What Actually Moves the Price
Headcount and service style carry the most weight. Pickup stays cheapest because you are not paying for delivery, setup, or onsite labor. As soon as a driver or a cook is involved, a base fee plus time-on-site gets layered in. Menu complexity matters too. A waffle line with toppings and hot proteins is more involved than trays of waffles and bacon kept warm in chafers. Eggs made to order are the biggest speed and labor wildcard; scrambled in bulk is the budget-friendly compromise.
How to Get an Accurate Quote (and Avoid Surprises)
Call or visit the local Waffle House you plan to use and ask for the person who handles group orders. Lead with the essentials: date, serve time, headcount, pickup vs drop-off vs onsite, dietary notes, and your budget target. Then request an itemized estimate that lists food components, beverage quantities, labor or appearance fees, delivery or mileage, disposables, tax, and any gratuity. If the estimate looks light on beverages or utensils, ask how many servings each line actually covers to avoid a last-minute store run.
Why This Phrase Endures
“Scattered, smothered, covered” sticks because it hits the sweet spot between process and pleasure. It is choreography you can taste: the sizzle of the scatter, the perfume of the smother, the comfort of the cover. It is also welcoming. You do not need to be a regular to speak the language, and once you do, you feel like you belong to something bigger than your plate. For night-shift workers, road trippers, students, and anyone riding out a long day, it has been a dependable ritual that says you are taken care of. There is also pure culinary logic at work. Contrast and layering make food satisfying, and this trio nails both: crispy-soft potatoes, sweet-savory onions, creamy cheese. That it is fun to say is a bonus. So the next time you hear it, you will know it is more than a quirky mantra. It is a tiny blueprint for comfort, cooked hot and handed over with a grin.
From Page To Screen
Set roughly two centuries before the events of Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon adapts sections of George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood, a history of House Targaryen. That choice shapes the casting brief: the story unfolds as a chronicle rather than a single-POV tale, demanding an ensemble capable of shifting timelines, layered allegiances and sudden reversals of fortune. Season 1 introduced an expansive bench and used time jumps and dual performers to build a dynastic portrait. Season 2 moves from prelude to open conflict, putting added weight on actors who must carry both intimate family drama and large‑scale political stakes.
What Does "Musty" Really Mean?
That stale, earthy smell that greets you when you walk in the door? That is “musty.” It usually signals moisture hanging around longer than it should, with microbes like mold and mildew throwing a little party on damp surfaces. The scent is often compared to old books, wet cardboard, or a damp basement. It is different from rotten or sulfuric odors (think sewage), and it is not the sharp, chemical bite you get from cleaners or paints. Mustiness is a slow-bloom scent that fades when you open windows and returns when you close up again, which is a big clue that humidity and stagnant air are in the mix.