ufgators68
Contributor
- May 23, 2017
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Probably butt diddling as well
Who doesn't?
Fuck you, post editing midget.
Last edited:
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Probably butt diddling as well
see editWho doesn't?
I had one for lunchitās hard to beat an overcooked Totinos party pizza
I havenāt had one in years, Iāve moved on to the Detroit style pizza from Costco as of late. My wife calls it a thick totinosI'd rather just get papa johns or dominos, $6 pairings or whatever. Get a couple medium pizzas for like $13....better and not really much more expensive than frozen pizza.
Unlike many, I didn't exactly maintain my love for Totinos as I got older.
There's a BJ's in the villages and a Costco opening there in a month or so. Mrs. Pan is psyched to get a Costco membership.As popular as Costco co, even with a Sams here, I don't know how they haven't built one here. From what I hear, it'd put Sams out of business.

I had to tighten the purse strings after my job change, so at $1.25 for ~700 cals it's a great value.I havenāt had one in years, Iāve moved on to the Detroit style pizza from Costco as of late. My wife calls it a thick totinos
Yeah that's too far away. We need one here.There's a BJ's in the villages and a Costco opening there in a month or so. Mrs. Pan is psyched to get a Costco membership.
Also... Add some bacon, xtra pepperoni and mozz to a supreme Totinos, toss it in the oven, then smoke a bowl...![]()
Diners are increasingly bringing their own food, including entire pizzas, to restaurants.
Steven Boyle/S.F. Chronicle
By MacKenzie Chung Fegan, Restaurant Critic
July 31, 2025
A few years ago, Akira Akuto was dining at Quarter Sheets, a popular Los Angeles pizzeria. Akuto, a chef, watched as two people from the party of eight next to him left and returned with a box of pizzaā¦. from a different pizzeria. The couple hid it under the table, surreptitiously taking bites of the contraband slices, until a server confronted them.
This is a restaurant, she said. You canāt bring food in from another restaurant.
Akuto was shocked, as was I when I first heard the story. But as Iāve spoken with restaurant workers over the last few weeks, Iāve learned that this behavior is not as far-fetched as I would have imagined. And so, hereās a sentence I never imagined I would need to write: Readers, please do not bring your own food to restaurants.
My journey into the dark underbelly of the BYOFood movement began with a direct message from Contimo, a Napa cafe that serves breakfast and lunch. āWeāve noticed a surprising and increasing trend: guests bringing outside food ā or even homecooked meals ā into our restaurant,ā owner Ryan Harris wrote. āItās now a daily occurrence.ā He wondered if other businesses were also dealing with this situation and, if so, how they were tackling it.
Surely this was a fluke, I thought, a quirk particular to Napa tourists who have overdone it at the tasting rooms and forgotten that we live in a society. But I decided to post about it on Instagram, asking restaurant workers if they had encountered customers taking a potluck approach to dining out.
Contimo Provisions Ryan Harris speaks with customers. He has noticed an uptick in diners bringing their own food into his Napa restaurant.
Brontƫ Wittpenn/The Chronicle
āMostly drinks,ā an employee at Tartine Manufactory responded, ābut I had to politely tell a guest the other day that we donāt allow outside food. They brought in what looked like a rice dish with barbecue pork.ā
āSometimes we have people who want to bring in their own pizza toppings,ā wrote AimĆ©e Wingen of Wingen Bakery in Livermore, ālike out-of-season tomatoes or arugula or, one time, even their own chopped gem lettuce.ā
āOnce a lady pulled a whole rotisserie chicken out of her purse and started putting it on her salad,ā Katie Reicher, the chef at the famously meat-free restaurant Greens, told me. On another occasion, there was āpurse tuna,ā two words that I wish I had never seen side-by-side.
What was inspiring this madness? If you want to keep up with the most awful of trends, thereās only one place to go: TikTok. There, I quickly found a subgroup of diners encouraging one another in their quests to smuggle their own food into restaurants.
Many of these content creators are body builders, powerlifters or other fitness enthusiasts who obsessively track their macros. In one video, a 16-year-old prepping for a body building show asks her followers if itās acceptable to bring her own food to the restaurant where her friends will be dining before winter formal. She ends the video by saying, the uncertainty audible in her voice, āI feel so weird having to do that, but itāll be worth it in the end?ā The comments applaud her for sticking to her #goals.
