
I ate at world's biggest all you can eat buffet – it cost £10 with NO time limit… but here's what it's REALLY like
A FOODIE who filled up her plate at the world's biggest buffet for just £10 has spilled the beans on her tasty experience.
Serving up giant steaks, extra thick milkshakes and Amish pie, the huge restaurant serves up enough grub for 10,000 people every single day.
9
9
9
9
Shady Maple Smorgasbord has transformed East Earl, Pennsylvania into an unlikely tourist hotspot in recent years.
Hungry Americans and fascinated tourists regularly flock to the 100,000 sq ft buffet to try and take on the world's biggest buffet.
In recent years it has even become famous on social media through food bloggers and popular influencers.
One of these is New York-based influencer Amorray Marcano who visited Shady Maple back in April.
She told The Sun: "I'm a content creator so I like to show cool things in the New York area and around it and I had no clue that the largest buffet in America was so close to me.
"So I wanted to go just because of its reputation of being the largest and serving up to 10,000 people in a day."
Amorray, 29, filmed her trip and posted it online to her 440,000 Instagram followers.
She said one of her biggest concerns going into the buffet was the quality of the food.
Most people usually head down to a buffet as a novelty dining experience where they can fill their plates high and try out as much food as their stomachs can handle.
But the food is typically seen as below par due to it usually being left out under a heat lamp for some time before being eaten.
Hotel guest reveals unique buffet breakfast and people have been left stunned
Shady Maple is far from an average all you can eat place though as it even boasts an impressive 4.6 star rating online.
Amorray said she was "pleasantly surprised" by the taste of the food on offer.
She admitted: "There were hits and misses, but there were certain things that were actually really good.
"The night I went they were serving catfish. And I don't really eat catfish normally, but thought I'll try it and it was so good.
"It was cooked really well and just delicious.
"There were some things that I didn't love. I would say some things might've been a little dry or some things maybe needed a little bit more seasoning.
"But the things that were good were great, like their beef brisket, the steak and of course the cajun catfish."
The whole buffet is open Monday to Saturday and welcomes in hungry guests from 7am all the way through to 7:30pm.
9
9
9
During the day, they serve up a breakfast, lunch and dinner offerings.
The breakfast costs just $13.99 (£10) during the week and lunch will set you back $19.99 (£15).
The price for dinner varies depending on exactly what type of food you want to treat yourself to but a standard price is $26.99 (£20).
This encompasses grill items, 46 salad bar items, three soups, six homemade breads & rolls, four cheeses, eight different meats, 14 vegetables, ten cold desserts, three hot desserts, eight pies, six cakes, sundae bar and countless drinks.
Special options are also available throughout the week including steak night, seafood night, wings night or even the grand menu.
Amorray was amazed by the cheap price of the unlimited food.
She continued: "I would see people sit down, they would eat, and then they would go back for more and you could stay for as long as you want.
"So realistically, you could stay there for hours so it's a great bang for your buck.
"For the night that I went, it was like $27 and the amount of food you get for that is easily worth way more than the price."
One thing that did leave a sour taste in Amorray's mouth was just how busy the buffet was.
Amorray and her friend queued up for 30 minutes outside at around dinner time due to the long line of excited guests.
The influencer was mainly shocked by this due to its little known location.
Not only is East Earl a tight knit community in Amish country but it also has a population of under 2,000 people.
This means the town can sometimes be packed out with over five times the number of residents due to the popularity of the restaurant.
"When I went in, I thought there's not going to be that much seating. But then once I walked in, there was loads in every, nook and cranny," Amorray added.
"There must have been thousands of people in there and I was not expecting that just because we already had a 30 minute wait and there was a huge line behind us.
"Honestly I was kind of overwhelmed when I went in because I was expecting the amount of food but not the amount of people."
But after tucking into her first plate, Amorray said she fully understood why so many people flocked to the world famous Pennsylvania buffet.
Amorray was also blown away by the number of drinks available.
I tried one of the world's most expensive buffets – and made my money back in just one plate
By The Sun's Assistant Travel Editor, Sophie Swietochowski
AS the Sun travel desk's resident foodie, I could hardly resist trying the UK's fanciest buffet, also one of the world's most expensive.
The Grove Hotel in Hertfordshire went viral earlier last year when TikTok foodies discovered its Glasshouse restaurant where everyone dines en masse, but in five-star luxury.
Costing a whopping £82 per person at the weekend, there is certainly enough to choose from.
After several, overly-generous spoonfuls of caviar, a few servings of beetroot-cured salmon and seven superbly crafted sushi rolls, decorated with dainty herbs, I felt I'd made a good dent in 'getting my money's worth' – a statement that had been thrown back and forth between my buffet partner, Mum, and I.
I prowled the platters of sizzling Asian grub arranged temptingly in tandoor bowls and loaded into terracotta dishes, before heading straight for the crispy Thai fish cakes.
The fish section was part of one of 10 dining areas at the buffet.
This includes a carving station, AKA the place to pick up your classic roast dinner and trimmings with slices of rare roast beef, flakey wellington and crispy roast spuds all laid out with gravy.
There was a sushi station with hand-made California rolls placed delicately alongside huge tubs of wasabi and seaweed salads.
The robata grill is where everything from whole seabass to juicy steaks are scorched over an open flame and there's also fresh pasta and pizza stations.
If all this isn't enough to wrap your head around, you can also order directly from the chefs, doting on each station, when there is something in particular that you fancy that isn't on display.
So the real question is: would you pay that much cash for dinner?
Much like the food on offer at the buffet, Shady Maple provided almost every kind of soft drink imaginable.
The star of the drinks show was a huge soda fountain to the side of the room.
This had all kinds of soda in it from cream soda, vanilla coke and even root beer as well as all the regular options.
