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Wikipedia

Restaurant

A restaurant is a business that prepares and serves food and drinks to customers.[1] Meals are generally served and eaten on the premises, but many restaurants also offer take-out and food delivery services. Restaurants vary greatly in appearance and offerings, including a wide variety of cuisines and service models ranging from inexpensive fast-food restaurants and cafeterias to mid-priced family restaurants, to high-priced luxury establishments.

Via Sophia in Washington, D.C., United States

Etymology

The word derives from the early 19th century, taken from the French word restaurer 'provide food for', literally 'restore to a former state'[2] and, being the present participle of the verb,[3] The term restaurant may have been used in 1507 as a "restorative beverage", and in correspondence in 1521 to mean 'that which restores the strength, a fortifying food or remedy'.[4]

History

 
Remains of a thermopolium in Pompeii
 
Service counter of a thermopolium in Pompeii

A public eating establishment similar to a restaurant is mentioned in a 512 BC record from Ancient Egypt. It served only one dish, a plate of cereal, wild fowl, and onions.[5]

A forerunner of the modern restaurant is the thermopolium, an establishment in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome that sold and served ready-to-eat food and beverages. These establishments were somewhat similar in function to modern fast food restaurants. They were most often frequented by people who lacked private kitchens. In the Roman Empire they were popular among residents of insulae.[6]

In Pompeii, 158 thermopolia with service counters have been identified throughout the town. They were concentrated along the main axis of the town and the public spaces where they were frequented by the locals.[7]

The Romans also had the popina, a wine bar which in addition to a variety of wines offered a limited selection of simple foods such as olives, bread, cheese, stews, sausage, and porridge. The popinae were known as places for the plebeians of the lower classes of Roman society to socialize. While some were confined to one standing room only, others had tables and stools and a few even had couches.[8][9]

Another early forerunner of the restaurant was the inn. Throughout the ancient world, inns were set up alongside roads to cater to people travelling between cities, offering lodging and food. Meals were typically served at a common table to guests. However, there were no menus or options to choose from.[10]

The Arthashastra references establishments where prepared food was sold in ancient India. One regulation states that "those who trade in cooked rice, liquor, and flesh" are to live in the south of the city. Another states that superintendents of storehouses may give surpluses of bran and flour to "those who prepare cooked rice, and rice-cakes", while a regulation involving city superintendents references "sellers of cooked flesh and cooked rice".[11]

Early eating establishments recognizable as restaurants in the modern sense emerged in Song dynasty China during the 11th and 12th centuries. In large cities, such as Kaifeng and Hangzhou, food catering establishments catered to merchants who travelled between cities. Probably growing out of tea houses and taverns which catered to travellers, Kaifeng's restaurants blossomed into an industry that catered to locals as well as people from other regions of China. As travelling merchants were not used to the local cuisine of other cities, these establishments were set up to serve dishes familiar to merchants from other parts of China. Such establishments were located in the entertainment districts of major cities, alongside hotels, bars, and brothels. The larger and more opulent of these establishments offered a dining experience similar to modern restaurant culture. According to a Chinese manuscript from 1126, patrons of one such establishment were greeted with a selection of pre-plated demonstration dishes which represented food options. Customers had their orders taken by a team of waiters who would then sing their orders to the kitchen and distribute the dishes in the exact order in which they had been ordered.[12][13]

There is a direct correlation between the growth of the restaurant businesses and institutions of theatrical stage drama, gambling and prostitution which served the burgeoning merchant middle class during the Song dynasty.[14] Restaurants catered to different styles of cuisine, price brackets, and religious requirements. Even within a single restaurant choices were available, and people ordered the entrée from written menus.[13] An account from 1275 writes of Hangzhou, the capital city for the last half of the dynasty:

The people of Hangzhou are very difficult to please. Hundreds of orders are given on all sides: this person wants something hot, another something cold, a third something tepid, a fourth something chilled. one wants cooked food, another raw, another chooses roast, another grill.[15]

The restaurants in Hangzhou also catered to many northern Chinese who had fled south from Kaifeng during the Jurchen invasion of the 1120s, while it is also known that many restaurants were run by families formerly from Kaifeng.[16]

In Japan, a restaurant culture emerged in the 16th century out of local tea houses. Tea house owner Sen no Rikyū created the kaiseki multi-course meal tradition, and his grandsons expanded the tradition to include speciality dishes and cutlery which matched the aesthetic of the food.[12]

In Europe, inns which offered food and lodgings and taverns where food was served alongside alcoholic beverages were common into the Middle Ages and Renaissance. They typically served common fare of the type normally available to peasants. In Spain, such establishments were called bodegas and served tapas. In England, they typically served foods such as sausage and shepherd's pie.[10] Cookshops were also common in European cities during the Middle Ages. These were establishments which served dishes such as pies, puddings, sauces, fish, and baked meats. Customers could either buy a ready-made meal or bring their own meat to be cooked. As only large private homes had the means for cooking, the inhabitants of European cities were significantly reliant on them.[17]

France in particular has a rich history with the development of various forms of inns and eateries, eventually to form many of the now-ubiquitous elements of the modern restaurant. As far back as the thirteenth century, French inns served a variety of food — bread, cheese, bacon, roasts, soups, and stews - usually eaten at a common table. Parisians could buy what was essentially take-out food from rôtisseurs, who prepared roasted meat dishes, and pastry-cooks, who could prepare meat pies and often more elaborate dishes. Municipal statutes stated that the official prices per item were to be posted at the entrance; this was the first official mention of menus.[18]

Taverns also served food, as did cabarets. A cabaret, however, unlike a tavern, served food at tables with tablecloths, provided drinks with the meal, and charged by the customers' choice of dish, rather than by the pot.[19] Cabarets were reputed to serve better food than taverns and a few, such as the Petit Maure, became well known. A few cabarets had musicians or singing, but most, until the late 19th century, were simply convivial eating places.[18][19] The first café opened in Paris in 1672 at the Saint-Germain fair. By 1723 there were nearly four hundred cafés in Paris, but their menu was limited to simpler dishes or confectionaries, such as coffee, tea, chocolate (the drink; chocolate in solid state was invented only in the 19th century), ice creams, pastries, and liqueurs.[19]

At the end of the 16th century, the guild of cook-caterers (later known as "traiteurs") was given its own legal status. The traiteurs dominated sophisticated food service, delivering or preparing meals for the wealthy at their residences. Taverns and cabarets were limited to serving little more than roast or grilled meats. Towards the end of the seventeenth century, both inns and then traiteurs began to offer "host's tables" (tables d'hôte), where one paid a set price to sit at a large table with other guests and eat a fixed menu meal.[18]

Modern format

The earliest modern-format "restaurants" to use that word in Paris were the establishments which served bouillon, a broth made of meat and egg which was said to restore health and vigour. The first restaurant of this kind was opened in 1765 or 1766 by Mathurin Roze de Chantoiseau on rue des Poulies, now part of the Rue de Louvre.[20] The name of the owner is sometimes given as Boulanger.[21] Unlike earlier eating places, it was elegantly decorated, and besides meat broth offered a menu of several other "restorative" dishes, including macaroni. Chantoiseau and other chefs took the title "traiteurs-restaurateurs".[21] While not the first establishment where one could order food, or even soups, it is thought to be the first to offer a menu of available choices.[22]

In the Western world, the concept of a restaurant as a public venue where waiting staff serve patrons food from a fixed menu is a relatively recent one, dating from the late 18th century.[23] Modern restaurant culture originated in France during the 1780s.

