fbpx
Wikipedia

Take-out

A take-out or takeout (U.S., Canada and the Philippines); carry-out or to-go (Scotland and some dialects in the U.S. and Canada);[1] takeaway (England, Wales, Australia, Lebanon, South Africa, Northern Ireland, Ireland, and occasionally in North America);[1] takeaways (India, New Zealand); grab-n-go; and parcel (Bangladesh, Pakistan)[2] is a prepared meal or other food items, purchased at a restaurant or fast food outlet with the intent to eat elsewhere. A concept found in many ancient cultures, take-out food is common worldwide, with a number of different cuisines and dishes on offer.

Clockwise from upper left: A Meat Feast Parmo from Stockton-on-Tees, UK; Fish and chips; Döner kebab; Pizza delivery.

History

 
Thermopolium in Herculaneum

The concept of prepared meals to be eaten elsewhere dates back to antiquity. Market and roadside stalls selling food were common in Ancient Greece and Rome.[3] In Pompeii, archaeologists have found a number of thermopolia, service counters opening onto the street which provided food to be taken away. There is a distinct lack of formal dining and kitchen area in Pompeian homes, which may suggest that eating, or at least cooking, at home was unusual. Over 200 thermopolia have been found in the ruins of Pompeii.[4]

In the cities of medieval Europe a number of street vendors sold take-out food. In medieval London, street vendors sold hot meat pies, geese, sheep's feet and French wine, while in Paris roasted meats, squab, tarts and flans, cheeses and eggs were available. A large strata of society would have purchased food from these vendors, but they were especially popular amongst the urban poor, who would have lacked kitchen facilities in which to prepare their own food.[5] However, these vendors often had a bad reputation, often being in trouble with city authorities reprimanding them for selling infected meat or reheated food. The cooks of Norwich often defended themselves in court against selling such things as "pokky pies" and "stynkyng mackerelles".[6] In 10th and 11th century China, citizens of cities such as Kaifeng and Hangzhou were able to buy pastries such as yuebing and congyoubing to take away. By the early 13th century, the two most successful such shops in Kaifeng had "upwards of fifty ovens".[7] A traveling Florentine reported in the late 14th century that in Cairo, people carried picnic cloths made of raw hide to spread on the streets and eat their meals of lamb kebabs, rice and fritters that they had purchased from street vendors.[8] In Renaissance Turkey, many crossroads saw vendors selling "fragrant bites of hot meat", including chicken and lamb that had been spit roasted.[9]

Aztec marketplaces had vendors that sold beverages such as atolli ("a gruel made from maize dough"), almost 50 types of tamales (with ingredients that ranged from the meat of turkey, rabbit, gopher, frog, and fish, fruit, eggs, and maize flowers),[10] as well as insects and stews.[11] After Spanish colonization of Peru and importation of European food stocks including wheat, sugarcane and livestock, most commoners continued primarily to eat their traditional diets, but did add grilled beef hearts sold by street vendors.[12] Some of Lima's 19th century street vendors such as "Erasmo, the 'negro' sango vendor" and Na Aguedita are still remembered today.[13]

 
Street food vendors in early 20th century New York City.

During the American colonial period, street vendors sold "pepper pot soup" (tripe) "oysters, roasted corn ears, fruit and sweets," with oysters being a low-priced commodity until the 1910s when overfishing caused prices to rise.[14] In 1707, after previous restrictions that had limited their operating hours, street food vendors had been banned in New York City.[15] Many women of African descent made their living selling street foods in America in the 18th and 19th centuries; with products ranging from fruit, cakes and nuts in Savannah, Georgia, to coffee, biscuits, pralines and other sweets in New Orleans.[16] In the 19th century, street food vendors in Transylvania sold gingerbread-nuts, cream mixed with corn, and bacon and other meat fried on tops of ceramic vessels with hot coals inside.[17]

The Industrial Revolution saw an increase in the availability of take-out food. By the early 20th Century, fish and chips was considered an "established institution" in Britain. The hamburger was introduced to America around this time. The diets of industrial workers were often poor, and these meals provided an "important component" to their nutrition.[18] In India, local businesses and cooperatives, had begun to supply workers in the city of Bombay (now Mumbai) with tiffin boxes by the end of the 19th century.[19]

The COVID-19 pandemic led to many restaurants closing their indoor dining spaces and only offering take-out.[20][21]

Business operation

Take-out food can be purchased from restaurants that also provide sit-down table service or from establishments specialising in food to be taken away.[22] Providing a take-out service saves operators the cost of cutlery, crockery and pay for servers and hosts; it also allows many customers to be served quickly, without restricting sales by remaining to eat their food.[23]

