We gorged ourselves on IHOP’s All You Can Eat Pancakes and and discovered why it was a horrible idea

IHOP All You Can Eat Pancakes 7Hollis Johnson

  • IHOP’s All You Can Eat pancake deal is back and continuing until mid-February.
  • This year, the promotion costs $ 3.99.
  • While nonstop pancakes may sound like a dream come true, it ended up being our sugary nightmare.

We at Business Insider love a good bargain — especially when it comes to food. 

So when we heard about IHOP’s All You Can Eat pancake promotion, we immediately began dreaming of syrupy stacks. 

Little did we know, our flapjack fantasy would fall into pancake perdition. 

Here’s what it’s like to spend five hours in a Manhattan IHOP — and why this delicious deal may not be as sweet as it seems. 

We arrived at 10 a.m., ready to pile on the pancakes.

Hollis Johnson

This 14th Street location is open 24 hours, which means that you could roll in at 3 a.m. and tackle the All You Can Eat challenge. The deal runs for the entire month of January, continuing into mid-February. 

After our triumphant Shrimpsgiving at Red Lobster, we were feeling confident about this day. How could a day full of pancakes possibly go wrong?

We settle in and prepare to order.

Hollis Johnson

While you can order just pancakes, the promotion offers five different combo plates to start. Kate decides on the egg combo, which comes with two eggs of your choice and a side of hash browns … plus infinite pancakes. Hollis chooses the sausage and egg combo, consisting of four sausage links, two eggs, and hash browns — and of course, pancakes galore. 

Interestingly enough, ordering simply pancakes would cost $ 9.99, the same price as Hollis’ sausage combo, and a dollar more than Kate’s egg combo. 

While perhaps this should have raised suspicions, we brushed it off and concocted a brash motto for the day: you stack ’em up, we knock ’em down. 

While waiting for our order, we took in the scenery.

Hollis Johnson

Above us was a rather eerie and foreboding image of a child dwarfed by an absurd totem of pancakes. It was interesting to say the least.

The soundtrack pumped us up with countless ’80s power ballads and anthems, and we felt like we could take on the world — or at least 10 pancakes. 

Our friendly and attentive waitress told us that the most impressive All You Can Eat showcase she had personally witnessed was 10 flapjacks. However, the man who completed this astonishing feat “looked bad” by the end. 

“What do you mean?” Kate asked with a hint of anxiety.

“Bad.”


See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Post Author: martin

Martin is an enthusiastic programmer, a webdeveloper and a young entrepreneur. He is intereted into computers for a long time. In the age of 10 he has programmed his first website and since then he has been working on web technologies until now. He is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of BriefNews.eu and PCHealthBoost.info Online Magazines. His colleagues appreciate him as a passionate workhorse, a fan of new technologies, an eternal optimist and a dreamer, but especially the soul of the team for whom he can do anything in the world.

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