In June 1786, the Provost of Paris issued a decree giving the new kind of eating establishment official status, authorising restaurateurs to receive clients and to offer them meals until eleven in the evening in winter and midnight in summer.[21] Ambitious cooks from noble households began to open more elaborate eating places. The first luxury restaurant in Paris, the La Grande Taverne de Londres, was opened at the Palais-Royal at the beginning of 1786 by Antoine Beauvilliers, the former chef of the Count of Provence. It had mahogany tables, linen tablecloths, chandeliers, well-dressed and trained waiters, a long wine list and an extensive menu of elaborately prepared and presented dishes.[21] Dishes on its menu included partridge with cabbage, veal chops grilled in buttered paper, and duck with turnips.[24] This is considered to have been the "first real restaurant".[25][22] According to Brillat-Savarin, the restaurant was "the first to combine the four essentials of an elegant room, smart waiters, a choice cellar, and superior cooking".[26][27][28]

The aftermath of the French Revolution saw the number of restaurants skyrocket. Due to the mass emigration of nobles from the country, many cooks from aristocratic households who were left unemployed went on to found new restaurants.[29][10] One restaurant was started in 1791 by Méot, the former chef of the Duke of Orleans, which offered a wine list with twenty-two choices of red wine and twenty-seven of white wine. By the end of the century there were a collection of luxury restaurants at the Grand-Palais: Huré, the Couvert espagnol; Février; the Grotte flamande; Véry, Masse and the Café de Chartres (still open, now Le Grand Véfour)[21]

In 1802 the term was applied to an establishment where restorative foods, such as bouillon, a meat broth, were served ("établissement de restaurateur").[30] The closure of culinary guilds and societal changes resulting from the industrial revolution contributed significantly to the increased prevalence of restaurants in Europe.[31]

Types

 
Kuappi, the smallest restaurant in the world,[32] located in Iisalmi, Finland

Restaurants are classified or distinguished in many different ways. The primary factors are usually the food itself (e.g. vegetarian, seafood, steak); the cuisine (e.g. Italian, Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, French, Mexican, Thai) or the style of offering (e.g. tapas bar, a sushi train, a tastet restaurant, a buffet restaurant or a yum cha restaurant). Beyond this, restaurants may differentiate themselves on factors including speed (see fast food), formality, location, cost, service, or novelty themes (such as automated restaurants). Some of these also include fine dining, casual dining, contemporary casual, family style, fast casual, fast food, cafes, buffet, concession stands, food trucks, pop-up restaurants, diners, and ghost restaurants.

 
Restaurant Basilica at the shoreline of Kellosaarenranta by night in Ruoholahti, Helsinki, Finland

Restaurants range from inexpensive and informal lunching or dining places catering to people working nearby, with modest food served in simple settings at low prices, to expensive establishments serving refined food and fine wines in a formal setting. In the former case, customers usually wear casual clothing. In the latter case, depending on culture and local traditions, customers might wear semi-casual, semi-formal or formal wear. Typically, at mid- to high-priced restaurants, customers sit at tables, their orders are taken by a waiter, who brings the food when it is ready. After eating, the customers then pay the bill. In some restaurants, such as those in workplaces, there are usually no waiters; the customers use trays, on which they place cold items that they select from a refrigerated container and hot items which they request from cooks, and then they pay a cashier before they sit down. Another restaurant approach which uses few waiters is the buffet restaurant. Customers serve food onto their own plates and then pay at the end of the meal. Buffet restaurants typically still have waiters to serve drinks and alcoholic beverages. Fast food establishments are also considered to be restaurants. In addition, food trucks are another popular option for people who want quick food service.

Tourists around the world can enjoy dining services on railway dining cars and cruise ship dining rooms, which are essentially travelling restaurants. Many railway dining services also cater to the needs of travellers by providing railway refreshment rooms at railway stations. Many cruise ships provide a variety of dining experiences including a main restaurant, satellite restaurants, room service, speciality restaurants, cafes, bars and buffets to name a few. Some restaurants on these cruise ships require table reservations and operate specific dress codes.[33]

Restaurant staff

A restaurant's proprietor is called a restaurateur, this derives from the French verb restaurer, meaning "to restore". Professional cooks are called chefs, with there being various finer distinctions (e.g. sous-chef, chef de partie). Most restaurants (other than fast food restaurants and cafeterias) will have various waiting staff to serve food, beverages and alcoholic drinks, including busboys who remove used dishes and cutlery. In finer restaurants, this may include a host or hostess, a maître d'hôtel to welcome customers and to seat them, and a sommelier or wine waiter to help patrons select wines. A new route to becoming a restaurateur, rather than working one's way up through the stages, is to operate a food truck. Once a sufficient following has been obtained, a permanent restaurant site can be opened. This trend has become common in the UK and the US.

Chef's table

 
Chef's table at Marcus restaurant in Central London

A chef's table is a table located in the kitchen of a restaurant,[34][35] reserved for VIPs and special guests.[36] Patrons may be served a themed[36] tasting menu prepared and served by the head chef. Restaurants can require a minimum party[37] and charge a higher flat fee.[38] Because of the demand on the kitchen's facilities, chef's tables are generally only available during off-peak times.[39]

By country

Europe

France

 
Le Grand Véfour restaurant at the Palais Royal in Paris

France has a long tradition with public eateries and modern restaurant culture emerged there. In the early 19th century, traiteurs and restaurateurs became known simply as "restaurateurs". The use of the term "restaurant" for the establishment itself only became common in the 19th century.

According to the legend, the first mention to a restaurant dates back to 1765 in Paris. It was located on Rue des Poulies, now Rue du Louvre, and use to serve dishes known as "restaurants".[40] The place was run by a man named Mr. Boulanger.[41] However, according to the Larousse Gastronomique, La Grande Taverne de Londres which opened in 1782 is considered as the first Parisian restaurant.[42]

The first restaurant guide, called Almanach des Gourmands, written by Grimod de La Reyniére, was published in 1804. During the French Restoration period, the most celebrated restaurant was the Rocher de Cancale, frequented by the characters of Balzac. In the middle of the century, Balzac's characters moved to the Café Anglais, which in 1867 also hosted the famous Three Emperors Dinner hosted by Napoleon III in honor of Tsar Alexander II, Kaiser Wilhelm I and Otto von Bismarck during the Exposition Universelle in 1867[43]

 
Garden café of the Hôtel Ritz Paris (1904), Pierre-Georges Jeanniot

Other restaurants that occupy a place in French history and literature include Maxim's and Fouquet's. The restaurant of Hotel Ritz Paris, opened in 1898, was made famous by its chef, Auguste Escoffier. The 19th century also saw the appearance of new kinds of more modest restaurants, including the bistrot. The brasserie featured beer and was made popular during the 1867 Paris Exposition.[21]

North America

United States

 
Tom's Restaurant in Manhattan was made internationally famous by Seinfeld

In the United States, it was not until the late 18th century that establishments that provided meals without also providing lodging began to appear in major metropolitan areas in the form of coffee and oyster houses. The actual term "restaurant" did not enter into the common parlance until the following century. Prior to being referred to as "restaurants" these eating establishments assumed regional names such as "eating house" in New York City, "restorator" in Boston, or "victualling house" in other areas. Restaurants were typically located in populous urban areas during the 19th century and grew both in number and sophistication in the mid-century due to a more affluent middle class and to urbanization. The highest concentration of these restaurants were in the West, followed by industrial cities on the Eastern Seaboard.[44]

