Close Menu
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
    • Home
    • News
      • Local
      • State
      • National
      • World
      • HBCUs
    • Events
    • Directories
    • Weather
    • Traffic
    • Jobs
    • Sports
    • Politics
    • Lifestyle
      • Faith
      • Senior Living
      • Health
      • Travel
      • Beauty
      • Fashion
      • Food
      • Art & Literature
    • Business
      • Real Estate
      • Entertainment
      • Investing
      • Education
    • Guides
      • Summer Camp Guide
      • Juneteenth Guide
      • Black History Savannah
      • MLK Guide Savannah
    We're Social
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • YouTube

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Trending
    • New Strikes on Ships in Strait of Hormuz Test U.S.-Iran Cease-Fire
    • Cristiano Ronaldo: Portugal captain meets natural end with national team and goes down as best player to never win World Cup | Football News
    • How To Upgrade All Moonlight Peaks Tools
    • Samsung Made More Profit Last Quarter Than the Last Two Years Combined
    • Sweet & Smoky Grilled Corn Ribs Recipe
    • Why food TV keeps going undercover
    • The Best Black Paris Tours, Depending On What Kind Of Paris You Want To See
    • Cardinals, cake and corndogs: Inside a complicated Vatican July 4
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Login
    Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
    Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
    Home » Why food TV keeps going undercover
    Food

    Why food TV keeps going undercover

    Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldJuly 7, 20265 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Food TV loves disguises (Deagreez / Getty Images)
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Food & Beverage News: Insights, Safety, and Dining Trends

    Key takeaways
    • For Ruth Reichl, disguises tested hospitality; modern TV treats them as spectacle, promising a theatrical reveal.
    • Gordon Ramsay exemplifies the trope, using prosthetics to expose the gap between a restaurant’s self-image and diners’ realities.
    • Restaurants are immersive theater, with uniforms and choreography; undercover work reveals whether hospitality survives anonymity, as Le Cirque showed.

    While perusing Food Network’s summer lineup — a familiar parade of seasonal returns like “The Great Food Truck Race” and brand extensions like “Guy’s Grocery Games: Global Games” — I found myself lingering over one new arrival in particular: “Kitchen Undercover.”

    The series, according to press materials, is “a high-stakes, sneak-attack restaurant rescue” led by chef Antonia Lofaso and sous-chef Nestor Milian, who will “go full undercover, slipping into failing restaurants that are one more bad review away from total collapse.” Milian, we are told, will serve as the man on the inside, embedding himself with the staff, while Lofaso monitors the operation from an off-site command center — a phrase that suggests, thrillingly, less sauté station than Situation Room.

    Eventually, once the real reason customers aren’t returning has been revealed, Lofaso will “storm in to shake things up, call out the chaos and whip these teams into shape.”

    If the premise sounds familiar, it is because food television has long cherished the notion that the truth of a restaurant can only be accessed by subterfuge. Chefs, it seems, yearn for disguises. Or, at the very least, the people who produce shows about chefs do.

    I’ll admit: I have a soft spot for the whole enterprise.

    In part, that is because, if you squint, you can see its lineage in old-school food criticism. I think of Ruth Reichl’s “Garlic and Sapphires: The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise,” her account of her tenure as restaurant critic for the New York Times in the nineteen-nineties.

    Because Reichl’s face had become familiar within the restaurant industry — kitchens were known to post her photograph in hopes of ensuring the critic received suitably royal treatment — she began dining undercover, developing a full repertory of alternate selves. There was Molly Hollis, a middle-aged, Midwestern former schoolteacher whose creation required body padding and a wig; a flamboyant redhead; a nearly invisible elderly woman; and, most uncannily, Reichl’s own mother.

    In our current everyone-with-a-phone-is-a-critic culture, this may sound like a particular flavor of zany. But Reichl’s disguises were not merely bits. They were a way of asking whether hospitality could survive anonymity — or whether the quality of a restaurant changed the moment power entered the dining room. (Le Cirque, infamously, lost its fourth star after Reichl dined there in disguise and found that, without the glow of recognition, the room dimmed considerably.)


