleep times if your partner can carry the load. It's very strategic. It's a

Speaker 41

My partner can never carry the load, just so

Speaker 50

right now.

Speaker 58

now. I... It's great. It's great. So thank you. Yeah, Pitmasters- Well, I- is a lot of fun.

Speaker 50

all right.

Speaker 41

w- you know, you did Wild Game Kitchens just so you could practice, you know, what you were preaching here. That, that, that was just a lead-up to this, to, to do this show

Speaker 58

It was a... It, it's funny that you say that. I mean, Pitmasters was a l- a logical extension after Wild Game Kitchen- Mm which we just finished filming episode six and seven. Season six is already underway on A&E, on... it? Uh, Outdoor Channel and Taste Made. Um, people can go to andrewzimmern.com and find out everything they want about what's going on where. But I did... I, I'd been asked to do a dump and stir show by every network that does food known to man, but none of them would let me do the one I wanted. And one day, I'm fishing in an ice house in Minnesota, and there's some other guys who are guests of the host across from me. And they're jigging in their hole, and I'm in mine. And, you know, it's just quiet in the fish house. Uh-huh. And he says, "Hi, I'm, I'm so and so. I run blankety blank for Outdoor Channel. Would you ever consider doing a cooking show for Outdoor Channel?" And I said, "Would I be allowed to cook wild game and do it only over open fire?" And they said, "Absolutely." And I literally gave him my number- Okay wrote my agent's number on the back of it. And he said, "I can't believe it was that easy." And I said, "I've been looking for someone to say that to me for 20 blanking years." Yeah. And so that was it. Now we're, you know, season seven, and- That's season eight will-

Speaker 41

I want to tell you

Speaker 58

soon

Speaker 41

one of the difference between you and me. I have a very good friend in Minnesota, from Minnesota, and he keeps inviting me to go ice fishing. And I keep saying, "No effing way." You're telling me that that's a mistake? Yes. That sitting on an icy lake for two days, drinking beer and fishing out of a hole is- Yes is, is something I need to do?

Speaker 58

Yes. It is- Now, please tell me, tell me what the pleasure is in that you cannot have a better time. Okay. Because hardcore 25-year-olds-

Speaker 59

Uh-huh

Speaker 58

wrap layers of sleeping bags that they've tied together with bungee cords and fish a hole that they drilled themselves, and they're exposed to the elements. Everyone I've ice fished with drags a custom-made ice house that's on

Speaker 41

This would be a first cl- this would be a first-class experience. I do know that.

Speaker 58

It has ovens- couches, multiple holes. If you put a number on it and you can drop a pin food will be delivered to you from DoorDash- Oh from, from Uber Eats, any of the- This is amazing stuff it is- All right we, we bring food into the ice house. We cook in

Speaker 41

All right, John Likness,

Speaker 58

You sleep-

Speaker 41

are you listening?

Speaker 58

there, and it is so much fun, and you do it when there's lots of sports on TV. Like, if there's ice now, World Cup would be perfect, right? Um, it's great. There's nothing better than ice fishing.

Speaker 50

It's like glamping is to camping.

Speaker 49

Yes.

Speaker 50

All right. Fair enough. Yes. I would do that. Yes. I would do that. All right. Now I wanna ask you-

Speaker 41

me a first-class experience. I just want you to know I didn't believe him. I didn't believe him.

Speaker 50

I just want John Likness, if he's listening, to know what the definition of a first-class experience is. He may have been thinking

Speaker 41

about it.

Speaker 50

first class.

Speaker 58

how it's done. Yeah, he went first class. That's,

Speaker 41

He's been doing it a long time.

Speaker 58

trust me, he's in an ice house.

Speaker 60

All

Speaker 50

Trust me, he's in the nice S. So all right. So I wanna talk to you about barbecue specifically. For sure. But first I wanna ask, with a great deal of trepidation now that I've heard the, how much you are, skeptical of other people's production companies, did you enjoy your time at our, being the center of our live show in New Brunswick at the Performing Arts

Speaker 60

Center?

Speaker 58

Yeah, I thought it was an incredible experience. I was actually talking to Bobby Flay earlier and, we were discussing how much fun I had. a, a lot of times you get asked to do something and you say yes, and you... Uh, I'll just be honest, it's, it's work. Yeah. Right? And you have to remember it's work, and you have to make sure you're smiling and kind to everyone. And the, the conversation is, the, the, the questions may be less insightful than you were hoping for, especially in a live theater. I mean, there's hundreds of people- Yeah out there. You, you have to deliver at a higher level of, of interest, in

Speaker 41

up here, we can edit, right? That's

Speaker 50

live shows

Speaker 58

Yeah, live shows Yes, honestly. You can. Um, first of all, we had great conversation. We went, like, a half hour over, it was so great. The questions from the audience were great. The people I met at the after event were great. I was treated well the entire time. I thought it was fantastic.