When Prohibition went into effect in 1920, restaurants offering fine dining had a hard time making ends meet because they had depended on profits from selling wine and alcoholic beverages. Replacing them were establishments offering simpler, more casual experiences such as cafeterias, roadside restaurants, and diners. When Prohibition ended in the 1930s, luxury restaurants slowly started to appear again as the economy recovered from the Great Depression.[45]

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed segregation based on race, color, religion, or national origin in all public accommodations engaged in interstate commerce, including restaurants. Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U.S. 294 (1964), was a decision of the US Supreme Court which held that Congress acted within its power under the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution in forbidding racial discrimination in restaurants as this was a burden to interstate commerce.[46][47]

In the 1970s, there was one restaurant for every 7,500 persons. In 2016, there were 1,000,000 restaurants; one for every 310 people. The average person eats out five to six times weekly. 3.3% of the nation's workforce is composed of restaurant workers.[48] According to a Gallup Poll in 2016, nearly 61% of Americans across the country eat out at a restaurant once a week or more, and this percent is only predicted to increase in future years.[49] Before the COVID-19 pandemic, The National Restaurant Association estimated restaurant sales of $899 billion in 2020. The association now projects that the pandemic will decrease that to $675 billion, a decline of $274 billion over their previous estimate.[50]

South America

Brazil

In Brazil, restaurant varieties mirror the multitude of nationalities that arrived in the country: Japanese, Arab, German, Italian, Portuguese and many more.

Colombia

The word piquete can be used to refer to a common Colombian type of meal that includes meat, yuca and potatoes, which is a type of meal served at a piqueteaderos. The verb form of the word piquete, piquetear, means to participate in binging, liquor drinking, and leisure activities in popular areas or open spaces.[51]

Peru

In Peru, many indigenous, Spanish, and Chinese dishes are frequently found. Because of recent immigration from places such as China, and Japan, there are many Chinese and Japanese restaurants around the country, especially in the capital city of Lima.

Guides

 
Noma in Copenhagen, Denmark rated 3 stars in the Michelin guide, and named Best Restaurant in the World by Restaurant.

Restaurant guides review restaurants, often ranking them or providing information to guide consumers (type of food, handicap accessibility, facilities, etc.). One of the most famous contemporary guides is the Michelin series of guides which accord from 1 to 3 stars to restaurants they perceive to be of high culinary merit. Restaurants with stars in the Michelin guide are formal, expensive establishments; in general the more stars awarded, the higher the prices.

The main competitor to the Michelin guide in Europe is the guidebook series published by Gault Millau. Its ratings are on a scale of 1 to 20, with 20 being the highest.

In the United States, the Forbes Travel Guide (previously the Mobil travel guides) and the AAA rate restaurants on a similar 1 to 5 star (Forbes) or diamond (AAA) scale. Three, four, and five star/diamond ratings are roughly equivalent to the Michelin one, two, and three star ratings while one and two star ratings typically indicate more casual places to eat. In 2005, Michelin released a New York City guide, its first for the United States. The popular Zagat Survey compiles individuals' comments about restaurants but does not pass an "official" critical assessment.

Nearly all major American newspapers employ food critics and publish online dining guides for the cities they serve. Some news sources provide customary reviews of restaurants, while others may provide more of a general listings service.

More recently Internet sites have started up that publish both food critic reviews and popular reviews by the general public.

Economics

 
Restaurant Näsinneula in Tampere, Finland
 
Gunpowder Cellar of Tartu, a former 18th-century gunpowder cellar and current beer restaurant in Tartu, Estonia

Canada

There are 86,915 commercial food service units in Canada, or 26.4 units per 10,000 Canadians. By segment, there are:[52]

  • 38,797 full-service restaurants
  • 34,629 limited-service restaurants
  • 741 contract and social caterers
  • 6,749 drinking places

Fully 63% of restaurants in Canada are independent brands. Chain restaurants account for the remaining 37%, and many of these are locally owned and operated franchises.[53]

European Union

The EU-27 has an estimated 1.6m businesses involved in 'accommodation & food services', more than 75% of which are small and medium enterprises.[54]

India

The Indian restaurant industry is highly fragmented with more than 1.5 million outlets of which only around 3000 of them are from the organised segment.[55] The organised segment includes quick service restaurants; casual dining; cafes; fine dining; and pubs, bars, clubs, and lounges.

United States

 
The kitchen at Delmonico's Restaurant, New York City, 1902.

As of 2006, there are approximately 215,000 full-service restaurants in the United States, accounting for $298 billion in sales, and approximately 250,000 limited-service (fast food) restaurants, accounting for $260 billion.[56] Starting in 2016, Americans spent more on restaurants than groceries.[57] In October 2017, The New York Times reported there are 620,000 eating and drinking places in the United States, according to the Bureau of Labour Statistics. They also reported that the number of restaurants are growing almost twice as fast as the population.[58]

One study of new restaurants in Cleveland, Ohio found that 1 in 4 changed ownership or went out of business after one year, and 6 out of 10 did so after three years. (Not all changes in ownership are indicative of financial failure.)[59] The three-year failure rate for franchises was nearly the same.[60]

Restaurants employed 912,100 cooks in 2013, earning an average $9.83 per hour.[61] The waiting staff numbered 4,438,100 in 2012, earning an average $8.84 per hour.[62]

Jiaxi Lu of the Washington Post reports in 2014 that, "Americans are spending $683.4 billion a year dining out, and they are also demanding better food quality and greater variety from restaurants to make sure their money is well spent."[63]

Dining in restaurants has become increasingly popular, with the proportion of meals consumed outside the home in restaurants or institutions rising from 25% in 1950 to 46% in 1990. This is caused by factors such as the growing numbers of older people, who are often unable or unwilling to cook their meals at home and the growing number of single-parent households. It is also caused by the convenience that restaurants can afford people; the growth of restaurant popularity is also correlated with the growing length of the work day in the US, as well as the growing number of single parent households.[64] Eating in restaurants has also become more popular with the growth of higher income households. At the same time, less expensive establishments such as fast food establishments can be quite inexpensive, making restaurant eating accessible to many.

Employment

The restaurant industry in the United States is large and quickly growing, with 10 million workers. 1 in every 12 U.S. residents work in the business, and during the 2008 recession, the industry was an anomaly in that it continued to grow. Restaurants are known for having low wages, which they claim are due to thin profit margins of 4-5%. For comparison, however, Walmart has a 1% profit margin.[65] As a result of these low wages, restaurant employees suffer from three times the poverty rate as other U.S. workers, and use food stamps twice as much.[65] Restaurants are the largest employer of people of color, and rank as the second largest employer of immigrants. These workers statistically are concentrated in the lowest paying positions in the restaurant industry. In the restaurant industry, 39% of workers earn minimum wage or lower.[65]

Regulations

In many countries, restaurants are subject to inspections by health inspectors to maintain standards for public health, such as maintaining proper hygiene and cleanliness. The most common kind of violations of inspection reports are those concerning the storage of cold food at appropriate temperatures, proper sanitation of equipment, regular hand washing and proper disposal of harmful chemicals. Simple steps can be taken to improve sanitation in restaurants. As sickness is easily spread through touch, restaurants are encouraged to regularly wipe down tables, door knobs and menus.[66]

