Culture A chef changed the name of his restaurant from his nonbinary child's deadname to their current name — and business is booming

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A chef changed the name of his restaurant from his nonbinary child's deadname to their current name — and business is booming​

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  • A Wisconsin chef closed his restaurant named for his child after they came out as nonbinary.
  • Chef Dave Heide then opened a new eating establishment bearing his kid's chosen name.
  • "The thing that makes me happy is making other people happy," Heide told Insider. "I think food is love."
Chef Dave Heide loves food and loves his "kiddos."

The Wisconsin chef and father of three opened his first restaurant fifteen years ago, a fine dining establishment affectionately named for his first child.

When two more children came along in subsequent years, the restaurateur opened two new food endeavors, one for each kid: There was Charlie's on Main in honor of his second child, and Little John's, a nonprofit food kitchen named for Heide's youngest.

"The thing that makes me happy is making other people happy," Heide, 42, said of both his culinary career and life approach. "I think food is love."

So, when Heide's eldest child, Ollie, 16, came out as nonbinary nearly two years ago, Heide told Insider he and his wife reacted with nothing but love and support. There would be no queer, familial strife for Ollie, who uses both he/him and they/them pronouns.

But looming over Ollie's joyful announcement was his dad's first restaurant, the establishment that still proudly bore Ollie's birth name, known as a "deadname" in the LGBTQ community.

Ollie originally told his parents that he didn't mind the ongoing presence of his deadname donning the restaurant, Heide said. But the chef soon discovered that "it was really making [Ollie] sad, getting deadnamed every day, seeing the name on the building I went to work at," Heide told Insider.

It took Heide and his family less than a month to decide: The restaurant and the name it wore had to go.

Heide, a well-known figure in the Madison community, quickly announced via social media the restaurant was on the outs, sharing Ollie's coming out story in the process. He told Insider several people reached out to him asking why he would give up his long-held business for a name change. Keep the old restaurant and open up a new one honoring Ollie, they suggested.

Heide had no patience for such ideas.

"Do you think I give a crap about my old brand compared to my kiddo and their mental health?" he said.

But more than anything, the community responded with an outpouring of positivity and support for both father and child, Heide said. "For every one, ugly, horrible human out there, there were 75 or 100 people reaching out."

Ollie and his dad took their story public, jointly writing a column about their experience entitled "The Recipe for Unconditional Support" in a local LGBTQ outlet.

The piece sparked a flood of responses. Heide's inbox was full of supportive messages from other trans and nonbinary kids thanking Ollie for his courage and visibility. Meanwhile, Heide was fielding an influx of questions from parents seeking support and guidance in handling their own children's coming out, he said.

"The best thing for Ollie was they got to see so many messages from kids thanking them for being brave," Heide said.

A new restaurant for Ollie​

For nine months, Heide and his team worked to create a new restaurant for both Ollie and his second child, Charlie. The COVID-19 pandemic forced Heide to shut down his second restaurant, Charlie's on Main, but the finality of two business endeavors actually offered the chef an opportunity to try something new.

Heide split the site of his first restaurant down the middle to encompass both new establishments. On one side sits Ollie's Madison, while next door will be St. Charles Station, a farm-to-table restaurant set to open in the new year.

Since Ollie's on Madison was a celebration of Ollie, he got input on nearly every part of the restaurant, Heide said. Ollie chose 23 different shades of paint for the rainbow adorning the ceiling; he also helped with the construction and had a heavy influence on the menu.

"We took all of Ollie's favorite foods and amplified them," Heide said of the menu, which features everything from Detroit-style pizza, to smash burgers and mac n' cheese.

The new restaurant opened its doors only three weeks ago, and business has been booming, Heide said.

"It's been incredible and we literally haven't even advertised yet," he told Insider. We're doing just as much in sales as when it was the whole restaurant before."

But the support Heide and his family have received isn't exclusively food-focused. Several customers have come to share words of encouragement and gratitude for Ollie and his dad.

"It's great to hear all these people who knew Ollie growing up and have them come out to say 'you're seen and heard.' It's really beautiful," Heide said.
 
"Business is booming"
1) No mention of financials or even attendance, just a "the owner of this newly opened business says it's doing swell" quote. Great journalism there, lol
2) Covid just ended. If the business is legit doing better than it was, then that's almost certainly why your sells are up from the last few years, not because your obese daughter is depressed.
 
"Business is booming"
1) No mention of financials or even attendance, just a "the owner of this newly opened business says it's doing swell" quote. Great journalism there, lol
2) Covid just ended. If the business is legit doing better than it was, then that's almost certainly why your sells are up from the last few years, not because your obese daughter is depressed.
Usually with new restaurants, people will initially flock to them if the menu sounds enticing. If it doesn’t live up to its hype/isn’t worth the cost, then the overall sales diminish over time. The entire tip thing the restaurant demands despite the customers doing most of the work is ridiculous. That alone would make me not want to go again. It would be more cost effective to just be a fast casual restaurant like Chipotle where all you’d really need is a cashier, a few people preparing the food up front, and a few in back doing other food preparation. If people want fountain drinks, just offer a soda machine with free refills. He could make the location half of its size and just do a custom build-your-own mac and cheese/salad/burger place for way cheaper. This guy has no business sense, and with sub-par food and premium prices, it’s going to be hard to get people to want to come back.
 