Street food

 
A market stall in Thailand selling take-out food

Although once popular in Europe and America,[5] street food declined in popularity in the 20th century. In part, this can be attributed to a combination of the proliferation of specialized takeaway restaurants and legislation relating to health and safety.[5] Vendors selling street food are still common in parts of Asia, Africa and the Middle East,[24] with the annual turnover of street food vendors in Bangladesh and Thailand being described as particularly important to the local economy.[25]

Drive-through

Many restaurants and take-out establishments offer drive-through or drive-thru[26] outlets that allow customers to order, pay for, and receive food without leaving their cars. The idea was pioneered in 1931 in a California fast food restaurant, Pig Stand Number 21. By 1988, 51% of McDonald's turnover was being generated by drive-throughs, with 31% of all US take-out turnover being generated by them by 1990.[27]

Food delivery

Some take-out businesses offer prepared food for delivery, which usually involves contacting a local restaurant by telephone or online. In countries including Australia, Canada, India, Brazil, Japan, much of the European Union and the United States, food can be ordered online from a menu, then picked up by the customer or delivered by the restaurant or a third party delivery service.[28] The industry has kept pace with technological developments since the 1980s, beginning with the rise of the personal computer and continuing with the rise of mobile devices and online delivery applications. Specialized computer software for food delivery helps determine the most efficient routes for carriers, track order and delivery times, manage calls and orders with PoS software, and other functions. Since 2008 satellite navigation tracking technology has been used for real-time monitoring of delivery vehicles by customers over the Internet.[29]

 
A branded scooter used for Pizza Hut pizza delivery in Hong Kong.

A restaurant can either maintain its own delivery personnel or use third parties who contract with restaurants to not only deliver food orders but also assist in marketing and providing order-taking technology. The field has seen rapid growth since the late 2000s with the spread of the smart phones and apps enabling customers to order from their mobile devices.[30] According to a study cited the New York Times,[31][32] as of 2019, three companies account for nearly 80 percent of the US restaurant food delivery market: GrubHub, Uber Eats and DoorDash. Competition for market share has been fierce,[33] with smaller competitors either being bought out or closing down. Amazon Restaurants announced in June 2019 that it was closing its restaurant food delivery service to concentrate on grocery delivery.[32]

Some businesses offer a guarantee to deliver within a predetermined period of time, with late deliveries not charged for.[34] For example, Domino's Pizza had a commercial campaign in the 1980s and early 1990s for its pizza delivery service which promised "30 minutes or it's free". This was discontinued in the United States in 1993 due to the number of lawsuits arising from accidents caused by hurried delivery drivers.[35]

Packaging

Take-out food is packaged in paper, paperboard, corrugated fiberboard, plastic, or foam food containers. One common container is the oyster pail, a folded, waxed or plastic coated, paperboard container. The oyster pail was quickly adopted, especially in the West, for "Chinese takeout".[36]

In Britain old newspapers were traditionally used for wrapping fish and chips until this was banned for health reasons in the 1980s.[37] Many people are nostalgic for this traditional wrapping; some modern fish and chip shops wrap their food in faux-newspaper, food-safe paper printed to look like a newspaper.[38]

Corrugated fiberboard and foam containers are to some extent self-insulating, and can be used for other foods. Thermal bags and other insulated shipping containers keep food hot (or cold) more effectively for longer.

Aluminium containers are also popular for take-out packaging due to their low cost. Expanded polystyrene is often used for hot drinks containers and food trays because it is lightweight and heat-insulating.[39]

All types of container can be produced with supplier information and design to create a brand identity.[40]

Disposable serviceware waste

 
Disposable chopsticks in a university cafeteria trash bin in Japan.

Packaging of fast food and take-out food is necessary for the customer but involves a significant amount of material that ends up in landfills, recycling, composting, or litter.[41] Foam containers for fast-food were the target of environmentalists in the U.S. and were largely replaced with paper wrappers among large restaurant chains.[42]

In 2002, Taiwan began taking action to reduce the use of disposable tableware at institutions and businesses, and to reduce the use of plastic bags. Yearly, the nation of 17.7 million people was producing 59,000 tons of disposable tableware waste and 105,000 tons of waste plastic bags, and increasing measures have been taken in the years since then to reduce the amount of waste.[43] In 2013, Taiwan's Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) banned outright the use of disposable tableware in the nation's 968 schools, government agencies, and hospitals. The ban was expected to eliminate 2,600 metric tons of waste yearly.[44]

In Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, laws banning the use of disposable food and drink containers at large-scale events have been enacted. Such a ban has been in place in Munich, Germany since 1991, applying to all city facilities and events. This includes events of all sizes, including very large ones (Christmas market, Auer-Dult Faire, Oktoberfest and Munich City Marathon). For small events of a few hundred people, the city has arranged for a corporation to offer rental of crockery and dishwasher equipment. In part through this regulation, Munich reduced the waste generated by Oktoberfest, which attracts millions of people,[45] from 11,000 metric tons in 1990 to 550 tons in 1999.[46]