Depending on local customs, legislation and the establishment, restaurants may or may not serve alcoholic beverages. Restaurants are often prohibited from selling alcoholic beverages without a meal by alcohol sale laws; such sale is considered to be activity for bars, which are meant to have more severe restrictions. Some restaurants are licensed to serve alcohol ("fully licensed"), or permit customers to "bring your own" alcohol (BYO / BYOB). In some places restaurant licenses may restrict service to beer, or wine and beer.[67]

Occupational hazards

Food service regulations have historically been built around hygiene and protection of the consumer's health.[68] However, restaurant workers face many health hazards such as long hours, low wages, minimal benefits, discrimination, high stress, and poor working conditions.[68] Along with the COVID-19 pandemic, much attention has been drawn to the prevention of community transmission in restaurants and other public settings.[69] To reduce airborne disease transmission, the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention recommends reduced dining capacity, face masks, adequate ventilation, physical barrier instalments, disinfection, signage, and flexible leave policies for workers.[70]

See also

References

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  4. ^ "ce qui répare les forces, aliment ou remède fortifiant" (Marguerite d'Angoulême ds Briçonnet, volume 1, p. 70)
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  53. ^ ReCount/NPD Group and CRFA's Foodservice Facts
  54. ^ "Business economy – size class analysis – Statistics Explained". Epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  55. ^ "Restaurant Industry". SMERGERS Industry Watch. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  56. ^ 2006 U.S. Industry & Market Outlook by Barnes Reports.
  57. ^ Phillips, Matt (June 16, 2016). "No one cooks anymore". Quartz (publication). Retrieved April 5, 2017.
  58. ^ Abrams, Rachel; Gebeloff (October 31, 2017). "Thanks to Wall St., There May Be Too Many Restaurants". The New York Times. Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  59. ^ Kerry Miller, , Business Week, April 16, 2007. Cites an article by H.G. Parsa in Cornell Hotel & Restaurant Administration Quarterly, published August 2005.
  60. ^ Miller, "Failure Myth",
  61. ^ Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2013 35-2014 Cooks, Restaurant" online
  62. ^ BLS, "Occupational Outlook Handbook: Food and Beverage Serving and Related Workers" (January 8, 2014) online
  63. ^ Jiaxi Lu, "Consumer Reports: McDonald's burger ranked worst in the U.S.," [1]
  64. ^ Nestle, Marion (1994). "Traditional Models of Healthy Eating: Alternatives to 'techno-food'". Journal of Nutrition Education. 26 (5): 241–45. doi:10.1016/s0022-3182(12)80898-3.
  65. ^ a b c Jayaraman, Saru (Summer 2014). "Feeding America: Immigrants in the Restaurant Industry and Throughout the Food System Take Action for Change". Social Research. 81 (2): 347–358. doi:10.1353/sor.2014.0019.
  66. ^ Sibel Roller (2012). "10". Essential Microbiology and Hygiene for Food Professionals. CRC Press. ISBN 9781444121490.
  67. ^ Danny May; Andy Sharpe (2004). The Only Wine Book You'll Ever Need. Adams Media. p. 221. ISBN 9781440518935.
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  69. ^ Morawska, Lidia; Tang, Julian W.; Bahnfleth, William; Bluyssen, Philomena M.; Boerstra, Atze; Buonanno, Giorgio; Cao, Junji; Dancer, Stephanie; Floto, Andres; Franchimon, Francesco; Haworth, Charles (September 1, 2020). "How can airborne transmission of COVID-19 indoors be minimised?". Environment International. 142: 105832. doi:10.1016/j.envint.2020.105832. ISSN 0160-4120. PMC 7250761. PMID 32521345.
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Bibliography

  • Chevallier, Jim (2018). A History of the Food of Paris: From Roast Mammoth to Steak Frites. Big City Food Biographies. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1442272828.
  • Fierro, Alfred (1996). Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris. Robert Laffont. ISBN 978-2221078624.
  • Gernet, Jacques (1962). Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250–1276. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0720-6.
  • Spang, Rebecca L. (2000), The Invention of the Restaurant. Harvard University Press
  • West, Stephen H. (1997). "Playing With Food: Performance, Food, and The Aesthetics of Artificiality in The Sung and Yuan". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 57 (1): 67–106. doi:10.2307/2719361. JSTOR 2719361.
  • "Early Restaurants in America". UNLV Libraries Digital Collections. University of Nevada Las Vegas. Retrieved April 30, 2013.

Further reading

  • Appelbaum, Robert, Dishing It Out: In Search of the Restaurant Experience. (London: Reaktion, 2011).
  • Fleury, Hélène (2007), "L'Inde en miniature à Paris. Le décor des restaurants", Diasporas indiennes dans la ville. Hommes et migrations (Number 1268–1269, 2007): 168–73.
  • Haley, Andrew P. Turning the Tables: Restaurants and the Rise of the American Middle Class, 1880–1920. (University of North Carolina Press; 2011) 384 pp
  • Kiefer, Nicholas M. (August 2002). "Economics and the Origin of the Restaurant" (PDF). Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly. 43 (4): 5–7. doi:10.1177/0010880402434006. S2CID 220628566.
  • Lundberg, Donald E., The Hotel and Restaurant Business, Boston : Cahners Books, 1974. ISBN 0-8436-2044-7
  • Sitwell, William (2020). The Restaurant: A 2,000-Year History of Dining Out. New York, NY: Diversion Books. ISBN 978-1635766998.
  • Whitaker, Jan (2002), Tea at the Blue Lantern Inn: A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America. St. Martin's Press.

External links

  •   Media related to Restaurant at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Restaurant at Wikiquote

