To continue our summer series highlighting the best in Fly&Dine, today we’re sharing Fly&Dine’s Hotel Brunch Buffet Rules, a guide for getting the most out of your All-You-Can-Eat buffet. Enjoy!
You want to brunch, son? You want to buffet like a baller? Then drop the soup and listen to me. I’ve been hitting hotel brunch buffets since Justin Bieber was in short pants (he still is, though, right?). I know the secrets of the steam trays. I’m cool with the curiosities of carving stations. I’m open to the option of omelets. Lucky for you, I’m finally ready to share my knowledge about turning the All-You-Can-Eat Brunch Buffet into your derogatory word for a female dog.
If you haven’t checked out any of my buffet reviews before, now’s a great time to do so. Click here for the full list. Have you caught up yet? Good. Then you’re ready for the meat of the story. Brunch pun.
I’m going to give you a set of rules for hitting the brunch buffet hard and if you follow these rules, you’re going to be a BrunBuf superstar. (Sorry about that. I was trying out a new abbreviation and it didn’t really work.) Harbourside at The InterContinental Hong Kong, The Broadmoor, the Airport Hilton: it doesn’t matter where you’re doing your buffet brunching. If you take these rules to heart, you will become a Brunch Buffet Master.
Rule #1: Put Down That Salad
Seriously, bro? You’re piling up a salad when there’s sushi over there? Salad is a LVI: low-value item. Brunches put these out to cut down on their food costs and appeal to idiots. “But I’m into healthy eating!†Shut up. If you’re into healthy eating, you shouldn’t be at an all-you-can-eat brunch buffet anyway.
Rule #2: Hit the High-Value Items First, But Be Careful
You know to skip the salad, but what should you be replacing it with? HVIs: high-value items. In this category, you’ve got your crab legs, your prime rib, your made-to-order sushi. Anything that would actually cost money in the real world should be a target here. The problem is, you don’t want to fill up right away. That’s why HVIs are divided into two categories: Heavy HVIs and Light HVIs. That mountain of shrimp? That’s a light HVI. You can put down two dozen before you even realized you started eating. Those barbeque beef ribs? They might be great, but they’re not your starter. Save those for later in the meal (see my plate order suggestions below). Stick to Light HVIs to start things off and then move into the Heavy HVIs once you’re already in your groove. Your stomach and your wallet will thank you.
Rule #3: Skip the Sides
Sides are not only LVIs, they’re also stomach-fillers. Sure, some breakfast potatoes may work well next to that cooked-to-order omelet, but wouldn’t you rather have ANOTHER OMELET? If your plate has rice/potatoes/bread or any other complex carbohydrate on it, ditch the plate. We eat side dishes in our normal, everyday, non-brunching life because they make us full and keep us from ordering two steaks or a full rack of ribs. At AYCE brunch buffets, though, you don’t have these restrictions. Break the bonds of side dishes and make your brunch an all-entree affair.
Rule #4: Become An Evil Genius
Have you ever seen those people that pile a whole bunch of disparate items on their plate and eat them like they’re one cohesive meal? It’s gross. Prime rib + ambrosia salad + Thai green curry do not a meal make. That’s not to say you shouldn’t be combining ingredients, though. Think of the dishes that are put out on the buffet as suggestions. Or think of them as your Sandra Lee-style semi-homemade ingredients (but then stop thinking of Sandra Lee immediately because she’s terrifying). With a little creativity, you can turn your buffet brunch into a creative culinary incubator. Chop up bacon, grab some cheddar cheese (from the salad bar or the egg station) and throw it all into the grits. Combine a slice of honey-baked ham and pulled pork on a sandwich with pickles and Swiss and you’ve got yourself a Cubano. Heck, you can even pull ingredients from other sections and bring them to the omelet dude and have him throw in crab meat/sweet & sour pork/peanut butter. You’re only limited by your own imagination! Start thinking of the brunch buffet as your paint and your plate as your canvas.
Rule #5: Dessert Doesn’t Have to Be Last
Who said dessert comes at the end of the meal? If you’ve got a sweet tooth, go ahead and gorge on the sugar section whenever you want. After all, brunch always has a sweet component and what’s the difference between pancakes and chocolate cake anyway? Go ahead and drop the conventions of traditional meals because traditional meals don’t have unlimited soft serve.
IDEAL PLATE ORDER
This is how an all-you-can-eat brunch buffet king throws down. Five plates not your jam? Skip Plate 4. Four plates still too much? Start with breakfast and combine both light and heavy HVIs into one stellar course for Plate 2. Your goal should be to eat as much as possible while getting as much value as you possibly can. If this sounds too gluttonous for you, why did you bother reading this far in a post about brunch buffet rules?
First Plate
Stock up on all of the Light HVIs: your shrimp, your crab legs, your sushi, your shellfish of any sort. If it’s fresh and expensive, it goes on your plate. High-end cheeses are attractive here, but be careful. They may fill you up more than you’d prefer. Personally, I go crazy on the smoked salmon first — at least $20 worth.
Second Plate
Plate 2 is great for all of the breakfast foods you want but never want to make: Belgian waffles piled high with whipped cream, eggs benedict, and crepes are all fair game here. Don’t go nuts, though, because you won’t have room for the most important plate: Plate 3.
Third Plate
You’ve already laid a solid foundation and at least a third of your stomach space is already gone. Now it’s time to dive into the Heavy HVIs. A slice of prime rib on a slice of ham on a slice of turkey creates a high-value deconstructed spin on turducken (more of a turbeefam, really). Poached salmon works here as does any amount of breakfast meats. If you’re bringing dessert into the fold early, now’s your chance to hit it. You know what the expensive stuff is. This is your time to pull out all of the stops.
Fourth Plate
Seconds. If you still have room, your fourth plate is meant for your greatest hits. Mix and match the highlights of the meal here and enjoy.
Fifth Plate
Dessert. If you didn’t pull dessert into the rotation earlier, this is the time to do it. Instead of going for six or seven little desserts, find one or two that really look good and grab multiple portions. Who needs a tiny creme brulee when you can have three mini-slices of pecan pie that add up to one whole piece?
By following these brunch buffet rules, you will soon become a Brunch Buffet Ninja. Skilled in the ways of the value warrior, you will feel a sense of brunch enjoyment you have never previously known. Go forth, young ninja, and eat well.
Very entertaining! I will concede that you are indeed Master of the Buffet. Now, please tell us, just WHAT IS that last food item?? (Looks like Sausage a la mode.)
Those are eggs benedicts made with Portuguese sausage down in Hawaii.