Posted on 09/12/2015 7:55:48 AM PDT by don-o
Often on my day off, before a morning motorcycle ride in the mountains, I treat myself to breakfast at a Southern American institution: Waffle House.
Waffle Houses are not luxurious. The box-like buildings are designed for cheerful efficiency, and cheerfully efficient they are. As soon as you walk through the door the staff call out a cheerful, Good morning! The pleasantries continue as you are seated and a drink is immediately placed before you. A moment later the waitress is ready to advise you or take your order. Shes well groomed, clean and friendly. Shes talkative without being a bore and easy-going without being slack.
The menu is also cheerful and efficient. The All Star Special is the best value. You get two eggs as you like them, grits (this is South Carolina) or hash browns (if youre a Yankee), bacon or sausage, toast, coffee and a waffle, and the mug of coffee has no bottom.
I like to sit at the counter and watch the team at work. They are men and women, young, middle-aged and almost retired. They are African American, Hispanic, and white, and they are all working together as a team, joking and chatting. The waitresses shout out the orders in diner lingo, while the chefs are busy slapping bacon on the griddle, scrambling eggs, watching the hash browns, and flipping the sausages. One team member preps and finishes the plates, another is busy bussing tables, sweeping the floor and loading the dishwasher. Three girls are waiting tables. A manager circulates to talk to customers and keep an eye on the whole operation cheerfully, efficiently and 24/7.
Unit_1_SepiaWaffle House is sixty years old this month. The first restaurant opened on Labor Day weekend in 1955 in Avondale Estates, Georgia. That restaurant was conceived and founded by Joe Rogers Sr. and Tom Forkner, who both continue to own a majority of the company. Rogerss concept was to combine the speed of fast food with table service with around-the-clock availability. He told Forkner, You build a restaurant, and Ill show you how to run it.
After opening a fourth restaurant in 1960, the company began franchising its restaurants and slowly grew to twenty-seven stores by the late 1960s. There are now over 2,000 Waffle Houses in twenty-five states, and as my local manager told me, They keep building a new one every day!
Writing about Southern culture Jim Ridley observes:
The Waffle House is everywhere in the South. It has inspired country songs, comedy routines, loving editorials, a scene in the movie Tin Cup, and even web sites and Internet newsgroups that breathlessly post late-breaking developments. With more than 1700 locations in 25 states, as far north as Ohio and as far west as Arizona, Waffle House is cherished by thousands of diners. Regular customers speak of its employees, its customs, and its food with near reverence. Touring musicians have been known to eat five meals a week there. Yet the Waffle House is so pervasive, it is invisible. It does not advertise; it hides in plain sight.
Whats the real secret of Waffle House success? No doubt the usual American mix of customer service, good value, military precision, and entrepreneurial genius, but behind it all some truly American values are being lived out. Despite being a national chain, Waffle House manages to create a local feel. One morning over breakfast I found myself seated next to a local African-American pastor and we started swapping ministry stories about our flocks. Another morning I found my bill had been covered by a local Catholic businessman who gave me a cheerful (and efficient) wave as he downed his bacon, eggs, and coffee.
The local feel is created by loyal and local staff. Not only does the mix of sex, ages, and races reflect the best of America working together, but every time Ive visited Waffle House I get the impression that the team really enjoys working at Waffle House. Employees report good benefits with health care and paid vacations, but theres more to Waffle House success.
Ive quizzed managers and discovered that many of them have worked at Waffle House for twenty years or more. Then I discovered one of the reasons for the cheerfulness of their hard work: employees are given the opportunity to purchase stock in Waffle House. While Forkner and Rogers continue to own majority, theyve encouraged employees to share ownership through purchasing stocks.
slideshow_1503757_wafflehouse.0321_cAt Waffle House you dont only get a slice of pie, you get a slice of American pie. A good company not only looks after ts customers, but it also invests in their workers. In this way, Waffle House is not only an American success story, it is also a great example Catholic social teaching in action. Catholic social teaching swings on the two hinges of subsidiarity and solidarity. Subsidiarity is the principle that initiatives are taken and solutions are found at the most local level possible. Solidarity is the principle that we are not islands. We are a continent, a part of the main. We are family. We care for one another.
If these two principles were applied within families, within parishes, within dioceses, communities, corporations, and governments many of our social problems would resolve themselves. Put simply we should care for one another at the local levelthe level of reality. We should, if you like, serve one another breakfast more often
and we should do so cheerfully and efficiently.
Anybody who dumps chili and sausage gravy on hash browns is aces in my book!
Yeah, but now they’ve gone PC and turned their backs on their former customers. Not the same as before.
Nowadays, it’s too quiet and orderly at Waffle House. No more short-order cooks storming out slamming the glass door or throwing a plate at a waitress or a waitress throwing one at the cook. All the fun is gone from Waffle House.
Nice article.
I went to Waffle House once, in Austin TX.
Only disappointment for me was they didn’t have chicken fried steak.
I always look forward to some Waffle House visits when I hit the South.
Don’t bother stopping around Kansas City at a Waffle House, they are nasty dirty dumps full of tweekers for customers and employees. I assume the area manager must be a dirtbag because that is what they hire.
I love to stop at Waffle House when I am traveling but I avoid them around KC. Same exact senerio with IHOP. In Kansas City alot of the IHOPs are owned by Mudslimes.
Stopped going to the Waffle Houses in Georgia.
Too many Amish gave the places kind of a tension that wasn’t good for enjoying breakfast.
ping
Yeah but the food stinks.
Waffle House just took the concept of the all night diner, greasy-spoon sort of places that serve breakfast all day and cleaned it up, formalized it into a concept and grew it from there. They’re all over the place here, to the point that I didn’t even realize it was regional to the south. There are other lesser known examples in the same mold, for instance Huddle House.
Quality is hit and miss from store to store but when it’s good, it’s very good.
I’ve eaten at waffle house all my 48 years of being a Georgia boy.
IN the 90’s...hurricane Opal ripped through Villa Rica, Ga(Thirty miles west of Atlanta). No one had power. But the local waffle house was open...the cook slinging hashbrowns by the light of a coleman lantern.
The late, great Lewis Grizzard said:
1. We oughta elect more waffle house cooks to congress, they wouldn’t forget why we sent them there.
2. Waffle house is the only place where you could pick up your tbone and eat that best meat right off the bone.
some years ago I drove my daughter back to college after a weekend at home and decided to stop in at the Waffle House for supper, we’d done most of the other resturants and I was hungry for W-H. None up here in the DC area. She was not sure she wanted to go there, but I insisted. After that visit and the “Cheesey eggs” and hash browns with cheese, she is a confirmed W-H customer.
Hash browns scattered and smothered! And their scrambled eggs & cheese are the best tasting in the business.
Too many businesses confuse “efficiency” with “minimalization”. Waffle House provides what the customer wants, not just what is most efficient to provide.
Starbuck’s efficiently provides their customers what they want too. Not just a coffee but a chance to be snooty.
Try the one in platte city.
There’s 20 of them in Indiana. Most all of them from Muncie south, but concentrated mostly around Indy. I’ve et at the one in Anderson a few times when I was working in the area.
Never disappointed.
Indiana from Indy on down is one of the more southern-feeling places outside the south. Not surprised.
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