restaurant, other, uses, disambiguation, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, june, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, rest. For other uses see Restaurant disambiguation The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message A restaurant is a business that prepares and serves food and drinks to customers 1 Meals are generally served and eaten on the premises but many restaurants also offer take out and food delivery services Restaurants vary greatly in appearance and offerings including a wide variety of cuisines and service models ranging from inexpensive fast food restaurants and cafeterias to mid priced family restaurants to high priced luxury establishments Via Sophia in Washington D C United States Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Modern format 4 Types 5 Restaurant staff 5 1 Chef s table 6 By country 6 1 Europe 6 1 1 France 6 2 North America 6 2 1 United States 6 3 South America 6 3 1 Brazil 6 3 2 Colombia 6 3 3 Peru 7 Guides 8 Economics 8 1 Canada 8 2 European Union 8 3 India 8 4 United States 8 4 1 Employment 9 Regulations 10 Occupational hazards 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksEtymology EditThe word derives from the early 19th century taken from the French word restaurer provide food for literally restore to a former state 2 and being the present participle of the verb 3 The term restaurant may have been used in 1507 as a restorative beverage and in correspondence in 1521 to mean that which restores the strength a fortifying food or remedy 4 History Edit Remains of a thermopolium in Pompeii Service counter of a thermopolium in Pompeii A public eating establishment similar to a restaurant is mentioned in a 512 BC record from Ancient Egypt It served only one dish a plate of cereal wild fowl and onions 5 A forerunner of the modern restaurant is the thermopolium an establishment in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome that sold and served ready to eat food and beverages These establishments were somewhat similar in function to modern fast food restaurants They were most often frequented by people who lacked private kitchens In the Roman Empire they were popular among residents of insulae 6 In Pompeii 158 thermopolia with service counters have been identified throughout the town They were concentrated along the main axis of the town and the public spaces where they were frequented by the locals 7 The Romans also had the popina a wine bar which in addition to a variety of wines offered a limited selection of simple foods such as olives bread cheese stews sausage and porridge The popinae were known as places for the plebeians of the lower classes of Roman society to socialize While some were confined to one standing room only others had tables and stools and a few even had couches 8 9 Another early forerunner of the restaurant was the inn Throughout the ancient world inns were set up alongside roads to cater to people travelling between cities offering lodging and food Meals were typically served at a common table to guests However there were no menus or options to choose from 10 The Arthashastra references establishments where prepared food was sold in ancient India One regulation states that those who trade in cooked rice liquor and flesh are to live in the south of the city Another states that superintendents of storehouses may give surpluses of bran and flour to those who prepare cooked rice and rice cakes while a regulation involving city superintendents references sellers of cooked flesh and cooked rice 11 Early eating establishments recognizable as restaurants in the modern sense emerged in Song dynasty China during the 11th and 12th centuries In large cities such as Kaifeng and Hangzhou food catering establishments catered to merchants who travelled between cities Probably growing out of tea houses and taverns which catered to travellers Kaifeng s restaurants blossomed into an industry that catered to locals as well as people from other regions of China As travelling merchants were not used to the local cuisine of other cities these establishments were set up to serve dishes familiar to merchants from other parts of China Such establishments were located in the entertainment districts of major cities alongside hotels bars and brothels The larger and more opulent of these establishments offered a dining experience similar to modern restaurant culture According to a Chinese manuscript from 1126 patrons of one such establishment were greeted with a selection of pre plated demonstration dishes which represented food options Customers had their orders taken by a team of waiters who would then sing their orders to the kitchen and distribute the dishes in the exact order in which they had been ordered 12 13 There is a direct correlation between the growth of the restaurant businesses and institutions of theatrical stage drama gambling and prostitution which served the burgeoning merchant middle class during the Song dynasty 14 Restaurants catered to different styles of cuisine price brackets and religious requirements Even within a single restaurant choices were available and people ordered the entree from written menus 13 An account from 1275 writes of Hangzhou the capital city for the last half of the dynasty The people of Hangzhou are very difficult to please Hundreds of orders are given on all sides this person wants something hot another something cold a third something tepid a fourth something chilled one wants cooked food another raw another chooses roast another grill 15 The restaurants in Hangzhou also catered to many northern Chinese who had fled south from Kaifeng during the Jurchen invasion of the 1120s while it is also known that many restaurants were run by families formerly from Kaifeng 16 In Japan a restaurant culture emerged in the 16th century out of local tea houses Tea house owner Sen no Rikyu created the kaiseki multi course meal tradition and his grandsons expanded the tradition to include speciality dishes and cutlery which matched the aesthetic of the food 12 In Europe inns which offered food and lodgings and taverns where food was served alongside alcoholic beverages were common into the Middle Ages and Renaissance They typically served common fare of the type normally available to peasants In Spain such establishments were called bodegas and served tapas In England they typically served foods such as sausage and shepherd s pie 10 Cookshops were also common in European cities during the Middle Ages These were establishments which served dishes such as pies puddings sauces fish and baked meats Customers could either buy a ready made meal or bring their own meat to be cooked As only large private homes had the means for cooking the inhabitants of European cities were significantly reliant on them 17 France in particular has a rich history with the development of various forms of inns and eateries eventually to form many of the now ubiquitous elements of the modern restaurant As far back as the thirteenth century French inns served a variety of food bread cheese bacon roasts soups and stews usually eaten at a common table Parisians could buy what was essentially take out food from rotisseurs who prepared roasted meat dishes and pastry cooks who could prepare meat pies and often more elaborate dishes Municipal statutes stated that the official prices per item were to be posted at the entrance this was the first official mention of menus 18 Taverns also served food as did cabarets A cabaret however unlike a tavern served food at tables with tablecloths provided drinks with the meal and charged by the customers choice of dish rather than by the pot 19 Cabarets were reputed to serve better food than taverns and a few such as the Petit Maure became well known A few cabarets had musicians or singing but most until the late 19th century were simply convivial eating places 18 19 The first cafe opened in Paris in 1672 at the Saint Germain fair By 1723 there were nearly four hundred cafes in Paris but their menu was limited to simpler dishes or confectionaries such as coffee tea chocolate the drink chocolate in solid state was invented only in the 19th century ice creams pastries and liqueurs 19 At the end of the 16th century the guild of cook caterers later known as traiteurs was given its own legal status The traiteurs dominated sophisticated food service delivering or preparing meals for the wealthy at their residences Taverns and cabarets were limited to serving little more than roast or grilled meats Towards the end of the seventeenth century both inns and then traiteurs began to offer host s tables tables d hote where one paid a set price to sit at a large table with other guests and eat a fixed menu meal 18 Modern format EditThe earliest modern format restaurants to use that word in Paris were the establishments which served bouillon a broth made of meat and egg which was said to restore health and vigour The first restaurant of this kind was opened in 1765 or 1766 by Mathurin Roze de Chantoiseau on rue des Poulies now part of the Rue de Louvre 20 The name of the owner is sometimes given as Boulanger 21 Unlike earlier eating places it was elegantly decorated and besides meat broth offered a menu of several other restorative dishes including macaroni Chantoiseau and other chefs took the title traiteurs restaurateurs 21 While not the first establishment where one could order food or even soups it is thought to be the first to offer a menu of available choices 22 In the Western