Bay Area Eats now has 17,500 members who respond within minutes to posts asking for dining recommendations, from their favorite "last-meal-on-earth bowl of noodle soup" in the Bay Area to the best pizza to restaurants serving Lunar New Year and Valentine's Day specials. Whether you're on the hunt for a crepe cake, stinky tofu or fried chicken, the avid food lovers of Bay Area Eats have the answer.
The page reads like a love letter to local restaurants, illustrated with photos of members' recent meals — an enormous calzone oozing cheese, a gorgeous box of masu ikura don, saucy Singaporean chili lobster, boba and popcorn chicken purchased inside a gas station — and short blurbs about the eateries to help give them exposure. Members live all over the Bay Area, so the group's geographic coverage is unusually comprehensive.
"People know when they log onto this group ... that what they're going to see is actual people actually eating," Peter Huang, a Mountain View resident and one of the page's moderators, said during a live Q&A the group hosted last Friday. "It's not paid placements. We just try to keep it as organic and natural as possible."
Cheng, a food lover and Millbrae real estate agent, never thought Bay Area Eats would get this big. He eventually asked a friend, Huang and another super-active member to become moderators, but the respectful and positive group mostly makes their job easy. Members by and large follow the group rules (don't do "anything that would get you put in timeout if you were in kindergarten," and no spam, unless it's served with rice) and quickly flag any problematic posts, which the moderators discuss and then vote on whether to delete.
The overarching rule is "give more than you take." Influencers that might be trying to promote themselves more than the restaurant they're posting about or startups looking for clients are pre-vetted with a closer eye.
"The only thing we ask is: Put the restaurant first as the purpose of the post," Cheng said.
Ken Ko is one of Bay Area Eats' most frequent posters. For him, local restaurants are the "bread and butter of any community," places to learn about other cultures and meet people.
"Some businesses are truly under-represented, undervalued, and under-appreciated, so this forum and those who are like-minded help showcase the need to keep our local restaurants going," Ko said. "We all end up learning from each other in one form or another, as well as immediately get a pulse on what's going on out there in the restaurant world."
Standout meals he discovered through Bay Area Eats include Taqueria San Bruno and ube desserts from Hula Hoops, a tiki bar in South San Francisco. Cheng, for his part, still thinks about the fresh sashimi he picked up from Suruki Supermarket in San Mateo after seeing another member post about it.
"It's a great community," Cheng said. "We have a lot of regulars. I just don't know them in person."
Local restaurant owners say the group has brought them increased business during a time when every order matters.
"You're really giving exposure to these places," Yuka Ioroi, who owns Cassava in San Francisco, said during the Q&A. "Some of these are older Asian restaurants that might not have any digital presence. ... the next thing they know, all of a sudden they might have a line outside. You can't put any words to a feeling like that."
Last fall, Huang found Dim Sum King in Sunnyvale, which was donating meals to people who had been displaced by the wildfires burning in the Santa Cruz Mountains. He's since become a regular.
"I will always go back to them now whenever I want dim sum," he said. "It's these cool little threads that bind us all together. It's the best power that food brings for all of us."
Find Bay Area Eats on facebook.com by searching its name.
This story contains 767 words.
Stories older than 90 days are available only to subscribing members. Please help sustain quality local journalism by becoming a subscribing member today.
If you are already a member, please log in so you can continue to enjoy unlimited access to stories and archives. Membership starts at $12 per month and may be cancelled at any time.