Speaker 50

so great. The questions from the audience were great. The people I met at the after event were great. I was treated well the entire time. I thought it was fantastic. Here's a shout-out to New Brunswick, New Jersey, and whoof, that's a load

Speaker 58

was wonderful. It was wonderful.

Speaker 50

glad you enjoyed that.

Speaker 58

No, I'm glad, I'm glad you had me brown-nose you on,

Speaker 50

me brown-nose you on,

Speaker 58

out to the entire world for

Speaker 50

Just so you know, Andrew Zimmern-

Speaker 58

No, I get it.

Speaker 50

Zimmern has not paid

Speaker 41

We've been saying nice things about you for a long

Speaker 58

I know. The

Speaker 41

a little, little bit comes back.

Speaker 50

a long time. I know. But the feeling is mutual, Nick. The feeling is mutual. All right. So, uh, let's talk about barbecue. I'm gonna tell you my first real experience with barbecue, and then I took a motorcycle down south and, and tried to explore a little more.

Speaker 41

I, can I just sneak in my first real experience was the McRib, so that's,

Speaker 50

that's not so, Mark's out of this part of the conversation. no, no, your experience was the same as mine. It was when, Danny Meyer brought in the Barbec- Big Apple Barbecue Festival, and he brought barbecue to New York for the

Speaker 41

yeah. What a cool event that was

Speaker 60

for the first time. Yeah, yeah. What a cool event that was. And all these great pit masters- The

Speaker 50

from all around the country came up, and that's how I learned there were different regions to barbecue, different traditions.

Speaker 58

And that was real barbecue, by the way. That wasn't live fire cooking, which I love.

Speaker 50

It wasn't live fire cooking, which I love. That was a, we did a

Speaker 58

a lot of live fire cooking, but barbecue is different

Speaker 50

We did a Restaurant Guys show from, live from the Big Apple Barbecue, the first one in New York. That's awesome. Um, and we learned so much. what do we learn on your show, and what makes a great barbecue? Uh, I'm asking you three questions in a row. Answer them any order you like. Sure. What are we gonna learn on your show? What makes really great barbecue better than very good barbecue? And are the different regions of barbecue that I first learned about, are they melding together or are they staying regional?

Speaker 58

Wow. let me address that in reverse, if I can remember them all. here's the, here's the deal. barbecue regionality has stayed distinctly regional. Okay. The biggest change in barbecue over the last 10 years has been the elevation and third culture cuisine impact on barbecue. So you have, well, Texas is a hub of so much of it. But, you have guys, what is it? Uh, Curry Boys BBQ. Mm-hmm. Right? Um, these are some young guys from, Desi countries who are bringing what would typically be Desi flavors, I'm talking about Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, et cetera, into the barbecue world. You have, uh, Japanese cooks, chefs, adapting barbecue and shooting it through the Japanese prism, in terms of flavors and things. You have so many different third culture cuisine impacts on it, and innovation being done in the barbecue space. 'Cause a lot of people said, "Okay, this is delicious, but it's in a very narrow lane. And the other sides to be eaten with barbecue are, are more numerous than just beans, coleslaw, potato salad, macaroni salad," right? Right. And they were right. They were correct. Yeah. Right. So what they've done is they've stayed in the lanes of barbecue tradition, but they've added a Japanese, cabbage salad that's typically served with katsu, and serving that with a koji, rubbed and smoked brisket. So it's distinctly Japanese. Right. And so that to me is so fascinating. There's a guy in our town, in Minneapolis, named John Wipflei, who has a barbecue spot called Anomali's that to me is one of the 10 best in the country. he was in a permanent pop-up for like six, seven years, uh, and then just moved into a brick-and-mortar location, and is doing some of the best barbecue in the country, bar none. All the way to, Ernest Cervantes, who's one of my co-judges on, Pitmasters. but he has, uh, the Burnt Bean, right outside of San Antonio, or in a suburb of San Antonio. he's won 500 barbecue competitions in his career, and finally opened a brick-and-mortar many years ago, and is doing extremely innovative stuff. So the answer is both.

Speaker 50

So there's the innovation and tradition. What makes truly great barbecue truly great barbecue? What wins the competition?