world the concept of a restaurant as a public venue where waiting staff serve patrons food from a fixed menu is a relatively recent one dating from the late 18th century 23 Modern restaurant culture originated in France during the 1780s In June 1786 the Provost of Paris issued a decree giving the new kind of eating establishment official status authorising restaurateurs to receive clients and to offer them meals until eleven in the evening in winter and midnight in summer 21 Ambitious cooks from noble households began to open more elaborate eating places The first luxury restaurant in Paris the La Grande Taverne de Londres was opened at the Palais Royal at the beginning of 1786 by Antoine Beauvilliers the former chef of the Count of Provence It had mahogany tables linen tablecloths chandeliers well dressed and trained waiters a long wine list and an extensive menu of elaborately prepared and presented dishes 21 Dishes on its menu included partridge with cabbage veal chops grilled in buttered paper and duck with turnips 24 This is considered to have been the first real restaurant 25 22 According to Brillat Savarin the restaurant was the first to combine the four essentials of an elegant room smart waiters a choice cellar and superior cooking 26 27 28 The aftermath of the French Revolution saw the number of restaurants skyrocket Due to the mass emigration of nobles from the country many cooks from aristocratic households who were left unemployed went on to found new restaurants 29 10 One restaurant was started in 1791 by Meot the former chef of the Duke of Orleans which offered a wine list with twenty two choices of red wine and twenty seven of white wine By the end of the century there were a collection of luxury restaurants at the Grand Palais Hure the Couvert espagnol Fevrier the Grotte flamande Very Masse and the Cafe de Chartres still open now Le Grand Vefour 21 In 1802 the term was applied to an establishment where restorative foods such as bouillon a meat broth were served etablissement de restaurateur 30 The closure of culinary guilds and societal changes resulting from the industrial revolution contributed significantly to the increased prevalence of restaurants in Europe 31 Types EditSee also Types of restaurants The kitchen of Petrus in Central London Kuappi the smallest restaurant in the world 32 located in Iisalmi Finland Restaurants are classified or distinguished in many different ways The primary factors are usually the food itself e g vegetarian seafood steak the cuisine e g Italian Korean Chinese Japanese Indian French Mexican Thai or the style of offering e g tapas bar a sushi train a tastet restaurant a buffet restaurant or a yum cha restaurant Beyond this restaurants may differentiate themselves on factors including speed see fast food formality location cost service or novelty themes such as automated restaurants Some of these also include fine dining casual dining contemporary casual family style fast casual fast food cafes buffet concession stands food trucks pop up restaurants diners and ghost restaurants Restaurant Basilica at the shoreline of Kellosaarenranta by night in Ruoholahti Helsinki Finland Restaurants range from inexpensive and informal lunching or dining places catering to people working nearby with modest food served in simple settings at low prices to expensive establishments serving refined food and fine wines in a formal setting In the former case customers usually wear casual clothing In the latter case depending on culture and local traditions customers might wear semi casual semi formal or formal wear Typically at mid to high priced restaurants customers sit at tables their orders are taken by a waiter who brings the food when it is ready After eating the customers then pay the bill In some restaurants such as those in workplaces there are usually no waiters the customers use trays on which they place cold items that they select from a refrigerated container and hot items which they request from cooks and then they pay a cashier before they sit down Another restaurant approach which uses few waiters is the buffet restaurant Customers serve food onto their own plates and then pay at the end of the meal Buffet restaurants typically still have waiters to serve drinks and alcoholic beverages Fast food establishments are also considered to be restaurants In addition food trucks are another popular option for people who want quick food service Tourists around the world can enjoy dining services on railway dining cars and cruise ship dining rooms which are essentially travelling restaurants Many railway dining services also cater to the needs of travellers by providing railway refreshment rooms at railway stations Many cruise ships provide a variety of dining experiences including a main restaurant satellite restaurants room service speciality restaurants cafes bars and buffets to name a few Some restaurants on these cruise ships require table reservations and operate specific dress codes 33 Restaurant staff EditA restaurant s proprietor is called a restaurateur this derives from the French verb restaurer meaning to restore Professional cooks are called chefs with there being various finer distinctions e g sous chef chef de partie Most restaurants other than fast food restaurants and cafeterias will have various waiting staff to serve food beverages and alcoholic drinks including busboys who remove used dishes and cutlery In finer restaurants this may include a host or hostess a maitre d hotel to welcome customers and to seat them and a sommelier or wine waiter to help patrons select wines A new route to becoming a restaurateur rather than working one s way up through the stages is to operate a food truck Once a sufficient following has been obtained a permanent restaurant site can be opened This trend has become common in the UK and the US Chef s table Edit Chef s table redirects here For the Netflix documentary series see Chef s Table Chef s table at Marcus restaurant in Central London A chef s table is a table located in the kitchen of a restaurant 34 35 reserved for VIPs and special guests 36 Patrons may be served a themed 36 tasting menu prepared and served by the head chef Restaurants can require a minimum party 37 and charge a higher flat fee 38 Because of the demand on the kitchen s facilities chef s tables are generally only available during off peak times 39 By country EditEurope Edit France Edit Le Grand Vefour restaurant at the Palais Royal in Paris France has a long tradition with public eateries and modern restaurant culture emerged there In the early 19th century traiteurs and restaurateurs became known simply as restaurateurs The use of the term restaurant for the establishment itself only became common in the 19th century According to the legend the first mention to a restaurant dates back to 1765 in Paris It was located on Rue des Poulies now Rue du Louvre and use to serve dishes known as restaurants 40 The place was run by a man named Mr Boulanger 41 However according to the Larousse Gastronomique La Grande Taverne de Londres which opened in 1782 is considered as the first Parisian restaurant 42 The first restaurant guide called Almanach des Gourmands written by Grimod de La Reyniere was published in 1804 During the French Restoration period the most celebrated restaurant was the Rocher de Cancale frequented by the characters of Balzac In the middle of the century Balzac s characters moved to the Cafe Anglais which in 1867 also hosted the famous Three Emperors Dinner hosted by Napoleon III in honor of Tsar Alexander II Kaiser Wilhelm I and Otto von Bismarck during the Exposition Universelle in 1867 43 Garden cafe of the Hotel Ritz Paris 1904 Pierre Georges Jeanniot Other restaurants that occupy a place in French history and literature include Maxim s and Fouquet s The restaurant of Hotel Ritz Paris opened in 1898 was made famous by its chef Auguste Escoffier The 19th century also saw the appearance of new kinds of more modest restaurants including the bistrot The brasserie featured beer and was made popular during the 1867 Paris Exposition 21 North America Edit United States Edit See also List of the oldest restaurants in the United States Tom s Restaurant in Manhattan was made internationally famous by Seinfeld In the United States it was not until the late 18th century that establishments that provided meals without also providing lodging began to appear in major metropolitan areas in the form of coffee and oyster houses The actual term restaurant did not enter into the common parlance until the following century Prior to being referred to as restaurants these eating establishments assumed regional names such as eating house in New York City restorator in Boston or victualling house in other areas Restaurants were typically located in populous urban areas during the 19th century and grew both in number and sophistication in the mid century due to a more affluent middle class and to urbanization The highest concentration of these restaurants were in the West followed by industrial cities on the Eastern Seaboard 44 When Prohibition went into effect in 1920 restaurants offering fine dining had a hard time making ends meet because they had depended on profits from selling wine and alcoholic beverages Replacing them were establishments offering simpler more casual experiences such as cafeterias roadside restaurants and diners When Prohibition ended in the 1930s luxury restaurants slowly started to appear again as the economy recovered from the Great