Cape Times

6 restaurant pivots that deserve to outlast the pandemic

- TOM SIETSEMA

NO ONE wants a repeat of 2020, but a diner can find silver linings in some of the many restaurant changes resulting from the pandemic. Here are six shifts worth making permanent:

Cocktails to go

Bartenders made life more worth living – and bags of take-away splashier – by pouring their craft into plastic pouches, glass apothecary bottles and other flasks. Added value: instead of trashing the containers, some customers are repurposin­g them as condiment or dressing jars.

Finessed hygiene

Hand sanitiser at the host stand and the table is the new flowers. Let’s hold on to the reminders to keep clean. Some establishm­ents are even making sanitisers chic by offering the product in cologne spritzers. Like yesterday’s matchbooks, they make for good branding.

Take-away from everywhere

Not just Chinese and pizza, as before, but high-end cooking, too, often personalis­ed with handwritte­n notes, gratis sweets, even suggested playlists – the sort of fillips you might get when you eat in a dining room. Chefs who tested their wares for endurance learnt what travels well and what does not. Wins all around – and a world more choices.

Year-round outdoor dining

Restaurate­urs feared cold weather but responded to diners’ desires with greenhouse­s, tents, igloos, yurts, blankets, fire pits and other heaters. Customers learnt to dress for the elements – it’s all about layering, right? – and came to enjoy the sense of community and shared adventure.

Please, bring back BYOB – Bring your own blanket.

Well-spaced tables

Pools of space between diners might not be great for restaurant­s’ bottom lines, but customers appreciate the elbow room and sense of privacy.

The safety accommodat­ion is probably going to affect menu prices, however, so expect to pay more for meals. Also, say goodbye to eavesdropp­ing.

Respect

Customers have been showing it – and restaurant workers have been enjoying it – as never before.

In a sentiment echoed by many of his peers, chef Brendan L’Etoile says: “I hope the appreciati­on of the work we do sticks around.”

When I think of first responders, restaurant workers come close to doctors, nurses and others who tend to our well-being.

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 ??  ?? THE lockdown made people more appreciati­ve of dining out.
THE lockdown made people more appreciati­ve of dining out.

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