China, by virtue of the size of its population and the surging popularity of food delivery apps, such as Meituan and Ele.me, faces significant challenges disposing of or recycling takeout food packaging waste.[47] According to a 2018 study published in Resources, Conservation and Recycling, for the first half of 2017, Chinese consumers ordered 4.6 billion takeout meals, generating "significant environmental concerns". The study's authors estimated that packaging waste from food delivery grew from 20,000 metric tons in 2015 to 1.5 million metric tons in 2017.[48] In 2018, Meituan reported making over 6.4 billion food deliveries, up from 4 billion a year earlier.[49]

Because takeout and delivery meals in China include single-use chopsticks, which are made from wood or bamboo, the growth in food delivery also has an impact on China's forests.[50] China produces about 80 billion pairs of single-use chopsticks yearly, the equivalent of 20 million 20-year-old trees.[51] About 45 percent are made from trees – mainly cottonwood, birch, and spruce, the remainder being made from bamboo. Japan uses about 24 billion pairs of these disposables per year, and globally about 80 billion pairs are thrown away by an estimated 1.4 billion people. In 2013 in Japan, one pair of disposable chopsticks cost US$0.02. One pair of reusable chopsticks cost $1.17, and each pair could be used 130 times. A cost of $1.17 per pair divided by 130 uses comes to $0.009 (0.9¢) per use, less than half the cost of disposable. Campaigns in several countries to reduce this waste are beginning to have some effect.[52][53][needs update]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "takeaway noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes". Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com. Retrieved June 18, 2021.
  2. ^ "Sunday Levity: Paradise Secured". The Acorn. Retrieved September 1, 2008. But we're only here for a take-away (or parcel, in local parlance).
  3. ^ Smith, Andrew F., ed. (2007). The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 580. ISBN 9780195307962.
  4. ^ Weiss Adamson, Melitta; Segan, Francine, eds. (October 30, 2008). Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl: An Encyclopedia. CT, USA: Greenwood Press. pp. 252–253. ISBN 9780313086892.
  5. ^ a b c Harris, Stephen; Grigsby, Bryon L., eds. (2007). Misconceptions about the Middle Ages. London, UK: Routledge. p. 166. ISBN 9781135986674.
  6. ^ Harper-Bill, Christopher, ed. (2005). Medieval East Anglia. Sussex, UK: The Boydell Press. p. 134. ISBN 9781843831518.
  7. ^ Fredman Cernea, Ruth, ed. (2005). The Great Latke-Hamantash Debate. London, UK: University of Chicago Press. pp. 181. ISBN 9780226100234.
  8. ^ Mary Snodgrass - (September 27, 2004). Encyclopedia of Kitchen History. ISBN 9780203319178. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  9. ^ Mary Snodgrass (September 27, 2004). Encyclopedia of Kitchen History. ISBN 9780203319178. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  10. ^ Susan Evans (2001). Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia. ISBN 9780815308874. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  11. ^ Long Towell Long, Luis Alberto Vargas (2005). Food Culture In Mexico. ISBN 9780313324314. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  12. ^ J. Pilcher (December 20, 2005). Food In World History. ISBN 9780203970058. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  13. ^ Ken Albala (May 25, 2011). Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia. Boo. ISBN 9780313376269. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  14. ^ Katherine Leonard Turner (2008). Good Food for Little Money: Food and Cooking Among Urban Working-class ... ISBN 9780549754237. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  15. ^ Artemis P. Simopoulos (2000). Street Foods. ISBN 9783805569279. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  16. ^ Bower, Anne L. (December 2008). African American Foodways: Explorations of History and Culture -. ISBN 9780252076305. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  17. ^ Walker, Harlan (1992). Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1991: Public Eating : Proceedings. ISBN 9780907325475. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  18. ^ Harbottle, Lynn (2004). Food for Health, Food for Wealth: Ethnic and Gender Identities in British Iranian Community. New York, USA: Berghahn Books. p. 72. ISBN 9781571816344.
  19. ^ Roncaglia, Sara (2013). Feeding the City: Work and Food Culture of the Mumbai Dabbawalas. London, UK: Open Book Publishers. pp. xvi. ISBN 9781909254008.
  20. ^ Daim, Nuradzimmah (March 17, 2020). "Restaurants, fast food outlets prepare for restricted movement order". New Straits Times. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  21. ^ Wong, Alexander (May 3, 2020). "McDonald's Malaysia will not open for dine-in customers on 4th May". SoyaCincau. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  22. ^ Mason, Laura (2004). Food Culture in Great Britain. CT, USA: Greenwood Press. p. 170. ISBN 9780313327988.