Depression 45 The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed segregation based on race color religion or national origin in all public accommodations engaged in interstate commerce including restaurants Katzenbach v McClung 379 U S 294 1964 was a decision of the US Supreme Court which held that Congress acted within its power under the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution in forbidding racial discrimination in restaurants as this was a burden to interstate commerce 46 47 In the 1970s there was one restaurant for every 7 500 persons In 2016 there were 1 000 000 restaurants one for every 310 people The average person eats out five to six times weekly 3 3 of the nation s workforce is composed of restaurant workers 48 According to a Gallup Poll in 2016 nearly 61 of Americans across the country eat out at a restaurant once a week or more and this percent is only predicted to increase in future years 49 Before the COVID 19 pandemic The National Restaurant Association estimated restaurant sales of 899 billion in 2020 The association now projects that the pandemic will decrease that to 675 billion a decline of 274 billion over their previous estimate 50 South America Edit Brazil Edit In Brazil restaurant varieties mirror the multitude of nationalities that arrived in the country Japanese Arab German Italian Portuguese and many more Colombia Edit The word piquete can be used to refer to a common Colombian type of meal that includes meat yuca and potatoes which is a type of meal served at a piqueteaderos The verb form of the word piquete piquetear means to participate in binging liquor drinking and leisure activities in popular areas or open spaces 51 Peru Edit In Peru many indigenous Spanish and Chinese dishes are frequently found Because of recent immigration from places such as China and Japan there are many Chinese and Japanese restaurants around the country especially in the capital city of Lima Guides EditMain article Restaurant rating Noma in Copenhagen Denmark rated 3 stars in the Michelin guide and named Best Restaurant in the World by Restaurant Restaurant guides review restaurants often ranking them or providing information to guide consumers type of food handicap accessibility facilities etc One of the most famous contemporary guides is the Michelin series of guides which accord from 1 to 3 stars to restaurants they perceive to be of high culinary merit Restaurants with stars in the Michelin guide are formal expensive establishments in general the more stars awarded the higher the prices The main competitor to the Michelin guide in Europe is the guidebook series published by Gault Millau Its ratings are on a scale of 1 to 20 with 20 being the highest Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Pocantico Hills New York has two Michelin stars In the United States the Forbes Travel Guide previously the Mobil travel guides and the AAA rate restaurants on a similar 1 to 5 star Forbes or diamond AAA scale Three four and five star diamond ratings are roughly equivalent to the Michelin one two and three star ratings while one and two star ratings typically indicate more casual places to eat In 2005 Michelin released a New York City guide its first for the United States The popular Zagat Survey compiles individuals comments about restaurants but does not pass an official critical assessment Nearly all major American newspapers employ food critics and publish online dining guides for the cities they serve Some news sources provide customary reviews of restaurants while others may provide more of a general listings service More recently Internet sites have started up that publish both food critic reviews and popular reviews by the general public Economics Edit Restaurant Nasinneula in Tampere Finland Gunpowder Cellar of Tartu a former 18th century gunpowder cellar and current beer restaurant in Tartu Estonia Canada Edit There are 86 915 commercial food service units in Canada or 26 4 units per 10 000 Canadians By segment there are 52 38 797 full service restaurants 34 629 limited service restaurants 741 contract and social caterers 6 749 drinking placesFully 63 of restaurants in Canada are independent brands Chain restaurants account for the remaining 37 and many of these are locally owned and operated franchises 53 European Union Edit The EU 27 has an estimated 1 6m businesses involved in accommodation amp food services more than 75 of which are small and medium enterprises 54 India Edit The Indian restaurant industry is highly fragmented with more than 1 5 million outlets of which only around 3000 of them are from the organised segment 55 The organised segment includes quick service restaurants casual dining cafes fine dining and pubs bars clubs and lounges United States Edit The kitchen at Delmonico s Restaurant New York City 1902 As of 2006 there are approximately 215 000 full service restaurants in the United States accounting for 298 billion in sales and approximately 250 000 limited service fast food restaurants accounting for 260 billion 56 Starting in 2016 Americans spent more on restaurants than groceries 57 In October 2017 The New York Times reported there are 620 000 eating and drinking places in the United States according to the Bureau of Labour Statistics They also reported that the number of restaurants are growing almost twice as fast as the population 58 One study of new restaurants in Cleveland Ohio found that 1 in 4 changed ownership or went out of business after one year and 6 out of 10 did so after three years Not all changes in ownership are indicative of financial failure 59 The three year failure rate for franchises was nearly the same 60 Restaurants employed 912 100 cooks in 2013 earning an average 9 83 per hour 61 The waiting staff numbered 4 438 100 in 2012 earning an average 8 84 per hour 62 Jiaxi Lu of the Washington Post reports in 2014 that Americans are spending 683 4 billion a year dining out and they are also demanding better food quality and greater variety from restaurants to make sure their money is well spent 63 Dining in restaurants has become increasingly popular with the proportion of meals consumed outside the home in restaurants or institutions rising from 25 in 1950 to 46 in 1990 This is caused by factors such as the growing numbers of older people who are often unable or unwilling to cook their meals at home and the growing number of single parent households It is also caused by the convenience that restaurants can afford people the growth of restaurant popularity is also correlated with the growing length of the work day in the US as well as the growing number of single parent households 64 Eating in restaurants has also become more popular with the growth of higher income households At the same time less expensive establishments such as fast food establishments can be quite inexpensive making restaurant eating accessible to many Employment Edit The restaurant industry in the United States is large and quickly growing with 10 million workers 1 in every 12 U S residents work in the business and during the 2008 recession the industry was an anomaly in that it continued to grow Restaurants are known for having low wages which they claim are due to thin profit margins of 4 5 For comparison however Walmart has a 1 profit margin 65 As a result of these low wages restaurant employees suffer from three times the poverty rate as other U S workers and use food stamps twice as much 65 Restaurants are the largest employer of people of color and rank as the second largest employer of immigrants These workers statistically are concentrated in the lowest paying positions in the restaurant industry In the restaurant industry 39 of workers earn minimum wage or lower 65 Regulations EditIn many countries restaurants are subject to inspections by health inspectors to maintain standards for public health such as maintaining proper hygiene and cleanliness The most common kind of violations of inspection reports are those concerning the storage of cold food at appropriate temperatures proper sanitation of equipment regular hand washing and proper disposal of harmful chemicals Simple steps can be taken to improve sanitation in restaurants As sickness is easily spread through touch restaurants are encouraged to regularly wipe down tables door knobs and menus 66 Depending on local customs legislation and the establishment restaurants may or may not serve alcoholic beverages Restaurants are often prohibited from selling alcoholic beverages without a meal by alcohol sale laws such sale is considered to be activity for bars which are meant to have more severe restrictions Some restaurants are licensed to serve alcohol fully licensed or permit customers to bring your own alcohol BYO BYOB In some places restaurant licenses may restrict service to beer or wine and beer 67 Occupational hazards EditFood service regulations have historically been built around hygiene and protection of the consumer s health 68 However restaurant workers face many health hazards such as long hours low wages minimal benefits discrimination high stress and poor working conditions 68 Along with the COVID 19 pandemic much attention has been drawn to the prevention of community transmission in restaurants and other public settings 69 To reduce airborne disease transmission the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention recommends reduced dining capacity face masks adequate ventilation physical barrier instalments disinfection signage and flexible leave policies for workers 