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Chain Food Showdown: The Best & Worst Potato Skins At America's Casual Dining Restaurants

HuffPost Food recently went on a tour de force of some of America's major casual dining chains. Regardless of your taste in cuisine, chances are you've found yourself at a casual dining restaurant before, whether one is your go-to Friday night spot or a road trip-only meal. These national chains pride themselves on creating a menu that can appeal to a wide variety of eaters. But are these calorie-heavy appetizers worth it? We pitted eight appetizers from eight casual dining chains against each other to find out. Week 4: Potato Skins.

What originally turned us on to evaluating the most common fare at the biggest restaurant chains was a surface level understanding of how many major casual dining restaurants work. In some of these chains, food is often pre-prepared in a central kitchen, and then frozen to be shipped and re-heated across the country. We read fascinating tales of this process, such as the section on Applebee's in Tracie McMillan's "The American Way Of Eating" or the discussion of Chili's in David Kessler's "The End Of Overeating."

Perhaps the viral review of an Olive Garden in Grand Forks, North Dakota proved just how much casual dining can resonate with the American audience.

In our evaluation of American casual dining food, we chose eight prominent chains that serve similar American fare across the country: Applebee's, The Cheesecake Factory, Chili's, Hard Rock Cafe, Planet Hollywood, Red Lobster, Ruby Tuesday and T.G.I. Friday's. Although locations and number of outlets vary, we felt that all eight epitomized the casual dining experience, perhaps best evidenced by the amount of dish overlap on all menus. In choosing which dishes to evaluate, we stuck to what we deemed the most sought-after appetizers.

As we kept eating our way through the various menus, we were surprised by the huge range across the food categories. While certain chains overall performed better than others, the more appropriate comparison was really about single dishes, rather than a restaurant as a whole. All spinach dips are not created equal.

For our fourth installment, we examined potato skins. A seemingly simple appetizer to make, potato skins proved difficult to execute well. It should be easy -- use decent potatoes, decent cheese, decent bacon and make sure to add a bit of salt. But when you try to cut corners and go for subpar ingredients, the skins suffer.

Previous showdowns
Week 1: Buffalo Wings

Week 2: Nachos

Week 3: Mozzarella Sticks

Check out the results below (high score: 5, low score: 1), and check back next week for Chain Food Showdown, Vol. 5: French Fries.

2012-06-19-0521appetizers_4.jpg

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  • LAST PLACE: Planet Hollywood, 2.57

    "These are potato wedges, not skins. I miss the crispy skin flavor." "Not skins but good as potatoes." "Potato-heavy, but par for the course." "Undercooked. Too firm." "A wedge smothered in cheese. I loved it." "Thoroughly unpleasant." "Too much potato flesh."

  • 3rd Place: TGI Friday's, 2.7

    "Bland and starchy." "Lacking salt/flavor. Needs more bacon/cheese." "Bland, soft and disappointing." "Not crisp enough but potato had a nice texture and wasn't dried out. Nice amount of bacon/cheese." "Bland. Needs salt."

  • 2nd Place: Hard Rock Cafe, 3.8

    "Crispy bacon, sizeable, good amount of potato." "Totally average." "Could be crunchier, but otherwise enjoyable." "Delicious with plenty of bacon."

  • WINNER: Chili's, 4.4

    "Very greasy, not a whole lot of taste. Could have used a bit more salt." "A little greasy. Nice soft potato flesh and a nice balance of toppings." "Best potato skins out there. They actually taste like potatoes, are crispy/creamy and have just the right amount of cheese and bacon topping." "Like potato skins should be." "Perfect."

Editor's Note: We dined at all chains anonymously -- no restaurant knew that we were evaluating the cuisine. The chains we visited were all located in the New York metro area.