Speaker 58

What the competition? Balance every time, because it is very tricky to develop the smoke flavor without it overwhelming the meat flavor. You have to use great meat. The pork can't be swiney. The beef can't be commodity. The chicken can't be, factory farm, right?

Speaker 50

have- A factory farmed chicken in a barbecue just, just evaporates. It- It just turns into crap.

Speaker 58

It just turns into crap. Yeah, yeah. Tell me about it. you know, when I walk into a place and someone's like, "Oh, you gotta try this," and I eat a couple of things and they're, they're crappy, It's a tell. Yeah. Right? Yeah. So, when your food is simple, you cannot hide behind anything. And there is no simple food technique on planet Earth than great barbecue. Because regardless of what the seasonings are, it's smoke and the hourglass.

Speaker 50

What's the number one thing they screw up?

Speaker 58

point of doneness

Speaker 41

Okay

Speaker 50

or under?

Speaker 58

Over or under.

Speaker 50

Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 58

and that's, that's with ribs, brisket, chicken, pork shoulder, you name it. It's, you know, that's the other point is you have to do this thousands of times under the same conditions just to know what to do when the ki- conditions aren't the same. It's colder out, it's windier, it's, you're, you're- Humid. The wood's different. Elevation. It's humid, eleva- Up here no, keep going. Yeah. Um, it's, it's insane.

Speaker 41

All right, completely fall off the bone into oblivion or

Speaker 58

toothsome- No, no. That's not

Speaker 41

or toothsome and have a little bit of,

Speaker 59

give?

Speaker 58

You should be able to pull it easily from the bone, but it should stay on the bone, and a baby's tug should not be able to remove it

Speaker 41

I love it. I love it. I needed a definition.

Speaker 50

think

Speaker 58

it should melt in the

Speaker 50

of people, A lot of arguments have been happening over what the appropriate point of doneness is, and I've never heard it described before

Speaker 58

There is no argument over the appropriate point of doneness. What I just

Speaker 50

Andrew Zimmern has

Speaker 58

only appropriate point of... Well, I don't understand. By the way-

Speaker 59

with you

Speaker 41

I'm with you

Speaker 58

I, no, look-

Speaker 41

that o- that overdone,

Speaker 58

me clarify. Let me clarify

Speaker 41

just turn into paste, I, I have no patience

Speaker 58

I think there's an in between, and here's the deal. I braise rib meat all the time. Mm-hmm. I love braised rib meat left in chunks where it falls off the bone, and I sauce it, and I serve it in Japanese curry sauce because I love that flavor of really good rib meat, but that's not barbecue. Right. Sorry.

Speaker 50

I love it. I love the distin- Well, and I think a lot of people don't know the difference. But at the same time, uh, one of the reasons I think the show is important for people to watch, more and more people, like more people who are not in the industry, are learning about wine and even becoming, you know, getting certified as sommeliers just out of the love of it and wanting to know more about it. W- when I was a kid, my dad said, "We're gonna have a barbecue." That meant a cookout on the grill, right? That's right. And, and, uh, and people really-

Speaker 49

Well,

Speaker 58

who do live fire cooking say, "I do barbecue."

Speaker 50

you're like, "You do not. No,

Speaker 58

doing live fire cooking. You're excellent,

Speaker 50

excellent- That was like, there was a fa- there was a famous- Delicious. Absolutely. Of course. And that's, honestly, that's what we cook in our restaurant there

Speaker 41

Which can be delicious, absolutely, of course. And that's, honestly, that's what we cook in our restaurant. We have a wood-burning grill. It, it, we throw apple wood in it every day. Yep. And we never call it barbecue

Speaker 58

No,

Speaker 50

People are really interested in geeking out over this and getting it right.

Speaker 49

By

Speaker 58

the way, I do need to say, for those that don't geek out of it and don't care, God bless you. Yeah. I mean, there, there is a portion of the audience that, like, i- is like, "Well, why does Zimmern have so many rules?" I'm like, "Because if you name it, it has to be that thing. If you use the name, it has to be that thing." What I tell people all the time is, "If you love it, eat it. Enjoy it. God bless you, and I applaud you for that." But if somebody says to me, uh, "I've made you coq au vin." Okay? I expect coq au vin, and I know what makes coq au

Speaker 41

There better be van in your cock-o-van.

Speaker 58

if someone says to me, "I've made you a delicious braised chicken in wine." I have no boundaries, no... Then I'm just going on deliciousness. Right. Yeah, yeah. But if you name-check, if you say chicken Kiev, that requires certain things. If if you say lobster Thermidor, that requires certain things. Yeah. And I just... You know, words matter.