70 See also EditLists of restaurantsReferences Edit Definition of RESTAURANT Merriam Webster Restaurant Lexico com Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Conjugaison de restaurer WordReference com wordreference com ce qui repare les forces aliment ou remede fortifiant Marguerite d Angouleme ds Briconnet volume 1 p 70 United States Congress Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs June 22 1977 Diet Related to Killer Diseases U S Government Printing Office Take out restaurants existed in ancient Rome and were called thermopolia The Vintage News November 26 2017 Ellis Steven J R 2004 The Distribution of Bars at Pompeii Archaeological Spatial and Viewshed Analyses Journal of Roman Archaeology Vol 17 pp 371 84 374f Visiting a Bar in Ancient Rome Lucius Romans University of Kent July 15 2016 Potter David S 2008 A Companion to the Roman Empire John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 7826 6 p 374 a b c Mealey Lorri December 13 2018 History of the Restaurant The Balance Small Business Kautilya s Arthashastra Book II The Duties of Government Superintendents a b Roos Dave May 18 2020 When Did People Start Eating in Restaurants History com a b Gernet 1962 133 West 1997 69 76 Kiefer 2002 5 7 Gernet 1962 133 134 Symons Michael A History of Cooks and Cooking p 312 a b c Chevallier 2018 pp 67 80 a b c Fierro 1996 p 737 Rebecca L Spang The Invention of the Restaurant Paris and Modern Gastronomic Culture Harvard University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 674 00685 0 a b c d e f Fierro 1996 p 1137 a b Restaurant Encyclopedia Britannica Constantine Wyatt May 2012 Un Histoire Culinaire Careme the Restaurant and the Birth of Modern Gastronomy Texas State University San Marcos James Salter 2010 Life Is Meals A Food Lover s Book of Days Random House pp 70 71 ISBN 9780307496447 Prosper Montagne The New Larousse Gastronomique Editions Larousse p 97 Retrieved February 22 2019 Jean Anthelme Brillat Savarin April 5 2012 The Physiology of Taste Courier Corporation pp 226 ISBN 978 0 486 14302 6 Paul H Freedman Professor Paul Freedman 2007 Food The History of Taste University of California Press pp 305 ISBN 978 0 520 25476 3 Edward Glaeser February 10 2011 Triumph of the City How Our Greatest Invention Makes Us Richer Smarter Greener Healthier and Happier Penguin Publishing Group pp 88 ISBN 978 1 101 47567 6 Metzner Paul Crescendo of the Virtuoso Spectacle Skill and Self Promotion in Paris during the Age of Revolution Berkeley University of California Press c1998 1998 Crescendo of the Virtuoso Etymology of Cabaret Ortolong site of the Centre National des Resources Textuelles et Lexicales in French Retrieved January 12 2019 Steven October 1 2006 Abolish restaurants A worker s critique of the food service industry Libcom Library Retrieved August 18 2021 The world s smallest restaurants Fox News 23 January 2013 Accessed on 30 June 2022 Beginner s guide to dining on a cruise Cruiseable May 7 2014 Retrieved April 22 2020 Ford Elise Hartman 2006 Frommer s Washington D C 2007 Part 3 Vol 298 John Wiley and Sons p 162 ISBN 978 0 470 03849 9 Blackwell Elizabeth Canning 2008 Frommer s Chicago 2009 Vol 627 Frommer s p 123 ISBN 978 0 470 37371 2 a b Brown Monique R January 2000 Host your own chef s table Black Enterprise p 122 Ford Elise Hartman Clark Colleen 2006 D C night day Part 3 ASDavis Media Group p 25 ISBN 978 0 9766013 4 0 Miller Laura Lea 2007 Walt Disney World amp Orlando For Dummies 2008 For Dummies p 157 ISBN 978 0 470 13470 2 Brown Monique R January 2000 New spin on dining Hosting a chef s table can wow guests Black Enterprise p 122 Louisgrand Nathalie Revolutionary broth the birth of the restaurant and the invention of French gastronomy The Conversation Retrieved January 31 2023 Who Invented the First Modern Restaurant Culture March 13 2015 Retrieved January 31 2023 Who Invented the First Modern Restaurant Culture March 13 2015 Retrieved January 31 2023 Diner des Trois Empereurs le 4 juin 1867 menus free fr Early Restaurants in America Menus the art of dining Digital Collections University of Nevada Las Vegas 2018 Food in Time and Place the American Historical Association Companion to Food History Paul Freedman Joyce E Chaplin Ken Albala Berkeley University of California Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 520 95934 7 OCLC 890089872 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Civil Rights Act of 1964 P L 88 352 PDF senate gov Retrieved May 30 2022 Nicholas deB KATZENBACH Acting Attorney General et al Appellants v Ollie McCLUNG Sr and Ollie McClung Jr LII Legal Information Institute Total U S Jobs National Restaurant Association 2021 Retrieved October 27 2021 Americans Dining Out Frequency Little Changed From 2008 Gallup January 11 2017 Retrieved April 2 2020 Gangitano Alex March 18 2020 Restaurant industry estimates 225B in losses from coronavirus The Hill Retrieved March 23 2020 Diccionario Comentado Del Espanol Actual en Colombia 3rd edition by Ramiro Montoya CRFA s Provincial InfoStats and Statistics Canada ReCount NPD Group and CRFA s Foodservice Facts Business economy size class analysis Statistics Explained Epp eurostat ec europa eu Retrieved May 2 2013 Restaurant Industry SMERGERS Industry Watch Retrieved August 27 2019 2006 U S Industry amp Market Outlook by Barnes Reports Phillips Matt June 16 2016 No one cooks anymore Quartz publication Retrieved April 5 2017 Abrams Rachel Gebeloff October 31 2017 Thanks to Wall St There May Be Too Many Restaurants The New York Times Retrieved November 1 2017 Kerry Miller The Restaurant Failure Myth Business Week April 16 2007 Cites an article by H G Parsa in Cornell Hotel amp Restaurant Administration Quarterly published August 2005 Miller Failure Myth page 2 Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wages May 2013 35 2014 Cooks Restaurant online BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook Food and Beverage Serving and Related Workers January 8 2014 online Jiaxi Lu Consumer Reports McDonald s burger ranked worst in the U S 1 Nestle Marion 1994 Traditional Models of Healthy Eating Alternatives to techno food Journal of Nutrition Education 26 5 241 45 doi 10 1016 s0022 3182 12 80898 3 a b c Jayaraman Saru Summer 2014 Feeding America Immigrants in the Restaurant Industry and Throughout the Food System Take Action for Change Social Research 81 2 347 358 doi 10 1353 sor 2014 0019 Sibel Roller 2012 10 Essential Microbiology and Hygiene for Food Professionals CRC Press ISBN 9781444121490 Danny May Andy Sharpe 2004 The Only Wine Book You ll Ever Need Adams Media p 221 ISBN 9781440518935 a b Lippert Julia Rosing Howard Tendick Matesanz Felipe July 2020 The health of restaurant work A historical and social context to the occupational health of food service American Journal of Industrial Medicine 63 7 563 576 doi 10 1002 ajim 23112 ISSN 0271 3586 PMID 32329097 S2CID 216110536 Morawska Lidia Tang Julian W Bahnfleth William Bluyssen Philomena M Boerstra Atze Buonanno Giorgio Cao Junji Dancer Stephanie Floto Andres Franchimon Francesco Haworth Charles September 1 2020 How can airborne transmission of COVID 19 indoors be minimised Environment International 142 105832 doi 10 1016 j envint 2020 105832 ISSN 0160 4120 PMC 7250761 PMID 32521345 Communities Schools Workplaces amp Events Centers for Disease Control and Prevention April 30 2020 Retrieved July 14 2020 Bibliography Edit Chevallier Jim 2018 A History of the Food of Paris From Roast Mammoth to Steak Frites Big City Food Biographies Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442272828 Fierro Alfred 1996 Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris Robert Laffont ISBN 978 2221078624 Gernet Jacques 1962 Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion 1250 1276 Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0720 6 Spang Rebecca L 2000 The Invention of the Restaurant Harvard University Press West Stephen H 1997 Playing With Food Performance Food and The Aesthetics of Artificiality in The Sung and Yuan Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 57 1 67 106 doi 10 2307 2719361 JSTOR 2719361 Early Restaurants in America UNLV Libraries Digital Collections University of Nevada Las Vegas Retrieved April 30 2013 Further reading EditAppelbaum Robert Dishing It Out In Search of the Restaurant Experience London Reaktion 2011 Fleury Helene 2007 L Inde en miniature a Paris Le decor des restaurants Diasporas indiennes dans la ville Hommes et migrations Number 1268 1269 2007 168 73 Haley Andrew P Turning the Tables Restaurants and the Rise of the American Middle Class 1880 1920 University of North Carolina Press 2011 384 pp Kiefer Nicholas M August 2002 Economics and the Origin of the Restaurant PDF Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly 43 4 5 7 doi 10 1177 0010880402434006 S2CID 220628566 Lundberg Donald E The Hotel and Restaurant Business Boston Cahners Books 1974 ISBN 0 8436 2044 7 Sitwell William 2020 The Restaurant A 2 000 Year History of Dining Out New York NY Diversion Books ISBN 978 1635766998 Whitaker Jan 2002 Tea at the Blue Lantern Inn A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America St Martin s Press External links Edit Media related to Restaurant at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Restaurant at Wikiquote Portals Food Drink Companies Business and economics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Restaurant amp oldid 1149791518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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