  23. ^ Gough, B; Gough, J (2008). FCS Hospitality Services L3. Cape Town, South Africa: Pearson Education South Africa. p. 203. ISBN 9781770251373.
  24. ^ Heine, Peter (2004). Food Culture in the Near East, Middle East, and North Africa. CT, USA: Greenwood Press. p. 119. ISBN 9780313329562.
  25. ^ Sethuraman, S. V., ed. (1992). The Urban Informal Sector in Asia: An Annotated Bibliography. Geneva, Switzerland: International Labour Organization. p. 192. ISBN 9789221082590.
  26. ^ "Drive-through or drive-thru". Collins Dictionary. n.d. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  27. ^ Sculle, Keith; Jakle, John (2002). Fast Food: Roadside Restaurants in the Automobile Age. Maryland, USA: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780801869204.
  28. ^ Kretzmann, David. "Why Domino's Digital Component Is Important". DailyFinance. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  29. ^ Marianne Kolbasuk McGee. "GPS Comes To High-Tech Pizza-Delivery Tracking", InformationWeek, February 1, 2008.
  30. ^ Haddon, Heather; Jargon, Julie (March 9, 2019). "The Delivery Wars: Your Food Is Almost Here --- Grocery stores and restaurants are racing into the delivery business. The problem: figuring out how to make any money". Dow Jones Company. pp. B1. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  31. ^ "DoorDash Surpasses GrubHub in National Market Share of Total Consumer Spend with 28% to 27%, with Uber Eats taking 25%". trends.edison.tech. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  32. ^ a b Yaffe-Bellany, David (June 11, 2019). "Amazon to End Its Restaurant Delivery Service". The New York Times Company. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  33. ^ Financial Times, Opinion Lex Team (September 25, 2017). "Deliveroo: not so dishy -- Competition is going to force standards up and prices down in hotly contested sector". Financial Times Company. Archived from the original on December 10, 2022. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  34. ^ . pizzapizza.ca. Archived from the original (Commercial website) on December 24, 2007. Retrieved December 7, 2007.
  35. ^ . Georgia Trial Lawyers Association. Archived from the original on January 13, 2003. Retrieved September 18, 2007.
  36. ^ "Harvard Advocate poster with Chinese Take-out Carton". The Fortune Cookie Chronicles website. March 17, 2008. Retrieved December 12, 2012.
  37. ^ James Alexander (December 18, 2009). "The unlikely origin of fish and chips". BBC News Magazine.
  38. ^ "Review of a fish and chip restaurant". Time Out. September 24, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2017.
  39. ^ Hill, J. (2003). Excel HSC & Preliminary Senior Science. NSW, Australia: Pascal Press. p. 132. ISBN 9781741251166.
  40. ^ Paine, Frank (1995). The Packaging User's Handbook. Glasgow, UK: Blackie Academic & Professional. p. 287. ISBN 9780751401516.
  41. ^ Reducing Wasted Food & Packaging: A Guide for Food Services and Restaurants (PDF), vol. EPA-909-K-14-002, US Environmental Protection Agency, retrieved March 9, 2015
  42. ^ Some fast-food brands look beyond polystyrene, others embrace it, Plastics Today, Heather Caliendo, August 12, 2013
  43. ^ Env. Research Foundation (undated). Taiwan's Plastics Ban. ().
  44. ^ China Post. June 5, 2013. EPA to ban disposable cups from June 1.
  45. ^ "Realbeer.com: Beer News: Oktoberfest visitors set records". realbeer.com.
  46. ^ Pre-Waste EU. (undated). Ban on disposable food and drink containers at events in Munich, Germany (Pre-waste factsheet 99)
  47. ^ Zhong, Raymond; Zhang, Carolyn (May 28, 2019). "Food Delivery Apps Are Drowning China in Plastic". The New York Times Company. Retrieved June 4, 2019. The astronomical growth of food delivery apps in China is flooding the country
  48. ^ Song, Guanghan; Zhang, Hui; Duan, Huabo; Xu, Ming (March 2018). "Packaging Waste from Food Delivery in China's Megacities". Resources, Conservation and Recycling. 130: 227–228. doi:10.1016/j.resconrec.2017.12.007. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  49. ^ 2018 company reportfrom Meituan June 4, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  50. ^ Luo, Chris (March 11, 2013). "China's 80 billion disposable chopsticks a 'burden' on forests". SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST PUBLISHERS LTD. South China Morning Post. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  51. ^ Gates, Sara (March 11, 2013). "Disposable Chopstick Demand Is Killing China's Forests As Annual Production Reaches 80 Billion". HuffPost.com. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  52. ^ Disposable Chopsticks Strip Asian Forests. By Rachel Nuwer. The New York Times. October 24, 2011.
  53. ^ Ecopedia. 2013. How Wooden Chopsticks Are Killing Nature. By Alastair Shaw.