Speaker 50

can I just share with you that, and I, I'm curious to your reaction, because I... It warms my heart that with the World Cup going on, and Mark is a sports fan and always makes fun of me. He's like, "Francis, you never know what's going on in sports ball," 'cause I don't. Um, but I'm seeing Europeans come to the United States, uh, and not just to the major cities, and they're making videos for their own back home audiences. Right. And they're like, "We never knew it could be like this." And one of their big things is the Walmarts, of course, or the Vistas- Yes and the mountains. But one of the things that recurs is people who are in places where there's real barbecue- Yes and they can't believe it, and they can't believe the size of it. And then they put it in their mouth, and they're like, "We've never tasted anything like that." So it's an American treasure, wouldn't you

Speaker 58

It, it is. It- well, we've Americanized it. obviously, like everything in this country, it came from somewhere else. Um, the Carib Indians, were cooking, meat over open fire and smoking it. And when the first Western Europeans came into the Caribbean islands and then moved up into what is now the Port of New Orleans, you know, and various other southern ports into Florida, I'm talking about in the 16th and 17th

Speaker 49

Florida, I'm talking about the 16th and 17th centuries- Yeah, yeah

Speaker 58

They carried that wisdom with them. when the French first arrived in the, what is now the Caribbean, uh, they saw Carib Indians cooking meat on a spit slowly over pimento wood, right? Mm-hmm. And they said in French, you know, un barbe elkaar, which is a stick through the heart.

Speaker 49

Oh. And

Speaker 50

that is how they then- I didn't know that

Speaker 49

Never heard that before

Speaker 50

Every time-- I was gonna interrupt

Speaker 58

goes all the way through I like stick that And by the

Speaker 41

By the way-

Speaker 58

by the way, previous to finishing it in open air over fire to crisp it, they were preserving it. They did not have salt, so they preserved it by smoking it. so the first roots of barbecue, came up that way. Now, at the same time, and this is where it gets confusing, from Europe, Czech and German French English immigrants, were bringing sausage-making and other techniques of preservation down into New York, where s- most people couldn't care less.

Speaker 60

Right,

Speaker 58

right. And they headed south on what is now known as the Barbecue Trail, through the Carolinas into Tennessee, finally ending up in Texas. and the Czechs and Germans wound up settling in great numbers in Texas 'cause there was no room for them- Right in New York. Right. And that's where you get all of that sausage-making, all of that extra texture on barbecue, all of those German-style potato salads that are down there. And it collided along the way with the Carib Indians, and their techniques. And that is kind of like that approach it from two sides, you know, sort of pincer that created... And, and I'm, I'm- We're cutting out a lot of the story, but that is what is the foundational elements of American barbecue as we know it. I learned- But why trust me? What do, what do I know?

Speaker 41

because I learn something from you every day is what, every time you're on the show

Speaker 50

the show. They say the smartest thing that a fairly smart person can do is to hang out with people smarter than them, and that's what Mark and I are doing right the hell

Speaker 41

Did you

Speaker 58

true. I just know a lot about

Speaker 49

this.

Speaker 50

I know. Well, that's why we're talking to you about this.

Speaker 41

Speaking of sausages, let's bring this back to, to Aspen for just one second in this event. Did you get to try Nox Untorrenon's sausage last

Speaker 58

First of all,

Speaker 41

First of all- That was from Kalaya. That was ridiculous.

Speaker 58

I've eaten it at her restaurant. Mm-hmm. I saw that it was there. I nibbled on everything else, and then I posted up for a half an hour at that station. And did you notice that they make it from scratch- Mm and they, they tied the skins with string.

Speaker 49

up

Speaker 50

next to the... with, with my toothpick, and Nok and I are

Speaker 58

so when the chef who was slicing it made his first cut, he discarded the first end- Uh-huh 'cause it's attached to a string. Yeah. And then the last end, 'cause it's attached to a string, and he piled them all to his left. And I just walked around to the corner, 'cause I'm that guy. I think I'm now the oldest continuing person here.

Speaker 41

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 50

and

Speaker 58

Yeah. This is, like, my 35th. I was coming here, I was coming here when I, before I was me, when I was washing dishes in friends' restaurants. Right. Right? and I mean, I've missed a couple, COVID. Mm-hmm. You know, uh, d- you know, a child coming into the world. I mean, there's all kinds of things I've missed the Classic for. But I think I've missed, like, three in the last 35 years. And so I kind of feel like... I mean, I was here before there were tents. Mm-hmm. When it was just in restaurants. So I posted up next to the, with, with my toothpick, and Nok and I are friends- Mm and her crew knows that, and I was just with them in Chicago at the Beard Awards. So I just kept eating all the ends

Speaker 50

and- throwing away the string? And

Speaker 49

throwing away the

Speaker 50

string. I love it.

