Happy Mouth Philip Camino & Nyesha Arrington
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Hosted by acclaimed restaurateur Philip Camino and star chef Nyesha Arrington, the Happy Mouth podcast is your source for the daily news about the hospitality industry. From bite-sized news stories to food for thought, Philip and Nyesha combine their unique insights to give you the lowdown on what’s happening and how it impacts you.
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July 29, 2021: Korean BBQ Restaurant Daedo Coming To America
Los Angeles is getting yet another top restaurant as Seoul’s top BBQ restaurant Daedo is coming to town and they’re bringing a lot of their amazing ingredients with them.
On this episode of the Happy Mouth podcast, chef Nyesha Arrington and restaurateur talk about Daedo’s history -- starting next to Seoul’s meat market in 1964, what makes the Hanu beef they use so special, recreating that taste in America, and the different ingredients Daedo will be exporting.
Listen to Philip and Nyesha discuss Daedo:
Daedo was established in 1964 in Majang-Dong, Seoul’s meat market
Daedo specifically uses Hanu beef, known for its more complex flavor and richness
However, since Hanu beef is rarely exported outside of South Korea, Daedo will be using prime-grade beef wet-aged directly on the premises, giving a similar taste
Daedo’s new LA location will feature items exported from South Korea like umami soybean paste from Chiri Mountain and cubed kkakdugi
Links:
Happy Mouth Podcast Instagram
Eater - Seoul’s most celebrated barbeque restaurant, Daedo, has arrived in Koreatown
Eater - 12 best Korean barbeque spots in Los Angeles
Wikipedia - Hanwoo
Lone Mountain Wagyu - Intro to wet-aged vs. dry-aged beef
Korean Bapsang - Kkakdugi recipe
Daedo Sikdang - Website
We have a lot more content coming your way! Be sure to check out our other shows:
Full Comp
The Happy Mouth Morning Show
Restaurant Marketing School
The Playbook -
July 28, 2021: LAX Is Getting The Most Luxurious Airport Lounge In The Country
Airports aren’t often known for their high-class food and luxurious accommodations. But one company is looking to change that, bringing world-class food and even a way to expedite your TSA screening.
On this episode of the Happy Mouth podcast, restaurateur Philip Camino and chef Nyesha Arrington talk about The Salon lounge opening at LAX and what parent company PS is aiming to do. Nyesha and Philip talk about some of the services customers can expect at The Salon, as well as what type of food and drinks could appear on the menu.
Listen to Philip and Nyesha discuss airport lounges:
PS is an exclusive offsite terminal at LAX at $4,000 per visit to stay in a private suite
Each visit to PS includes in-suite massages and facials, haircuts, complimentary airport parking and car detailing, and gourmet snacks
PS is opening a new luxury airport lounge at LAX called “The Salon”
Visits to The Salon will only cost $695 per person
The Salon still offers perks like expedited TSA screening, car detailing, and a personal drive to your aircraft’s door on the tarmac
The Salon will have a rotating cocktail list and a food menu inspired by California and the Mediterranean thanks to LA’s H.Wood Group
Co-CEO Joshua Gausman believes people are looking to make travel more of an experience, especially coming out of the coronavirus pandemic
Links:
Happy Mouth Podcast Instagram
Travel + Leisure - LAX is about to open what may be the most luxurious lounge a US airport has ever seen
ReservePS - Website
Robb Report - This exclusive new lounge at LAX is so luxe it lets you skip those long security lines
We have a lot more content coming your way! Be sure to check out our other shows:
Full Comp
The Happy Mouth Morning Show
Restaurant Marketing School
The Playbook -
July 27, 2021: DoorDash And Grubhub Fight San Francisco Over Delivery Fee Caps
While many cities around the country have created temporary delivery fee caps for third-party food delivery apps during the coronavirus pandemic, San Francisco is going a step further and it’s angered two food-delivery app giants.
