economie

I went to a food festival that served elevated versions of chain restaurant menu items. Here’s everything I ate.

The country-fried steak was a touch chewy.

The first menu item I tried at the festival ended up being my least favorite. The sandwich featured a miniature country-fried steak and seasoned gravy sandwiched between a plain biscuit.

This item was a spin on Cracker Barrel’s biscuits and gravy and country-fried steak, which are permanent fixtures on its menu.

The steak was well-fried, but the gravy was a little congealed by the time it got to me.
The lobster biscuit was the only VIP-exclusive menu item at the event.

Only those holding a VIP ticket had access to this menu item, which was being passed around in the sectioned-off VIP area. However, I wasn’t quite sure that this single menu item made the more expensive ticket worth it.

I personally thought the texture of the poached lobster was a little rubbery.
The Elote dog was topped with corn and cotija cheese.

Next up was the Elote dog from Hot Dog on a Stick, a chain that specializes in gourmet corndogs.

I’m admittedly a huge fan of Elote, so I was intrigued to try this corndog drizzled with chamoy and lime crema and topped with cotija cheese, charred roasted corn, and cilantro.

Biting in, this was the most flavorful corndog I’ve probably ever had.
The everything bagel was perfectly fluffy but had the right amount of tear.

It wouldn’t be a New York food festival without some bagels and schmear, and Pop-Up Bagels certainly impressed me with theirs.

They offered two different flavor variations: an everything bagel with pizza schmear, which was the one I got, and a salted bagel with cheesecake-flavored schmear.

This menu item took the idea of a “pizza bagel” to a whole other level.
The pumpkin spice doughnut had a subtle flavor.

This was one of the few sweet options available at the festival. It was a perfect choice for early autumn in New York, so I was excited to try this variation on Krispy Kreme’s classic glazed doughnut.

The doughnut was fluffy and had a subtle pumpkin spice flavor.
I got the opportunity to try a miniature version of Red Robin’s newest burger.

The only burger I tried during the day was a take on the Jalapeño Heatwave, the newest burger added to Red Robin’s menu.

The burger I tried varies slightly from the one you’ll find in restaurants but has the same flavor profile.

The ChainFest version came with an American wagyu beef patty seasoned with umami powder, hatch chili and avocado salsa, caramelized onions, jalapeño sofrito, pepper-jack cheese, and chicken-fried jalapeños on a potato-brioche bun. The mini burger also came with crispy onion rings.

I thought this burger was packed with flavor.
The hot dog came smothered with potato chips.

My third-favorite item I tried was the “Haute Dog” from Portillo’s, a hot-dog chain with locations in the Midwest and on the West Coast.

Inspired by a Chicago dog, the hot dog came with mustard, onions, relish, pickles, tomato, sport peppers, celery salt, cheese sauce, and potato chips.

This hot dog really impressed me. I loved the crunch of the potato chips.
I tried the Blazing Bourbon Chicken, a new menu item recently added at Panda Express.

This was the last menu item of the day that I ate, but that didn’t stop me from enjoying it.

The Blazing Bourbon Chicken is one of the newest additions to the Panda Express menu and came with green peppers, onions, and sesame seeds.

The chicken was sticky and sweet, with a slight kick.
The tender and waffle from KFC appeared to be the most popular item at ChainFest.

A play on chicken and waffles, this was by far the festival’s most popular menu item, judging by the seemingly mile-long line that stretched in front of the KFC booth all day.

The dish came with KFC’s newest menu item, the original recipe tenders, which will launch nationwide on October 14, a ChainFest-exclusive potato waffle, and a choice of sauce.

I tried the chicken tender and waffle with KFC’s new Comeback Sauce and a spicy mango sauce.
The chicken tender was juicy and paired well with the sauces.

This menu item had me seriously excited about the chain’s new chicken tenders launching next month.

It was juicy on the inside but perfectly crispy and seasoned on the outside — the hallmark of a truly great chicken tender. The Comeback Sauce, which is also coming to KFC menus soon, was tangy and the perfect complement to the chicken and waffle.

The waffle, which I wished was coming to menus, was light and fluffy and provided the perfect vehicle for soaking up the extra sauce. If I had had more room in my stomach, I definitely would have gone back for seconds — and maybe even thirds — of this menu item.