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"Restaurant vs (fine)
Restaurant"
The better than a hundred dollars charge, the
guestcheck's total for two meals in a so-so-restaurant in the city of nowhere, raises some
questions.
RESTAURANT vs (fine) RESTAURANT
Restaurants are what they are, namely a place to eat
and to relax while trudging around the potholes in the back roads through life on this
planet. The opportunities to hunt or fish for food are very limited. Only few people grow
their own vegetables. Many people do not even cook at home. The restaurant business is
therefore thriving.
Some eateries
are preferred as a stop by the hungry traveler. Often fast service or low prices make the
difference. Other restaurants are in demand as a place where one takes friends and
business acquaintances, to treat them to good food, drinks and service. Those are the
typical dinner houses.
At an average restaurant the diner eats and soon the
name of the restaurant is forgotten. The meal is not worth remembering, wouldn't it be for
the monthly credit card statement. Then the better than a hundred dollars, charged for two
meals in a so-so-restaurant in the city of nowhere, are raising a question. That is the
time when the customer rests on the bottom of his pants, scratches his head and asks
himself: "Did I really eat all what I'm charged for?"
What sets the (fine) restaurant apart from all the
other eating places are the fond memories. May it be that the waiter sold the guest their
first escargot salad, or frog legs, or Abalone dinner? Or that the waiter sold the guest
some excellent wine which the customer had never seen before or heard of. Maybe it is for
the waiter offered Starboard instead of Port as the after dinner drink?
It doesn't take much extra work to impress a
customer and it's worth it. The (fine) restaurant creates a fond memory, easy remembered
by the customer as unusual and definitely worth another visit. The mentioning of the
(fine) restaurant's name puts a smile on the customer's face. Yet the regular restaurant
will be forgotten once the credit card bill is paid.
Both types of restaurants have in common that their
existence is relatively new. Larouse Gastronomique Encyclopedia of Food Wine and Cookery
says: In 1765 a man named Boulanger, a vendor of soup in the Rue Bailleul, gave to his
soups the name of r e s t a u r a n t s, i.e. restoratives, and inscribed on his sign:
'Boulanger sells magical restoratives', a notice which he embellished with a joke in
culinary Latin: Venite ad me; vos qui stomacho laboratis et ego restaurabo vos.
However there had been public places where one could
eat and drink long before but not with the name Restaurant. The Faehrhaus in Blankenese,
where I had my apprenticeships, had received their permission to operate a Gasthaus (guest
house) from the Danish Crown in the year 978. Such permission had been part of a ferry
service across the two mile wide and at times impassable Elbe river. It was a place where
people could wait for the ferry. It was a place to buy or barter. Food and drinks were
available, so was anything else the travelers or the innkeeper had to sell or trade.
In some parts of the world the same type of place
offering shelter and food was and still is called an Inn. Places which provided food and
shelter along the traveled raods came in many styles; fortresses and castles served such
purpose along the salt route through Europe, missions along the camino real in California
were built a day trip away from each other for the same reason.
Over the centuries there was little competition for
Inns, Gasthauses or Restaurants. There were few of them. All catered to an existing
demand. Today it is much different. Most restaurants are opened without the need for such
and the clientele is lured by advertisement. Here the demand is created after
the fact.
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03/27/07 |