"Having been to Europe and working and traveling there, the restaurants my wife and I remember were always off the beaten trail restaurants. So I tried to seek a little 'off the beaten trail,' but cool area"
About this Quote
There is a whole worldview packed into that clunky little phrase, "off the beaten trail, but cool". Todd English is performing a familiar celebrity-foodie identity: the cosmopolitan traveler who rejects the obvious while still needing the reassurance of taste and status. He frames Europe not as a place with its own culinary ecosystems, but as a proving ground for authenticity points. The remembered meals aren’t tied to a city, a cook, or a tradition; they’re tied to a posture - we found the secret spot.
The intent is practical and brand-minded. English is explaining how he scouts: avoid tourist traps, chase the local joint, bottle that discovery and reproduce it elsewhere. But the subtext is the tightrope every celebrity restaurateur walks. "Off the beaten trail" signals grit, intimacy, insider access. "Cool area" quietly re-centers comfort, safety, and buzz. It’s not anti-mainstream so much as a curated version of it, the kind of “hidden gem” that’s hidden until an influential person puts it on a menu or in a guide.
Context matters: by the time chefs become celebrities, travel stories turn into marketing language. The phrase reads like a pitch meeting note - authenticity with an escape hatch. It’s also a snapshot of how food culture commodifies discovery: the desire to eat like a local, filtered through a traveler’s need to feel singular, and a brand’s need to scale that feeling.
The intent is practical and brand-minded. English is explaining how he scouts: avoid tourist traps, chase the local joint, bottle that discovery and reproduce it elsewhere. But the subtext is the tightrope every celebrity restaurateur walks. "Off the beaten trail" signals grit, intimacy, insider access. "Cool area" quietly re-centers comfort, safety, and buzz. It’s not anti-mainstream so much as a curated version of it, the kind of “hidden gem” that’s hidden until an influential person puts it on a menu or in a guide.
Context matters: by the time chefs become celebrities, travel stories turn into marketing language. The phrase reads like a pitch meeting note - authenticity with an escape hatch. It’s also a snapshot of how food culture commodifies discovery: the desire to eat like a local, filtered through a traveler’s need to feel singular, and a brand’s need to scale that feeling.
Quote Details
| Topic | Travel |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
More Quotes by Todd
Add to List