Hercules Nutrition and Training, a team of Indiana-based personal trainers and coaches, posts videos about how to boost testosterone alongside recipes for anabolic French toast. Much of their content focuses on ā24/7 accountability,ā encouraging their followers to adhere faithfully to their diets in order to get shredded for summer. āI just went to BJās the other day with some friends,ā one of the coaches says in a video, āand I brought my own food. And thereās nothing wrong with that.ā
That sentiment is echoed by TikTok creator @joannamiss2, a mom of three whom I can best describe as an egg salad influencer. Depending on which way you look at them, her videos about bringing egg salad sandwiches to restaurants are either algorithm-savvy rage bait or the incredibly earnest ministry of a woman who shanāt be parted from her eggs and mayo. It all starts innocently enough; she has young children, and she likes to pack them a little something in case they wonāt eat off the menu. Another video features her husband, who is gluten-intolerant, explaining that Joanna has made him an egg salad sandwich to bring to a pasta-centric restaurant.
But at a certain point, Joanna gives up the pretense of needing an excuse ā picky kids, dietary restrictions ā for bringing egg salad anywhere she pleases. āIām going out to eat with a bunch of friends tonight,ā she says to the camera, potato masher hovering menacingly over three hard-boiled eggs, āand I donāt know if Iām going to like anything at this restaurant.ā
To her haters, Joanna says, āYouāre allowed to bring your food to the restaurant⦠Itās a normal thing in times where everything is just so expensive.ā While Joanna did not respond to my request for an interview, I did manage to speak with someone who agrees with her, at least to a point.
Margaux Bauerlein is a recent college graduate and one of our summer interns here at the Chronicle. When she heard I was writing about bringing outside food to restaurants, she piped up ā she had seen this practice firsthand while working at La Valās Pizza in Berkeley, and, on the flip side, she had engaged in the behavior as well. As a college student, it often was a matter of budget, Bauerlein told me, and the fast-casual restaurants surrounding UC Berkeley could easily feel like an extension of the campus cafeteria. A group of friends might all individually order the takeout of their choice at their preferred price points before meeting back up at a central restaurant to eat together.
Bauerlein clarified that she would be mortified if a friend showed up with her own food at an establishment with table service. āDo I have to make eye contact with my waiter?ā she asked. āThatās where I draw the line.ā But if a restaurant is a counter-service operation, she feels itās more permissible ā especially if there is outdoor seating.
Customers walk into at Contimo Provisions, a counter-service spot with outdoor seating in Napa.
Brontƫ Wittpenn/The Chronicle
Contimo checks both of those boxes, which is perhaps why Harris has seen an uptick in customers with entire pizzas, spring rolls and even homemade salads. āThe only way Iāve been able to make it make sense of it,ā Harris said, āis that our style of hospitality makes people feel comfortable, and then they get too comfortable. But they forget this is how we make a living.ā
There is one type of āpurse tunaā customer that Harris appreciates: diners with major dietary restrictions. Heās is happy to accommodate dietary needs as possible ā macro bros, feel free to ask for double meat on your sandwich instead of sneaking in your own meal prep ā but in cases where someone wants to swap in their own, say, gluten-free bread? Go right ahead. āI love those guests,ā he told me. āThatās someone who is saying, āI have an accommodation you might not be able to meet, but I still want to support your restaurant.āā
Rounak Dumra of Haywardās Wah Jee Wah, which offers mostly outdoor seating, sees this often, and he feels the same way. Heāll even allow customers to order a pizza from his neighbor if theyāre dining with kids who are skeptical of his Indian barbecue. What he doesnāt understand is guests who bring their own rice ā a staple item that he offers on his menu.
I asked if he had any advice for Harris and other business owners in similar situations. āYou know how when people bring in their own wine bottles, theyāre charged corkage?ā he mused. āThat would be interesting. Maybe that would discourage people.ā
I watched a few of those fb ācookingāvideos where they smash white bread and sprinkle m&ms on it and put it into an air fryer out of sheer car wreck viewing and now they wonāt stop showing them to me