A coffee machine, hot chocolate station and milkshake stand meant everyone's taste was catered for.
Alcohol was the only notable exception on the menu.
And no tipping is expected at the restaurant.
Amorarry recommended anyone in the area to head to Shady Maple if they get the chance.
9
9
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE The three near-death experiencers who came back with the SAME message from the afterlife
Many near-death experiencers seem to return from their journeys with a similar message, and for three people who nearly died, they're convinced Earth is an illusion. Unlike many other out-of-body experiences, Joyce Keller, Nanci Danison, and Bill Letson didn't return to their bodies with a newfound sense of appreciation for their life here on Earth. Instead, each person claimed that they received an extraordinary message from the afterlife, saying that what we consider the real world is a dream, and the realm we call the afterlife is the actual reality. Moreover, the three who died and were brought back to life, said that the love of the afterlife is completely unconditional and is something they can't wait to return to. spoke to Keller, who said she's had multiple near-death experiences, and was just 18 months-old when she 'died' for the first time. The New Jersey -born author said that her father was a pharmacist, but was unable to get her fever down when she developed strep throat. 'There were curtains next to my bed that had big flowers on them, and the center of one of the flowers, which was like a daisy, an Angel appeared and said, 'It's time to come with me,'' Keller said. 'She reached her hand out, and I reached, took her hand, and I went with her, and that started my journey of out of body experiences,' she added. Keller said that the angel told her that human life was an illusion, and that she would live a life devoted to teaching when it was time to go back to her body. 'I had been out of my body for about a half an hour, I guess, and my parents accepted the fact that I was dead, but I came back,' Keller explained. When she was just seven years-old, Keller had another experience where she drowned while in a lake in Long Island, New York. 'My older sister took me by the hand, and we started to walk out into the lake. About 10 feet out, we both stepped into a very, very deep hole,' Keller recounted. 'I just kept going down and down and down, and I couldn't breathe. I accepted the fact that I was going to die, and then the same blue light appeared - a beautiful blue angel,' she continued. During this second near-death experience, Keller said the angel again told her that she would return for a life of teaching and healing. However, the angel also said that Keller would go through a period of suffering. She went on to write 12 books, but experienced a major disappointment during a failed a TV audition, leading to depression and despair. That's when Keller said the angel appeared in her life again, playing an Olivia Newton John song that had never been heard before. That song would be released a week after Keller's experience, which she said convinced her that she was connected to God and the cosmos in a unique way. 'My consciousness was elevated to another level. They said, You don't have to be depressed about anything. We're taking care of you,' Keller said. Another woman who had a similar experience in the afterlife was Danison, who died in a mammography room while undergoing tests in 1994. Danison, a scientist and devout Catholic from Ohio, was suspected of having breast cancer and was awaiting a biopsy to confirm the diagnosis. She told the Outer Limits of Inner Truth Reborn podcast: 'It was an allergic reaction to the local anesthetic that she used for that, combined with very low blood sugar, I just died. After the radiologist left... I just left my body.' Danison said she encountered a presence that was more like an energy field than a God-like entity, which she called 'Source.' It was this energy source that told her that human life was an illusion, created so that Source could learn from observing human experiences. 'The most compelling thing was the information that I am not a human. I'm not a human being, that humans are animals that are indigenous to planet Earth and that what I am is a spiritual being that inhabited the human,' she said. 'Source is innately, unconditionally loving and we as parts of Source are innately unconditionally loving. We know what love feels like. We feel it in the afterlife,' Danison continued. 'At the end of my near-death experience, I accepted the mission to return to this life of Nanci and to share with anyone who would listen to everything that I had learned in the afterlife, and also to experience unconditional love within this lifetime,' she added. Danison said that when humans die, they're simply waking up from a dream so they can resume their existence in what we call the afterlife. She added that people should focus on love, all the people they've loved, and the bliss they expect to feel after crossing over to join Source. 'You will be going HOME to your true home, to unconditional love and acceptance. Remember that you will leave all the pain and sorrow behind when you go but will take with you all the love and cherished memories,' Danison explained. Letson, a retired firefighter, found out that life was an illusion during a near-death experience which showed him the afterlife was a place of peace and joy. Letson briefly died after contracting the flu while on duty and being given medicine which caused a fatal reaction. 'I was trying to sneak out of there and they came in and they gave me some drugs that they were giving everybody and I reacted to that. I mean, I went down immediately and my wife was there and she said your eyes just rolled back and you fell straight back on the bed and they couldn't get you back,' Letson explained. He described the afterlife as a 'sea of welcoming euphoria and joy, heaping praise on me and acceptance and love.' Letson added that he realized that the 'person' he had been on Earth was not really him, and that human life was not the real reality. 'All I could think of through all of that was how in the world did I forget who I really was? How is it possible that I fell for this?' the firefighter explained.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Friends pick sides in Kevin Costner's ugly split... and declare boycott of ex-Christine Baumgartner's lavish wedding
Less than two years after they finalized their bitter divorce, Hollywood star Kevin Costner 's ex-wife Christine Baumgartner is set to walk down the aisle again… only, this time, to the Yellowstone actor's once-close friend. It was previously reported that Baumgartner, 51, will marry her financier fiancé Josh Connor, also 51, in a low-key ceremony in Hawaii with only close family and friends in attendance.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE What your pet is REALLY thinking... and the tell-tale signs that they're stressed
He can tame the feistiest of felines with just a stare, and now the internet's self-proclaimed 'Cat Whisperer' is revealing what your pet is really thinking. Donnie Pagsanjan, 41, never set out to become a feline guru but over the past year, the soft-spoken groomer has gone viral under the name @thecalmcatwhisperer, mesmerizing millions with his soothing energy, unshakable patience, and uncanny ability to tame even the feistiest of 'spicy cats.'