DoorDash and Grubhub are going after San Francisco after the city made its delivery fee cap permanent. Citing the move as “unconstitutional,” the food-delivery apps are fighting back against a cap of 15%.
Listen as restaurateur Philip Camino and chef Nyesha Arrington discuss third-part food-delivery apps, the delivery fee cap, and what it all means for those working in the hospitality industry.
Listen to Philip and Nyesha discuss San Francisco’s delivery fee cap:
In April 2020, many cities enacted temporary delivery fee caps to relieve some pressure from struggling restaurants at the start of the pandemic
The caps were usually around 15% of the food order and were meant to be a temporary solution until restrictions lifted and restaurants could resume 100% of their normal capacity
Prior to these caps, fees could range from 20%-40%
Third-party food delivery apps rely on fees charged to customers and restaurants to cover things like credit card processing, driver pay, and marketing campaigns
San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors unanimously voted to make the fee cap permanent in June, earning the praise of the Golden Gate Restaurant Association, though San Francisco Mayor London Breed chose to not sign it
DoorDash says they aren’t able to cover driver pay, operations, credit card fees, and marketing costs while fees are capped at 15%
To make up the difference, new fees are popping up for consumers
DoorDash and Grubhub filed a joint complaint against San Francisco to the U.S. District Court, alleging the delivery fee cap to be “unconstitutional” and a “dangerous overreach” of local government power
Grubhub and DoorDash are suing the city for damages and to put a stop to the delivery fee cap
Links:
Happy Mouth Podcast Instagram
Restaurant Business - DoorDash and Grubhub sue San Francisco over delivery fee cap
Restaurant Business - San Francisco to permanently cap third-party delivery fees
Restaurant Business - DoorDash says delivery fee caps are hurting order volumes
Restaurant Business - DoorDash unveils tiered pricing plan for restaurants
We have a lot more content coming your way! Be sure to check out our other shows:
Full Comp
The Happy Mouth Morning Show
Restaurant Marketing School
The Playbook -
July 26, 2021: Panda Express Orange Chicken Getting Plant-Based Makeover
It’s Meatless Monday and Panda Express is making one of their classics without meat.
That’s right, the orange chicken can now be ordered without the chicken! Panda Express has teamed up with the Beyond Meat team to bring a plant-based twist on their classic orange chicken dish.
Listen as chef Nyesha Arrington and restaurateur Philip Camino give you a little history lesson on Panda Express’ orange chicken, Beyond Meat’s foray into chicken, and how this new plant-based dish might stack up to the original.
Listen to Philip and Nyesha discuss orange chicken:
Panda Express chef Andy Kao created the famous orange chicken dish in 1987, four years after the first store opened
Panda Express has served more than 80 million pounds of orange chicken since 2016 alone
Panda Express chef Jimmy Wong spent more than a year working with Beyond Meat to develop the product
It will have the same size, taste, and texture of the original orange chicken
Beyond Meat recently launched plant-based chicken tenders nationwide
Beyond Meat’s plant-based chicken tenders are made with fava beans and peas and have 14 grams of protein per serving
The dish is only available for a limited time in select locations in New York City and southern California
Links:
Happy Mouth Podcast Instagram
Restaurant Business Online - Panda Express transforms its signature original orange chicken into a plant-based dish
Restaurant Business Online - Beyond Chicken Tenders launches on restaurant menus nationwide
Panda Express - Our family story
We have a lot more content coming your way! Be sure to check out our other shows:
Full Comp
The Happy Mouth Morning Show
Restaurant Marketing School
The Playbook -
July 23, 2021: Drink Up Sustainably With Pasta Straws
Pasta can save the environment! No, really.
The world is turning away from single-use plastics as people start recognizing their environmental impact. Plastic drinking straws are among the worst offenders, with millions littering U.S. shorelines alone. But several companies believe pasta could be the perfect answer and products are hitting store shelves near you.
