ANSWERS: 7
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There are two ways, neither of which is a guarantee. The first way is to ask nicely at the restaurant in which you enjoyed the meal. This is unlikely to work (at least in my experience) as the recipes a restaurant uses are their attraction for customers to keep coming back. The second way (for chain type restaurants) is to try http://www.topsecretrecipes.com/ looking for what you are after. This is a site which has matched with taste testing the foods in major chains. Some of the recipes are free and some are purchase only.
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There's also a slightly more underhanded way to do it, which will get you an ingredient list, though probably not the measurements for the recipe. You'll probably have to play around and experiment a little. Claim allergies, ask what ingredients are used to make your dish to be sure you can eat it. Since most restaurants find that sudden trips to the hospital destroy the dining experience, your server will probably provide such a list to you. Use your own discretion and moral compass when using this technique.
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Many recipes from restaurants show up in the RSVP section of Bon Appetite magazine. You can search through those recipes at http://www.epicurious.com/ http://www.topsecretrecipes.com/ does have a few recipes from popular chains, most you have to pay for but it's cheap, about 79 cents.
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There used to be a website called copycatrecipes.com. I used it several years ago to find some recipes and I loved the results. I don't know if it still even exists but it may nbe worth a shot!
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Go to NPR.org and check their listings for food programs. All have web sites and some are chefs in restaurants and share their best recipes there.
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Many restraunts have their own websites now. Sometimes they will even post some of their recipes that they would like to share.
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I look at both http://www.topsecretrecipes.com/recipes.asp and http://www.copykat.com/component/option,com_rapidrecipe/Itemid,28/page,viewcategory/category_id,12/
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