Perceptive diners increasingly want to enjoy something that they can share with others, and signature dishes give consumers that kind of unique experience. A signature dish can mean many different things. Classic dishes allow people to connect with their roots and the history of the regions where they live or travel. Often, a restaurant’s signature dish is a special modified version of a popular dish. By promoting signature dishes or beverages, restaurateurs can take advantage of these customer desires and preferences drawing in committed fans of particular dishes, cuisines and styles of cooking.
People show tremendous loyalty and enthusiasm for their favorite foods, and signature foods or dishes are the culinary equivalent of an author finding his or her niche or an artist finding a unique style of self-expression. In fact, most restaurant franchises started operations based partly on the culinary appeal of some signature dishes, styles of cooking, service or plating presentations.
Signature dishes might include appetizers, soups, salads, streaks, entrées or desserts, and cooking methods range from simple and healthy to complicated dishes like cassoulet that take several days to prepare. In New York, the Waldorf salad and Delmonico steak became inextricably linked to the Waldorf-Astoria hotel and Delmonico’s restaurant in lower Manhattan, and the foods shared fame with the establishments that served them, which has lasted since the 19th century.
Regional favorites include barbecue dishes, Cajun and Creole specialties, crab cakes, chili, barbecue ribs, muffuletta sandwiches, Philly cheese steaks, Louisiana gumbo, pastrami sandwiches and spectacular desserts such as baked Alaska, chocolate soufflé, crêpes Suzette and croquembouche.
Celebrity chefs often gain notoriety based on their interpretations of signature menu items:
Restaurant signature dishes can serve as tourist attractions and sources of civic. Commander’s Palace in New Orleans has produced many celebrity chefs, such as Paul Prudhomme, Emeril Lagasse and Tory McPhail, and signature dishes that include turtle soup with sherry, bread pudding soufflé, Parmesan-crusted oysters and pecan-crusted Gulf fish.
The important things about signature dishes is that they capture the imagination of aficionados who influence other people to visit restaurants including those who have little interest in the signature dishes.
Restaurants often need to change their menus and foods to keep pace with culinary trends, but signature dishes have the power to serve as anchors for loyal customers and evolve to reflect new trends, healthier eating habits and the techniques and personalities of new head chefs.