Gone are the family dinners of the 1940s, replaced with oven-heated TV trays eaten in the bluish glare of Three’s Company and Happy Days. Gone are microwaveable TV dinners, replaced with Seamless delivery and so many nights spent staring at Netflix, shoveling food into a slack mouth. But thankfully, in a bittersweet way, technology has taken us so far away from intimate social dinners that we’ve come full circle. Foodies and socialites are now using social dining platforms to connect with cooks — some professional, others simply passionate — to have meals with total strangers, either at a restaurant, or, in more adventurous cases, the cook’s home. The dinner table has reemerged as the premiere social network — here are five of the best ways to reconnect.
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Feastly

Best for Locals: Feastly is the largest American-made social dining platform, with the large majority of meals occurring in New York, San Francisco and Washington D.C. The site allows cooks of all skill levels to host dinners at their homes or another site. Prices can range from free for potluck gatherings to over $100 a head for high-end feasts. Founder Noah Karesh describes his site as an egalitarian platform for “building self-regulating communities” of foodies, which extends beyond basic pop-up restaurants and home-cooked meals to include more naturalistic approaches, like guided food foraging trips and lessons on healthy eating. Feastly goes so far as to actually try a cook’s food before giving them a “verified” classification in order to protect its customers.