External links

Videos
  • Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "How Takeout Took Over America". CNBC. September 3, 2018.

take, carryout, redirects, here, song, carry, take, take, away, redirect, here, other, uses, take, disambiguation, take, away, disambiguation, take, takeout, canada, philippines, carry, scotland, some, dialects, canada, takeaway, england, wales, australia, leb. Carryout redirects here For the song see Carry Out Take out and Take away redirect here For other uses see Take out disambiguation and Take away disambiguation A take out or takeout U S Canada and the Philippines carry out or to go Scotland and some dialects in the U S and Canada 1 takeaway England Wales Australia Lebanon South Africa Northern Ireland Ireland and occasionally in North America 1 takeaways India New Zealand grab n go and parcel Bangladesh Pakistan 2 is a prepared meal or other food items purchased at a restaurant or fast food outlet with the intent to eat elsewhere A concept found in many ancient cultures take out food is common worldwide with a number of different cuisines and dishes on offer Clockwise from upper left A Meat Feast Parmo from Stockton on Tees UK Fish and chips Doner kebab Pizza delivery Contents 1 History 2 Business operation 2 1 Street food 2 2 Drive through 2 3 Food delivery 3 Packaging 4 Disposable serviceware waste 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Thermopolium in Herculaneum The concept of prepared meals to be eaten elsewhere dates back to antiquity Market and roadside stalls selling food were common in Ancient Greece and Rome 3 In Pompeii archaeologists have found a number of thermopolia service counters opening onto the street which provided food to be taken away There is a distinct lack of formal dining and kitchen area in Pompeian homes which may suggest that eating or at least cooking at home was unusual Over 200 thermopolia have been found in the ruins of Pompeii 4 In the cities of medieval Europe a number of street vendors sold take out food In medieval London street vendors sold hot meat pies geese sheep s feet and French wine while in Paris roasted meats squab tarts and flans cheeses and eggs were available A large strata of society would have purchased food from these vendors but they were especially popular amongst the urban poor who would have lacked kitchen facilities in which to prepare their own food 5 However these vendors often had a bad reputation often being in trouble with city authorities reprimanding them for selling infected meat or reheated food The cooks of Norwich often defended themselves in court against selling such things as pokky pies and stynkyng mackerelles 6 In 10th and 11th century China citizens of cities such as Kaifeng and Hangzhou were able to buy pastries such as yuebing and congyoubing to take away By the early 13th century the two most successful such shops in Kaifeng had upwards of fifty ovens 7 A traveling Florentine reported in the late 14th century that in Cairo people carried picnic cloths made of raw hide to spread on the streets and eat their meals of lamb kebabs rice and fritters that they had purchased from street vendors 8 In Renaissance Turkey many crossroads saw vendors selling fragrant bites of hot meat including chicken and lamb that had been spit roasted 9 Aztec marketplaces had vendors that sold beverages such as atolli a gruel made from maize dough almost 50 types of tamales with ingredients that ranged from the meat of turkey rabbit gopher frog and fish fruit eggs and maize flowers 10 as well as insects and stews 11 After Spanish colonization of Peru and importation of European food stocks including wheat sugarcane and livestock most commoners continued primarily to eat their traditional diets but did add grilled beef hearts sold by street vendors 12 Some of Lima s 19th century street vendors such as Erasmo the negro sango vendor and Na Aguedita are still remembered today 13 Street food vendors in early 20th century New York City During the American colonial period street vendors sold pepper pot soup tripe oysters roasted corn ears fruit and sweets with oysters being a low priced commodity until the 1910s when overfishing caused prices to rise 14 In 1707 after previous restrictions that had limited their operating hours street food vendors had been banned in New York City 15 Many women of African descent made their living selling street foods in America in the 18th and 19th centuries with products ranging from fruit cakes and nuts in Savannah Georgia to coffee biscuits pralines and other sweets in New Orleans 16 In the 19th century street food vendors in Transylvania sold gingerbread nuts cream mixed with corn and bacon and other meat fried on tops of ceramic vessels with hot coals inside 17 The Industrial Revolution saw an increase in the availability of take out food By the early 20th Century fish and chips was considered an established institution in Britain The hamburger was introduced to America around this time The diets of industrial workers were often poor and these meals provided an important component to their nutrition 18 In India local businesses and cooperatives had begun to supply workers in the city of Bombay now Mumbai with tiffin boxes by the end of the 19th century 19 The COVID 19 pandemic led to many restaurants closing