FOLLOW FOOD

HuffPost Food recently went on a tour de force of some of America's major casual dining chains. Regardless of your taste in cuisine, chances are you've found yourself at a casual dining restaurant bef...
HuffPost Food recently went on a tour de force of some of America's major casual dining chains. Regardless of your taste in cuisine, chances are you've found yourself at a casual dining restaurant bef...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thaddeus Jude
Veteran of Occupy An Office Chair
12:57 PM on 06/25/2012
I just read an article two weeks ago on HuffPost about how Fridays had amazing potato skins. Now they're not recommended? Well, okay then...
03:48 PM on 06/24/2012
there use to be a company that made frozen potato skins you got a box full of them not like the tgi fridays ones that have the bacon and cheese already on them but you only got a few .these you added your own cheese and bacon bits but you got a good amount two boxes of them was enough for my whole family of five and the best part was you didn't have some with only a small amount of one thing or the other, but the company either stopped making them or they went out of business or something i miss them cause i love potato skins but since i shouldn't eat them any ways and now that they are so expensive i seldom do i guess they did me a favor . yeah right tgi fridays just wants to get rich, same as the rest of these companies making food cost almost a whole weeks pay or even two weeks a month. and try eating healthy it costs more than eating non healthy. although i can't remember the last time i had a steak that i didn't have to marinate for a day or two to be able to chew it, i think it was either whinnying or mooing before i stuck it in the marinade
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03:02 PM on 06/24/2012
Where have these people been? The comments were for the most part "needs more salt." The restaurant associatio has reduced the amount of salt in their dishes to meet the recommendation of the Heart Association for healthy eating. Then, there is the fact that most restaurants have salt/pepper on each table. You want more salt? Add it.

Kudos to the restaurant association for making this important change to their dishes.. So many more people are now able to eat out..

Then there is pictured a dish of potato skins loaded with bacon and cheese. The "expert" taster commented "needs more bacon and cheese." Then another picture, with a higher rating,. shows potato skins with very little bacon and cheese. Consider the source.
gasmanrobe
such is america
02:29 PM on 06/24/2012
ye old beef and ale house on germantown pike and joshua road in plymouth township pennslvania has the best potato skins to die for.all about it is perfect but you must order there roast beef sandwich which is carved off the roast not some deli beef slices.this place has been packing it since time memorial.if you are ever near phila this place is worth the drive.only ten minuets from chestnut hill in philadelphia .
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dmoongo
Tempus Edax Rerum
02:10 PM on 06/24/2012
If you can't make better potato skins at home than any restaurant, sell your oven.
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thetxsndn
Man Plans. God laughs.
04:04 PM on 06/24/2012
AMEN Dmoongo ! They're always better at home :)
02:00 PM on 06/24/2012
Somebody mentioned Max & Irma's. That chain has different food at every location. Trouble with these places is that they don't have chefs, they have minumum wage worker who re-heat processed food. I'm going to make my own potato skins today and not add bacon because I don't eat meat! Why would they say that the skins lack salt? The cheese has more than enough salt!
01:55 PM on 06/24/2012
I know there are a lot of people posting here about how we should not be eating this food and how bad it is for us. Well, I just have to say that if you are eating the majority of your meals at home from freshly prepared food then a little treat now and then is going to do you no harm. I have never had any of these items so I have no idea what any of them taste like. I might want to try one out now that it looks like Chili's has received high marks for flavour. Now to find out where a Chili's is :) Or better yet, I might just make them at home and save myself the trip and expense.
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03:12 PM on 06/24/2012
Bake as many potatoes as you need, Cut the potato in half, scoop most of the potato from the skins, leaving just enough to hold the skins and support the handling in loading the potato skin. Add small slices of green onion, cheese of your choice, and, there is veggie bacon available, usually in the organic section of your super market. Heat this bacon and crumble over the skins. A couple dashes of your favorite hot sauce. Put in the oven and bake until the cheese is melted. Home made goodness. Enjoy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whitechicuva
04:36 PM on 06/24/2012
youcejq, sounds yummy, tks. and will!
04:51 PM on 06/24/2012
Oh, thank you! I will have to try that tonight :)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mefrank01
01:34 PM on 06/24/2012
why are people eating bacon??? the food that it is featured w/is all too common. the pork industry apparently has spent a lot of $$ w/recipes and lobbying restaurants and chefs to use bacon on everything. pork is the worst food. does anyone still wonder why we have major health issues in this country?? educate thyself!!
02:09 PM on 06/24/2012
I've eaten fried bacon all of my life. Same goes for pork chops and pork roast. My mother used bacon grease for frying potatoes and meat. We always had meat, potatoes, vegetable (fresh, not canned) for dinner, our main meal. Breakfast was eggs, biscuits and bacon or ham. Most meat was bartered, not packaged (that is we traded vegetables for meat). Eggs were from laying hens, and the vegetables from the garden. Mom bought flour in 25-pound sacks and made her own bread and biscuits. We had homemade fudge and fresh baked fruit pies. Now, I am 87 and in relatively good health for my age and wear and tear. It's always amused me, these various lobbyists and do-gooders, all vying for our attention, and saying this, that or the other thing is bad for our health. When I was young, we played outdoors, and didn't sit on the couch playing video games and getting fat. Our ice cream was home churned, and we ate buttered popcorn at the movie and cotton candy at carnivals. In my opinion, it's lack of exercise, not pork or bacon, that contributes most to the ever-growing obesity and health crisis.
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03:22 PM on 06/24/2012
Ab so lutely! My husband is in his early 80s and I in the mid 70s are the healthest people we know. We grew up eating just as you describe in your post. I am the only person I know, in my age group, who still cooks, as in from scratch, fresh vegatables and fruit.