Let me get this straight. There are no waiter/waitresses, you order the food from your phone, nobody comes to check on the food or refill your drinks unless you press a button, you pay with your phone, you have to pay them 20% for doing nothing, and then the app makes you tip them 40%.

Place is only open 25 hours a week. How did this guy manage to make enough money to open 3 restaurants?
Honestly, this is so often a reason that places end up going down. Owners are lazy and they don't have cash to reinject in the business anymore until it "picks up again".

You go to the restaurant for two things;
  • Good food
  • Good service

If I am going to eat shit I could have done myself and not get my dick sucked by the waitress, I don't see the point. Even less so when it turns out I also have to tip 20%. I'd rather just go to KFC and drive home.

25hrs a week is absolute lunacy. Probably also why he needs to have as less staff as possible on site, because nobody good wants to do so little hours. They would need a second job, which would also be trash if they are not looking to hire full time. If they do any good elsewhere, they will leave for a full position.

Basically, he is double fucking himself, where he destroys the customer experience, hires shit staffs and proceeds to degrade the customer experience even further. It's a vicious circle.

I am guessing this is a new model for him. 3 restaurants is too much for one man anyway, so he most likely have managing partners. He probably was lucky enough to support is family before, thought that if he added more restaurants, he would make 3x the amount, and ended up spreading himself too thin.
 
I'm not fat, nor am I American, so can someone explain to me what the fuck a "smash burger" even is?
Is it squashed or something? It sounds dystopian. "ZER. HERE'S YA SMASH BURGER. 100 LIFE POINTS. NEXT!".

Also fat people who fuck have problems. This accept you as you are thing is bullshit. It's just settling. People can dress it up however they like, but this women accepted a gross, fat hambeast who's a complete cuck because she's the kind of person who troons out her kids.

All I know off the top of my head is there has been some kind of "hold my beer" competition between various hipster food cart owners to cram more disgusting random items onto burgers, escalating over the past 12 years or so.

According to wiki "smashburger" is a trademark of some Colorado company and:



Then they throw any old thing that is high in empty calories on top of it, from deep fried whatever to actual donuts.

It is to obesity what injecting into one's toes is to opiate addiction.
A smash burger is a thin burger that's pressed into a griddle/frying pan. Usually since they're smaller you can fit 2-3 of them between the buns.

The upside is that you get a lot more crust, meaning flavor, than with a regular burger. The downside is that you can't have it pink in the middle, since it's so thin that it'll always cook all the way through.

There's nothing more or less "healthy" about it than a regular burger. Whatever condiments are on it have no bearing on whether it's a smash burger or not, it's only the patty.

On topic, I feel that whatever my parents did for me that turned out for the worse, they still did it with the best intentions and with the best information they had available at the time.

As a parent trooning your kid, there's no such excuse. Having already lopped off your kids tits and pumped them full of hormones, there's no way you can claim that you did what you thought were best for them. Especially not after making a spectacle of them and using them for publicity.

This is disgusting.
 
>Fails as a male
>Becomes a "female"
>Can't even get guys to use "her" as a cum dumpster

The cycle never lies.
 
I have a cat named Ollie lol. I didn't even realize that it was a real name.

It's not a real name for a human. It's a pet's name.

Obvious fake review they probably paid for:
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"2 year old with a very sophisticated palate."
Please gas yourself, Ms. Lisha Hope. Thanks in advance!

Imagine getting in firefights in Afghanistan then coming home only to receive post-military job training from these dildos.

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It's almost symbolic that the little girl's menu item was a nice fancy pasta dish, and the enby is now represented by mac and cheese with handfuls of junk food items stirred in.
A lot of enby types I’ve seen online are very childish. Like they never grew out of the “I’m so special” phase and think everyone else should cater to that. The enby phenomenon among women is very “I’m not like other girls”, except instead of being goth/punk, it’s trooning out.
 
If this guy really loved his kids, he would get them on a diet.
I'm more concerned about how fat everyone is that the gender special stuff. Jesus those kids are going to be dead by 40.
If you look at the menu options they have, it’s pretty easy to see why they’re so fat. I guarantee they don’t eat much differently than what they offer at Ollie’s. They seem like the type of people to only go to Disney World for the food, as some of them are too fat for quite a few of the rides.
 
Look on the family's social accounts, when she was younger daddy fatass was all over her, glommed on her and posing for awkward pics that look like they are from an engagement announcement.
I’ve been thinking on this story today and it’s really creeping me out. Imagine the conversation where dad promises to change the restaurant name in order for the daughter to keep their secret.

Or don’t because it’s too terrible to contemplate.
 
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