their indoor dining spaces and only offering take out 20 21 Business operation EditTake out food can be purchased from restaurants that also provide sit down table service or from establishments specialising in food to be taken away 22 Providing a take out service saves operators the cost of cutlery crockery and pay for servers and hosts it also allows many customers to be served quickly without restricting sales by remaining to eat their food 23 Street food Edit A market stall in Thailand selling take out food Although once popular in Europe and America 5 street food declined in popularity in the 20th century In part this can be attributed to a combination of the proliferation of specialized takeaway restaurants and legislation relating to health and safety 5 Vendors selling street food are still common in parts of Asia Africa and the Middle East 24 with the annual turnover of street food vendors in Bangladesh and Thailand being described as particularly important to the local economy 25 Drive through Edit Many restaurants and take out establishments offer drive through or drive thru 26 outlets that allow customers to order pay for and receive food without leaving their cars The idea was pioneered in 1931 in a California fast food restaurant Pig Stand Number 21 By 1988 51 of McDonald s turnover was being generated by drive throughs with 31 of all US take out turnover being generated by them by 1990 27 Food delivery Edit Some take out businesses offer prepared food for delivery which usually involves contacting a local restaurant by telephone or online In countries including Australia Canada India Brazil Japan much of the European Union and the United States food can be ordered online from a menu then picked up by the customer or delivered by the restaurant or a third party delivery service 28 The industry has kept pace with technological developments since the 1980s beginning with the rise of the personal computer and continuing with the rise of mobile devices and online delivery applications Specialized computer software for food delivery helps determine the most efficient routes for carriers track order and delivery times manage calls and orders with PoS software and other functions Since 2008 satellite navigation tracking technology has been used for real time monitoring of delivery vehicles by customers over the Internet 29 A branded scooter used for Pizza Hut pizza delivery in Hong Kong A restaurant can either maintain its own delivery personnel or use third parties who contract with restaurants to not only deliver food orders but also assist in marketing and providing order taking technology The field has seen rapid growth since the late 2000s with the spread of the smart phones and apps enabling customers to order from their mobile devices 30 According to a study cited the New York Times 31 32 as of 2019 three companies account for nearly 80 percent of the US restaurant food delivery market GrubHub Uber Eats and DoorDash Competition for market share has been fierce 33 with smaller competitors either being bought out or closing down Amazon Restaurants announced in June 2019 that it was closing its restaurant food delivery service to concentrate on grocery delivery 32 Some businesses offer a guarantee to deliver within a predetermined period of time with late deliveries not charged for 34 For example Domino s Pizza had a commercial campaign in the 1980s and early 1990s for its pizza delivery service which promised 30 minutes or it s free This was discontinued in the United States in 1993 due to the number of lawsuits arising from accidents caused by hurried delivery drivers 35 Packaging EditSee also Disposable food packaging Foam food container and Oyster pail Take out food is packaged in paper paperboard corrugated fiberboard plastic or foam food containers One common container is the oyster pail a folded waxed or plastic coated paperboard container The oyster pail was quickly adopted especially in the West for Chinese takeout 36 In Britain old newspapers were traditionally used for wrapping fish and chips until this was banned for health reasons in the 1980s 37 Many people are nostalgic for this traditional wrapping some modern fish and chip shops wrap their food in faux newspaper food safe paper printed to look like a newspaper 38 Corrugated fiberboard and foam containers are to some extent self insulating and can be used for other foods Thermal bags and other insulated shipping containers keep food hot or cold more effectively for longer Aluminium containers are also popular for take out packaging due to their low cost Expanded polystyrene is often used for hot drinks containers and food trays because it is lightweight and heat insulating 39 All types of container can be produced with supplier information and design to create a brand identity 40 Pizza served in a cardboard box Boiled rice served in an oyster pail Leaf wrapped rice dish nasi kuning Paper wrapped food carrying McDonald s food including Chicken McNuggets fries burger and drink Take out food in Thailand is often packaged in plastic bags Orizume bento Tiffin carrier or dabba Chinese restaurant counter in a Northside Chicago neighborhoodDisposable serviceware waste Edit Disposable chopsticks in a university cafeteria trash bin in Japan Main article Disposable food