Speaker 58

love it. And, you know, I, because he looked at... The guy is a, a volunteer cook from the place where the event was, he looked at me and I said, "You're not serving those. You just keep s- I'm just gonna eat the ends." And he's like, "Yes, chef." And I just kept... I, I mean, I can't get... And I would leave to walk across the patio to get those incredible rice

Speaker 50

are beautiful

Speaker 41

those were great too.

Speaker 50

wait. So good. Before we move on, so I just wanna make a bet right now that at Kalaya restaurant in Philadelphia, Nok's and Taron's restaurant, you're gonna see a new appetizer of ends with strings. Yes. That was pioneered by Andrew Zimmern. You heard it here first. I,

Speaker 58

when my father carved the Thanksgiving turkey- Oh, the bits when I was- The crunchy bits six years old, I would steal the pope's nose. Everything that fell, what they now call board debris, was what I ate.

Speaker 41

Grandma was very clear that she wanted the piece that went over the fence last. Yes. Okay? That's- Yes that's mine. Nobody gets the piece that goes over the fence

Speaker 58

I was the youngest grandchild, so Grandma gave that to me- Ah and thus the family

Speaker 41

me. Ah. That's the- Grandma let me steal two black meatballs out of the pan while she was still making them because I was the youngest of my generation. That was

Speaker 59

experience. It's a nice thing.

Speaker 41

But I will tell you that the, the the guy at the exact same spot you were, 'cause I kept going back, and until Knock came up and hugged me, he was giving me the stink eye a little bit. Yeah, well, he does

Speaker 50

well-placed hug can add to your credibility in

Speaker 58

good. So good. Oh my God, was it good.

Speaker 41

Yeah, it was really terrific

Speaker 50

uh, Andrew Zimmern, uh, like I said, I get smarter every time I talk to you. You're a pleasure. I always have a laugh, I always learn something, and thanks for joining us at Aspen.

Speaker 58

you. Can I give one more shameless

Speaker 50

Yeah, Please. Go right ahead. People wanna know. I was serious before. Go to andrewzimmern.com if you wanna travel with me, we have trips. You can sign up for my Substack newsletter. You can find out about my books. You can find out about my TV shows. Um, I can't believe, I'm so grateful to whatever controls the universe, 'Cause I don't think it's us. I believe

Speaker 58

people wanna know. I was serious before. Go to andrewzimmern.com if you wanna travel with me, we have trips. You can sign up for my Substack newsletter. You can find out about my books, you can find out about my TV shows. I can't believe, I'm so grateful to whatever controls the universe, 'cause I don't think it's us. I believe in something bigger than us. However I landed at age 65, still being relevant is absolutely beyond my ability to comprehend. But if you're out there listening and you're responsible for it, thank you.

Speaker 59

say-

Speaker 58

And thank you, guys. Thank you, guys, for all you do for our industry, which is really amazing.

Speaker 41

have fun doing it, you just said you're 65 years old. You still put in the time, you still put in the effort. Everything you do is professional. You're successful because of how hard you still work

Speaker 58

Oh, thank you. That's very kind of you to say. But- I'm just mailing it in every day it's

Speaker 59

real.

Speaker 41

you. That's very kind of you to say. The, I

Speaker 50

of you to say. But it is- I'm just mailing it in every day it's real. All right, brother. Well, thanks for coming. It's great to have you. Thanks, my friend. Thank you. Much love. Next time you're in

Speaker 58

All right, brother. Well, thanks for coming to Street Food. Thanks, my friends. Next time you're in New Brunswick- Love you

Speaker 50

next time you're in New Brunswick, we're having dinner.

Speaker 49

Oh,

Speaker 58

absolutely, 100%. Maybe not even in New Brunswick.

Speaker 50

meet you in New York, I'll meet you in Philly, I'll meet you at Kalya.

Speaker 53

I

Speaker 62

So that's a wrap for the interviews from the field at the Aspen Food Wine Classic.

Speaker 63

We hope you enjoyed your time at Aspen with us.

Speaker 62

We certainly did, and, uh, maybe we'll see you there next year. Anyway, thanks for listening. We appreciate you more than you know. I'm Francis Schadt.

Speaker 63

And I'm Mark Pascal.

Speaker 62

We are the Restaurant Guys, and you can find out more about us, and you know, after an episode like this, you should really subscribe and help support us either way, find out more about us at restaurantguyspodcast.com