Ghost Restaurants

Jules

SF VIP
Do you have ghost restaurants popping around you. These are run by cooks/chefs who sublet a small section of a local restaurant so they can operate in a government approved/licensed location. They sell via the delivery services or at local events. Mostly they advertise online or by word of mouth and you rarely know their location. It usually a win/win for the subletter and the regular restaurant. If a newbie thinks they have a good idea and it fails, they didn’t invest as much. The regular restaurant made some extra income.
 

Do you have ghost restaurants popping around you. These are run by cooks/chefs who sublet a small section of a local restaurant so they can operate in a government approved/licensed location. They sell via the delivery services or at local events. Mostly they advertise online or by word of mouth and you rarely know their location. It usually a win/win for the subletter and the regular restaurant. If a newbie thinks they have a good idea and it fails, they didn’t invest as much. The regular restaurant made some extra income.
Not that I know of but a great idea. We did have some restaurants close and became food trucks. I know in Milwaukee they started a commercial kitchen for restaurant startups to buy time in an approved kitchen. I always think schools and churches should do the same.
 
Yesterday, I visited a Grandson who has taken a new job on the central WA coast. To celebrate his new job and home, I took him for a meal at a restaurant of his choice. We went to a small joint where I was introduced to a new operating style. We were greeted and seated in the conventional manner and given menus to study. There was no wall between the dining area and kitchen, just a counter so you could see all the activity.

Then the hostess told us there were no waiters to take our order. We were to make our selections and one of us could go up to a spot in front of the kitchen where we would tell an employee what we wanted to eat.

No server brought us coffee, water or other drinks. We got these (plus silverware and condiments) from a corner table and then took them back to our table ourselves. The same was true with refills. Our food was brought to us by kitchen staff.

It was an informal, friendly and relaxed experience and the food was generous and very good. A plus was when a fight broke out in the kitchen between two brothers who were working there. The hostess, a small early middle aged lady marched the two out of the building like a Marine Drill Sargent and we watched them both climb into the same car and drive away. For some reason, that brief scene delighted me and made the whole dining experience memorable.

As we left, I asked the hostess if I came back could she arrange a bit longer fight to watch.
 
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Yesterday, I visited a Grandson who has taken a new job on the central WA coast. To celebrate his new job and home, I took him for a meal at a restaurant of his choice. We went to a small joint where I was introduced to a new operating style. We were greeted and seated in the conventional manner and given menus to study. There was no wall between the dining area and kitchen, just a counter so you could see all the activity.

Then the hostess told us there were no waiters to take our order. We were to make our selections and than one of us could go up to a spot in front of the kitchen we would tell an employee what we wanted to eat.

No server brought us coffee, water or other drinks. We got these (plus silverware and condiments) from a corner table and then took them back to our table ourselves. The same was true with refills. Our food was brought to us by kitchen staff.

It was an informal, friendly and relaxed experience and the food was generous and very good. A plus was when a fight broke out in the kitchen between two brothers who were working there. The hostess, a small early middle aged lady marched the two out of the building like a Marine Drill Sargent and we watched them both climb into the same car and drive away. For some reason, that brief scene delighted me and made the whole dining experience memorable.

As we left, I asked the hostess if I came back could she arrange a bit longer fight to watch.
Dinner AND a show!
 
Yesterday, I visited a Grandson who has taken a new job on the central WA coast. To celebrate his new job and home, I took him for a meal at a restaurant of his choice. We went to a small joint where I was introduced to a new operating style. We were greeted and seated in the conventional manner and given menus to study. There was no wall between the dining area and kitchen, just a counter so you could see all the activity.

Then the hostess told us there were no waiters to take our order. We were to make our selections and one of us could go up to a spot in front of the kitchen where we would tell an employee what we wanted to eat.

No server brought us coffee, water or other drinks. We got these (plus silverware and condiments) from a corner table and then took them back to our table ourselves. The same was true with refills. Our food was brought to us by kitchen staff.

It was an informal, friendly and relaxed experience and the food was generous and very good. A plus was when a fight broke out in the kitchen between two brothers who were working there. The hostess, a small early middle aged lady marched the two out of the building like a Marine Drill Sargent and we watched them both climb into the same car and drive away. For some reason, that brief scene delighted me and made the whole dining experience memorable.

As we left, I asked the hostess if I came back could she arrange a bit longer fight to watch.
Kinda sounds like a fast food restaurant! :sneaky:
 
That is not a new idea here in Toronto. Back in 1998, a friend of mine had a small catering company that only did catering for University of Toronto functions. He rented a portion of a kitchen in a hotel ( he knew the owners ) and he had a small cargo van that he used to move the prepared food. The U of T has an inhouse department that provides the tables chairs table cloths and dishes and glasses and servers and bar tenders. He was busy most of the time. His culinary back ground was Malay/Hong Kong fusion foods. He is still in that business today, but with his own kitchen in a industrial complex. JimB.
 

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