packaging Packaging of fast food and take out food is necessary for the customer but involves a significant amount of material that ends up in landfills recycling composting or litter 41 Foam containers for fast food were the target of environmentalists in the U S and were largely replaced with paper wrappers among large restaurant chains 42 In 2002 Taiwan began taking action to reduce the use of disposable tableware at institutions and businesses and to reduce the use of plastic bags Yearly the nation of 17 7 million people was producing 59 000 tons of disposable tableware waste and 105 000 tons of waste plastic bags and increasing measures have been taken in the years since then to reduce the amount of waste 43 In 2013 Taiwan s Environmental Protection Administration EPA banned outright the use of disposable tableware in the nation s 968 schools government agencies and hospitals The ban was expected to eliminate 2 600 metric tons of waste yearly 44 In Germany Austria and Switzerland laws banning the use of disposable food and drink containers at large scale events have been enacted Such a ban has been in place in Munich Germany since 1991 applying to all city facilities and events This includes events of all sizes including very large ones Christmas market Auer Dult Faire Oktoberfest and Munich City Marathon For small events of a few hundred people the city has arranged for a corporation to offer rental of crockery and dishwasher equipment In part through this regulation Munich reduced the waste generated by Oktoberfest which attracts millions of people 45 from 11 000 metric tons in 1990 to 550 tons in 1999 46 China by virtue of the size of its population and the surging popularity of food delivery apps such as Meituan and Ele me faces significant challenges disposing of or recycling takeout food packaging waste 47 According to a 2018 study published in Resources Conservation and Recycling for the first half of 2017 Chinese consumers ordered 4 6 billion takeout meals generating significant environmental concerns The study s authors estimated that packaging waste from food delivery grew from 20 000 metric tons in 2015 to 1 5 million metric tons in 2017 48 In 2018 Meituan reported making over 6 4 billion food deliveries up from 4 billion a year earlier 49 Because takeout and delivery meals in China include single use chopsticks which are made from wood or bamboo the growth in food delivery also has an impact on China s forests 50 China produces about 80 billion pairs of single use chopsticks yearly the equivalent of 20 million 20 year old trees 51 About 45 percent are made from trees mainly cottonwood birch and spruce the remainder being made from bamboo Japan uses about 24 billion pairs of these disposables per year and globally about 80 billion pairs are thrown away by an estimated 1 4 billion people In 2013 in Japan one pair of disposable chopsticks cost US 0 02 One pair of reusable chopsticks cost 1 17 and each pair could be used 130 times A cost of 1 17 per pair divided by 130 uses comes to 0 009 0 9 per use less than half the cost of disposable Campaigns in several countries to reduce this waste are beginning to have some effect 52 53 needs update See also EditCondiment sachet Leftovers Oyster pail a type of paper container from America that later became used with Chinese American cuisine Pizza delivery Street foodReferences Edit a b takeaway noun Definition pictures pronunciation and usage notes Oxford Advanced Learner s Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries com Retrieved June 18 2021 Sunday Levity Paradise Secured The Acorn Retrieved September 1 2008 But we re only here for a take away or parcel in local parlance Smith Andrew F ed 2007 The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 580 ISBN 9780195307962 Weiss Adamson Melitta Segan Francine eds October 30 2008 Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl An Encyclopedia CT USA Greenwood Press pp 252 253 ISBN 9780313086892 a b c Harris Stephen Grigsby Bryon L eds 2007 Misconceptions about the Middle Ages London UK Routledge p 166 ISBN 9781135986674 Harper Bill Christopher ed 2005 Medieval East Anglia Sussex UK The Boydell Press p 134 ISBN 9781843831518 Fredman Cernea Ruth ed 2005 The Great Latke Hamantash Debate London UK University of Chicago Press pp 181 ISBN 9780226100234 Mary Snodgrass September 27 2004 Encyclopedia of Kitchen History ISBN 9780203319178 Retrieved August 16 2012 Mary Snodgrass September 27 2004 Encyclopedia of Kitchen History ISBN 9780203319178 Retrieved August 16 2012 Susan Evans 2001 Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America An Encyclopedia ISBN 9780815308874 Retrieved August 17 2012 Long Towell Long Luis Alberto Vargas 2005 Food Culture In Mexico ISBN 9780313324314 Retrieved August 17 2012 J Pilcher December 20 2005 Food In World History ISBN 9780203970058 Retrieved August 16 2012 Ken Albala May 25 2011 Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia Boo ISBN 9780313376269 Retrieved August 17 2012 Katherine Leonard Turner 2008 Good Food for Little Money Food and Cooking Among Urban Working class ISBN 9780549754237 Retrieved August 17 2012 Artemis P Simopoulos 2000 Street Foods ISBN 9783805569279 Retrieved August 16 2012 Bower Anne L December 2008 African American Foodways Explorations of History and