I agree with you, the problem with most of the population today is too little exercise. Doesn't require name brand clothing. Cleaning one's house, mowing the lawn, and ironing clothes are good ways to get exercise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deputy85
Rightwing,retired n doing great
04:10 PM on 06/24/2012
Maybe someday as i know you hope, there will be a official food police dept, to help all us poor stupid people eat correctly and only what is good for us, maybe you can get a job and a badge,,
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whitechicuva
04:43 PM on 06/24/2012
deputy85, with your attitude, you won't be keeping that job, nor badge, for long. LOL..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hitchslap2
Reason, always. Faith, never.
12:55 PM on 06/24/2012
Pour some warm bacon grease into a coffee can. The next day, it will be a thick, white, waxy mass. This is what happens inside your arteries when you eat potato skins, pizza, chips, fried foods in general...

Just saying.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mefrank01
01:35 PM on 06/24/2012
you are absolutely correct
01:58 PM on 06/24/2012
That was my grandmother's go to oil, bacon grease. She kept that coffee can under the counter and used it for frying everything :) Her eggs and hash browns were the best.
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scificarolinaguy
Disabled veteran, gay, Christian, American
12:42 PM on 06/24/2012
Great for NYC area. Now try evaluating those same chains in smaller towns. The difference will turn your 'results' topsy-turvey.
02:12 PM on 06/24/2012
Also, not all of the restaurats evaluated had the potato skins, so it does shrink the results, making the assessment almost useless.