    Want more great food writing and recipes? Sign up for Salon’s free food newsletter, The Bite.


    Still, the idea of using light spycraft to more honestly assess a plate of pasta has such obvious dramatic pull that it makes sense it eventually migrated to food television. Consider Gordon Ramsay’s “24 Hours to Hell and Back,” in which the chef donned full prosthetics and makeup to trick restaurant staff into treating him like an ordinary customer. Across the show’s two-season run, Ramsay appeared as, among other things, a Philadelphia Flyers fan, a “Mrs. Doubtfire”-style grandmother and a ghastly, melted-looking pilot — images that have since enjoyed a second life online as exactly the sort of meme you would expect.

    “Gordon Ramsay’s Secret Service,” a follow-up series that debuted in 2025, pushed the premise further still: undercover helpers, surveillance, insiders and Ramsay comparing the operation to going “full on MI6” with restaurants.

    It is all a bit schlocky — which can be fun, depending on your bent — but the increasingly elaborate machinations reveal something useful. The disguise has changed purpose. For Reichl, the costume helped the critic disappear. For modern food television, the costume is part of the spectacle. The audience knows there will eventually be a reveal. The pleasure is not anonymity itself; it is waiting for the mask to come off.

    That is when the episode really begins.

    Of course, there is something absurd about celebrity chefs needing fake mustaches, prosthetics or entire undercover personas to determine that a restaurant is poorly run. A walk-in full of expired chicken (why is it always chicken?) and a dining room drained of morale do not usually require MI6. But the costume gives the format permission to become playful, campy and theatrical, which may be why it feels so at home in restaurant television. A restaurant, after all, is already a kind of immersive theater.

    There is a front of house and a back of house. There are costumes, in the form of uniforms, and choreography, in the navigation of a packed dining room. There are performances of warmth, competence, abundance and ease. And, beneath all of it, there is the natural suspicion that those performances may change depending on the audience. Is there one version of the restaurant that appears when a V.I.P. walks in, and another when nobody important seems to be watching?

    The disguise, then, offers television a clean dramatic promise:

    We are going to find out what this place is really like.

    It remains to be seen whether “Kitchen Undercover” will rely on prosthetics, fake mustaches or merely the subtler costume of the unrecognized employee. But the title alone places it within a deliciously strange lineage of food television that keeps searching for ways to make the invisible visible: service, ego, passion, resentment and, most of all, the tiny, damning distance between what a restaurant believes it is offering and what a customer actually receives.


    Read the full article from the original source


    Related Posts

    • FAMU Finalist Encounters Reaction Over DeSantis Ties, Absence of Experience
    • White Akron Fire Captain Takes Legal Action Against After Black Female Promoted
    • UNC states Costs Belichick’s sweetheart still welcome at institution regardless of records|University football
    • What Happens When Prostitutes Marry Their Johns, Who Are Famous Men
    • Ultimate Summer Cookout Menu: 50+ Crowd-Pleasing BBQ Recipes, Side Dishes + Desserts
    • Atlanta Leaders Support Mayor’s Decision To Forgo Airport Funding
    • Grocery chain recalls tuna salad because of contamination with Listeria monocytogenes
    • Outbreak investigation report from FDA fails to provide crucial information
    Consumer Food Trends Culinary News Dining Trends Farm to Table Fast Food News FDA Food Updates Food and Beverage Food Industry Trends Food Manufacturing Food Marketing Food News Food Recalls Food Regulation Food Safety Global Food Industry Grocery Industry Health and Nutrition New Food Products Restaurant Industry Sustainable Food
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Savannah Herald
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Food July 7, 2026

    Sweet & Smoky Grilled Corn Ribs Recipe

    Food July 6, 2026

    Easy Mango Agua Fresca – Kenneth Temple

    Food July 5, 2026

    Vegan Sourdough Cinnamon Rolls | Jessica in the Kitchen

    Food July 5, 2026

    Food Exec Brief: USMCA Enters Annual Reviews, Big Egg Settles, and AI Governance Gets Urgent

    Food July 4, 2026

    Mashed Potatoes with Cheese – Dr. Davinah’s Eats

    Food July 3, 2026

    Big Summer Salad with Grilled Peaches and Strawberry Vinaigrette

    Comments are closed.