Culture ISBN 9780252076305 Retrieved August 17 2012 Walker Harlan 1992 Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1991 Public Eating Proceedings ISBN 9780907325475 Retrieved August 17 2012 Harbottle Lynn 2004 Food for Health Food for Wealth Ethnic and Gender Identities in British Iranian Community New York USA Berghahn Books p 72 ISBN 9781571816344 Roncaglia Sara 2013 Feeding the City Work and Food Culture of the Mumbai Dabbawalas London UK Open Book Publishers pp xvi ISBN 9781909254008 Daim Nuradzimmah March 17 2020 Restaurants fast food outlets prepare for restricted movement order New Straits Times Retrieved June 12 2020 Wong Alexander May 3 2020 McDonald s Malaysia will not open for dine in customers on 4th May SoyaCincau Retrieved June 12 2020 Mason Laura 2004 Food Culture in Great Britain CT USA Greenwood Press p 170 ISBN 9780313327988 Gough B Gough J 2008 FCS Hospitality Services L3 Cape Town South Africa Pearson Education South Africa p 203 ISBN 9781770251373 Heine Peter 2004 Food Culture in the Near East Middle East and North Africa CT USA Greenwood Press p 119 ISBN 9780313329562 Sethuraman S V ed 1992 The Urban Informal Sector in Asia An Annotated Bibliography Geneva Switzerland International Labour Organization p 192 ISBN 9789221082590 Drive through or drive thru Collins Dictionary n d Retrieved September 30 2014 Sculle Keith Jakle John 2002 Fast Food Roadside Restaurants in the Automobile Age Maryland USA Johns Hopkins University Press p 61 ISBN 9780801869204 Kretzmann David Why Domino s Digital Component Is Important DailyFinance Retrieved December 28 2013 Marianne Kolbasuk McGee GPS Comes To High Tech Pizza Delivery Tracking InformationWeek February 1 2008 Haddon Heather Jargon Julie March 9 2019 The Delivery Wars Your Food Is Almost Here Grocery stores and restaurants are racing into the delivery business The problem figuring out how to make any money Dow Jones Company pp B1 Retrieved June 1 2019 DoorDash Surpasses GrubHub in National Market Share of Total Consumer Spend with 28 to 27 with Uber Eats taking 25 trends edison tech Retrieved May 21 2021 a b Yaffe Bellany David June 11 2019 Amazon to End Its Restaurant Delivery Service The New York Times Company Retrieved June 12 2019 Financial Times Opinion Lex Team September 25 2017 Deliveroo not so dishy Competition is going to force standards up and prices down in hotly contested sector Financial Times Company Archived from the original on December 10 2022 Retrieved June 17 2019 Pizza Pizza s Guarantee pizzapizza ca Archived from the original Commercial website on December 24 2007 Retrieved December 7 2007 Jury award spurs Domino s to drop deadly policy Georgia Trial Lawyers Association Archived from the original on January 13 2003 Retrieved September 18 2007 Harvard Advocate poster with Chinese Take out Carton The Fortune Cookie Chronicles website March 17 2008 Retrieved December 12 2012 James Alexander December 18 2009 The unlikely origin of fish and chips BBC News Magazine Review of a fish and chip restaurant Time Out September 24 2013 Retrieved August 26 2017 Hill J 2003 Excel HSC amp Preliminary Senior Science NSW Australia Pascal Press p 132 ISBN 9781741251166 Paine Frank 1995 The Packaging User s Handbook Glasgow UK Blackie Academic amp Professional p 287 ISBN 9780751401516 Reducing Wasted Food amp Packaging A Guide for Food Services and Restaurants PDF vol EPA 909 K 14 002 US Environmental Protection Agency retrieved March 9 2015 Some fast food brands look beyond polystyrene others embrace it Plastics Today Heather Caliendo August 12 2013 Env Research Foundation undated Taiwan s Plastics Ban Archived China Post June 5 2013 EPA to ban disposable cups from June 1 Realbeer com Beer News Oktoberfest visitors set records realbeer com Pre Waste EU undated Ban on disposable food and drink containers at events in Munich Germany Pre waste factsheet 99 Zhong Raymond Zhang Carolyn May 28 2019 Food Delivery Apps Are Drowning China in Plastic The New York Times Company Retrieved June 4 2019 The astronomical growth of food delivery apps in China is flooding the country Song Guanghan Zhang Hui Duan Huabo Xu Ming March 2018 Packaging Waste from Food Delivery in China s Megacities Resources Conservation and Recycling 130 227 228 doi 10 1016 j resconrec 2017 12 007 Retrieved June 4 2019 2018 company reportfrom Meituan Archived June 4 2019 at the Wayback Machine Luo Chris March 11 2013 China s 80 billion disposable chopsticks a burden on forests SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST PUBLISHERS LTD South China Morning Post Retrieved June 4 2019 Gates Sara March 11 2013 Disposable Chopstick Demand Is Killing China s Forests As Annual Production Reaches 80 Billion HuffPost com Retrieved June 4 2019 Disposable Chopsticks Strip Asian Forests By Rachel Nuwer The New York Times October 24 2011 Ecopedia 2013 How Wooden Chopsticks Are Killing Nature By Alastair Shaw External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Take out food Look up Take out takeout carry out or take away in Wiktionary the free dictionary VideosArchived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine How Takeout Took Over America CNBC September 3 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Take out amp oldid 1136396264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.