I again ask: From where comes the potato skins? Don't say "potato," for my question is for the skin to be filled, it must first be emptied of the potatoe flesh. So, who empties them and at what point, and where goes the potato inards?
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03:32 PM on 06/24/2012
The kitchen most likely uses potatoes that are baked along with those that are baked for the night's menu. They then cut abaked potato in half, use a spoon, scoop out most of the potato, toss that, and lay the halves of the potato on an oven proof container, add the fillings, put it in the oven to melt the cheese, take it out, put it on a plate and serve it to the table ordering the potato skins.
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12:41 PM on 06/24/2012
All the restaurants that are listed above serve a plate of food enough for two or three people. More, MORE, MORE is not always best.
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mefrank01
01:36 PM on 06/24/2012
not always?? how about never best. many people cannot wait to stuff their guts - it used to be that one noticed obese people in airports. now the fat guts are everywhere. but of course we do not need a health care system.
02:16 PM on 06/24/2012
Not as much as we need to shut down those computers, smart phones, iPads, etc. and get out there and actually experience the world. Kids need to go outside and play, not sit in their rooms or on their couches playing video games and/or chatting. Exercise is great way of combatting a lot of physical problems, including obesity, and exercise needs not be sits up, time at the gym, push ups, running the track, etc. It can be walking to the store instead of driving; taking a stroll around the neighborhood. Parking the longest distance from a store instead of impatiently waiting for the closest parking slot. Taking the stairs instead of the escalator or elevator. You'd be surprised at what getting into those kinds of habits will do for your overall health.
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05:28 PM on 06/24/2012
I think you can eat but just take one small helping of everything and stop. I have been
the same weight since I was a teenager and can still wear same size.
12:36 PM on 06/24/2012
Like most people posting here, I like fully loaded potato skins, but my question has always been this: How are the potato skins obtained? Do the restaurants carefully cut out all of the meat of the raw potatoes and then roast the skins? Or do they bake the entire potatoe first, carve out the inwards, and fill it with the desired toppings? Or (gag worse here) do they simply scrape left-over baked potatoes off plates, and recycle the potato skin? (That last one is not serious, folks!) So how is it that only the potatoe skin is used, and where is the rest of the potato? (At home, I do recycle, but then it's my own potato, so no harm, no foul.)
02:47 PM on 06/24/2012
I work in a Chili's, the skins come in frozen in a box already hulled. We just fry them, put some mixed cheese, bacon, and diced scallions on them and put them up and the melter, then serve them, nothing special.
02:58 PM on 06/24/2012
Thanks for the information. Regardless of the way they are prepared, they are delicious. But your answer still begs the question: How are potato skins emptied, and what happens to the rest of the potato? Your answer is qualified to only Chili's, although the other restaurants may do the same.
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sdgrrl
Stay independent and always question your leaders.
03:12 PM on 06/25/2012
I used to work for Black Angus. They made them fresh, but they were way too greasy.
06:02 PM on 06/25/2012
By the way, I like your subheading under your name. Way to go!
Did Black Angus deep fry the potato skins, and was that why they were greasy?
My wife uses skins from potatoes baked the night before, loads them with the cheese and bacon, zaps them in the microwaves, adds the sour cream and chives (usually on the side), then we butter them to taste and dump on the sour cream and chives. Heaven! Never greasy that way.
12:04 PM on 06/24/2012
The best chain restaurant potato skins are the ones you like the least and won't order. I can't believe we are so obsessed with eating crap that will kill us before we collect a Social Security check. Eat a salad for goodness sake and skip the ranch dressing. It's like pouring cholesterol right into your arteries. By the way, most Americans could skip a meal or two or more during the week and, unless they are already suffering from preventable Type II diabetes, they won't die from starvation. Take a daily walk with a friend; bring a bottle of water. Jump on a scale a month later. You'll likely be thrilled.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mefrank01
01:37 PM on 06/24/2012
could not agree w/you more
11:28 AM on 06/24/2012
How can you rate wings and not include Buffalo Wild Wings? That makes no sense.
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03:34 PM on 06/24/2012
They probably do not have those in NY.
04:05 PM on 06/24/2012
Ah, but they do.
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thetxsndn
Man Plans. God laughs.
04:08 PM on 06/24/2012
Wing Stop is pretty dang good too.
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07:59 PM on 06/24/2012
How can wings and sauce be anything but good. No matter where they are eaten.
11:24 AM on 06/24/2012
Whoever did this evaluation has thier taste in thier rear. They said most of them needed more salt. Most food in restaurants has too much salt. You can always add salt but you cannot remove the excess salt the cook puts on the food.