    Don't Miss
    Gaming November 11, 2025By Savannah Herald014 Mins Read

    Best laptops for college students 2025: 7 picks for study and play

    November 11, 2025

    Game On: Latest in Gaming News, Reviews & Industry Buzz Picking out a laptop for…

    Inside the 15,500 malicious domains secretly using ad trackers to push AI investment scams across the web

    May 7, 2026

    Slow Stove Teriyaki Poultry – Fit Slow Stove Queen

    December 21, 2025

    SCCPSS Recruiter Recognized Nationally by AASPA for Excellence in Human Resources

    June 28, 2026

    Dodgers win electrifies LACMA’s starry Art + Film gala with Cynthia Erivo, George Lucas

    November 11, 2025
    Archives
    • July 2026
    • June 2026
    • May 2026
    • April 2026
    • March 2026
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    Categories
    • Art & Literature
    • Beauty
    • Black History
    • Business
    • Climate
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Entertainment
    • Faith
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Gaming
    • Georgia Politics
    • HBCUs
    • Health
    • Health Inspections
    • Investing
    • Lifestyle
    • Local
    • Lowcountry News
    • National
    • National Opinion
    • News
    • Politics
    • Real Estate
    • Senior Living
    • Sports
    • State
    • Tech
    • Traffic
    • Transportation
    • Travel
    • World
    Savannah Herald Newsletter

    Subscribe to Updates

    A round up interesting pic’s, post and articles in the C-Port and around the world.

    About Us
    About Us

    The Savannah Herald is your trusted source for the pulse of Coastal Georgia and the Low County of South Carolina. We're committed to delivering timely news that resonates with the African American community.

    From local politics to business developments, we're here to keep you informed and engaged. Our mission is to amplify the voices and stories that matter, shining a light on our collective experiences and achievements.
    We cover:
    🏛️ Politics
    💼 Business
    🎭 Entertainment
    🏀 Sports
    🩺 Health
    💻 Technology
    Savannah Herald: Savannah's Black Voice 💪🏾

    Our Picks

    NFL Pro Bowler takes ambassador role at HBCU program

    May 20, 2026

    Health Departments Offer Free Testing Events in April for STI Awareness Month

    June 9, 2026

    Travel and Beauty Expert Morgan Owens Shares What Your Jet-Setting Friends Really Want This Holiday Season

    November 25, 2025

    This Earth Day, Humanity Is Failing Our “First Commandment”

    April 21, 2026

    Some Women Are Obsessively Testing Their Vaginas to Optimize Them

    May 12, 2026
    Categories
    • Art & Literature
    • Beauty
    • Black History
    • Business
    • Climate
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Entertainment
    • Faith
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Gaming
    • Georgia Politics
    • HBCUs
    • Health
    • Health Inspections
    • Investing
    • Lifestyle
    • Local
    • Lowcountry News
    • National
    • National Opinion
    • News
    • Politics
    • Real Estate
    • Senior Living
    • Sports
    • State
    • Tech
    • Traffic
    • Transportation
    • Travel
    • World
    Copyright © 2002-2026 Savannahherald.com All Rights Reserved. A Veteran-Owned Business

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Manage Consent
    To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    • Manage options
    • Manage services
    • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
    • Read more about these purposes
    View preferences
    • {title}
    • {title}
    • {title}
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.

    Sign In or Register

    Welcome Back!

    Login below or Register Now.

    Lost password?

    Register Now!

    Already registered? Login.

    A password will be e-mailed to you.