On this episode of the Happy Mouth podcast, chef Nyesha Arrington and restaurateur Philip Camino talk about pasta straws. Philip and Nyesha cover the environmental impact plastic straws have had, their more eco-friendly alternatives, and how pasta straws could offer the sustainability people want without the hassles that come with metal and paper straws.
Listen to Philip and Nyesha discuss pasta straws:
Bans on plastic straws have gained a lot of traction in recent years, seeing several states and cities phasing them out
Companies like Starbucks and Disney World have banned plastic straws company-wide
Recycling machines can’t process single-use plastic straws, seeing them wind up in the ocean as trash
About 18 billion pounds of plastic ends up in the ocean every year and plastic straws are one of the top-10 contributors
During a 5-year clean-up project, researchers found almost 7.5 million plastic straws on U.S. shorelines
Scientists estimate plastic straws can take 450 years to break down with some remaining forever
Paper straws take 30-60 days to properly decompose but some people have found they can disintegrate a little too easily in their drinks
Metal straws are a good alternative since they are reusable but the energy needed to make a metal straw is equivalent to 150 plastic straws
Pasta straws have begun popping up in restaurants around the country, including Primi and Popina in New York
You can find gluten-free pasta straws made from rice and tapioca flour from brands like Pasta Life
Pasta straws still dissolve after about 45 minutes but can last longer than paper straws
Pasta straws are also a little pricier, coming in at about double the cost of paper straws
Links:
Happy Mouth Podcast Instagram
New York Magazine - Restaurants from Popina to Bar Primi use these nifty straws made of pasta
National Geographic - Forever is a long time
Our Last Straw - Facts and figures
Pasta Life - Gluten-free pasta straws
We have a lot more content coming your way! Be sure to check out our other shows:
Full Comp
The Happy Mouth Morning Show
Restaurant Marketing School
The Playbook -
July 22, 2021: Biden Takes Aim at Poaching Clauses
While it’s easy to mix up the restaurants you dine at, it’s not so easy to switch up the restaurants you work at. That is, until President Biden signed orders giving restaurant workers more freedom to change between jobs.
On this episode of the Happy Mouth podcast, chef Nyesha Arrington and restaurateur Philip Camino explain what a poaching clause is and discuss Biden’s hopes that targeting these restrictions will help boost market competition.
Listen to Philip and Nyesha discuss poaching clauses:
Biden is specifically targeting anti-poaching agreements.
A new executive order will allow restaurant workers to take on certain jobs without being as restricted, allowing employees to change jobs more freely.
The government will be limiting how much a restaurant or other employers can restrict their workers legally from hopping over to a competitor.
Biden is hoping to boost competition in the market.
The White House also declared that eliminating the non-competes and anti-poaching clauses were a top priority of the bill.
This bill comes as one of 72 policy changes that Biden has made in order to foster greater competition and drive prices down.
Links:
Happy Mouth Podcast Instagram
Photo Credits
Restaurant Business - President Biden Takes Aim At Anti-Poaching Agreements
We have a lot more content coming your way! Be sure to check out our other shows:
Full Comp
The Happy Mouth Morning Show
Restaurant Marketing School
The Playbook
Customer Reviews
Thankful
I stumbled upon this podcast bc of a crush I have on this lady. Now to know that she is a good human being in general makes me love her more. I’m Not in the chef world but I am in the medical world and the link between food and health is key to curing diseases. I really wish that we talked about this more as a society. The links between disease and the food we intake or “indulge” in and educating others about this is key to prevention of disease. Instead of running to a pharmacy for that medicine why don’t we run to a farmers market to invest in health? Knowledge is power, thanks for helping me “dip my toes” in another field for knowledge. I totally dig this podcast which isn’t my typical podcast I would listen to.
The absolute best
PC & Nyesha do a fantastic job of letting our industry know what going on and why we should care in a fun and entertaining way.