What's wrong with a plate?

dennisd
dennisd Forum Participant Posts: 157
edited August 2016 in Food & Drink #1

Second time out this week for a meal , first time my chips were in an enamel mug and last night they were in a (mini) watering can. I wonder what makes restaurant owners think I want my food on anything other than a plate? 
Undecided

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Comments

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #2

    Yep, I agree and sometimes it chucked on a flat wooden thingy Undecided and then my steak pie comes in a dish on a plate, so I have to scrape it out onto the plate, I'm not fancy I'm into plain cooking and plain serving.

  • milliehull
    milliehull Forum Participant Posts: 4,754 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #3

    I have had chips in a plant pot amongst other things.  It seems to be the fashion to use everything and anything other than a plate!

  • Remus
    Remus Forum Participant Posts: 132
    edited August 2016 #4

    Totally agree.  I've had a meal served with a pie in a dish, a pot with sauce in and chips in a small bucket.  All balanced on a wooden platter (slate is also somtimes used) with a load of salad leaves on top.    By the time I've assembled things into some sort of order half the stuff has fallen off onto the table.  I'm surprised that no-one has yet decided that serving your meal in a bedpan would be "tres chic" - give it time eh?

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #5

    This summer we had cream teas on a wooden board, that seemed a bit strange (and messy!)

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Forum Participant Posts: 3,880
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    edited August 2016 #6

    I wonder how well these "chic" (or whatever) items get washed?

    It is nice when your server asks "Is there anything else I can get you?" and one can reply "Plate!"

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited August 2016 #7

    And none of the food is very warm (that does not include salad) when served as they cannot heat the new "fad" serving "things" and you get a funny look if you tell them to warm it up,Yell

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Forum Participant Posts: 3,880
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    edited August 2016 #8

    I find the opposite is often the case as the food is dangerous to eat at such a high temperature - and yet the beer is so cold it prompts hicups and convulsions. Suppose it balances out somewhere in the lower gut.

  • eyebrowsb
    eyebrowsb Forum Participant Posts: 554
    edited August 2016 #9

    One of our local pubs used to do really good food at reasonable prices, but since their refurbishment .... most things seem to come on a "slate platter" with 9 chips 'artfully arranged' in a bucket Frown  

    They now charge £14.95 for a burger and chips with "dressed leaves" Surprised

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited August 2016 #10

    We have in the last year started to use Wetherspoons pubs as its like the cc sites, you know what you are getting but not as expensiveWink, and
    they all serve Doombar as part of their meal dealsSmile and all on proper platesInnocent

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
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    edited August 2016 #11

    Some places have got a bit 'poncy' with prices to match. We find we eat more in the van now, seldom treating ourselves to a meal out.

  • IanH
    IanH Forum Participant Posts: 4,708
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    edited August 2016 #12

    We've had fish and chips as a pub meal a couple of times this year and there seems to be a trend of putting the fish on top of the chips.

    Not a good idea and it makes the chips soggy......

  • sailorgirl2
    sailorgirl2 Forum Participant Posts: 153
    edited August 2016 #13

    What a lot of moaners we have become ,,,, at least we have food think of the Syrians no food, no real life really so perhaps we should be thankful we can fill our stomachs from whatever the food is served in or on and be thankful.....SG2....

  • eyebrowsb
    eyebrowsb Forum Participant Posts: 554
    edited August 2016 #14

    What a lot of moaners we have become ,,,, at least we have food think of the Syrians no food, no real life really so perhaps we should be thankful we can fill our stomachs from whatever the food is served in or on and be thankful.....SG2....

     Sorry SG2, but the discussion is about food presentation.  It has nothing to do with Syria or anywhere else!

  • eyebrowsb
    eyebrowsb Forum Participant Posts: 554
    edited August 2016 #15

    Some places have got a bit 'poncy' with prices to match. We find we eat more in the van now, seldom treating ourselves to a meal out.

    That made me laugh CY Laughing as I would describe a couple of pubs near us as 'poncy' .  Both are called "The (poncy) Plough" Laughing

  • Vicmallows
    Vicmallows Forum Participant Posts: 580
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    edited August 2016 #16

    The way people moan on here about CC site charges I am amazed that so many people 'eat out' at all
    Surprised

  • sailorgirl2
    sailorgirl2 Forum Participant Posts: 153
    edited August 2016 #17

    Lyn Ruby,

     I am educated enough to understand the theme of the discussion about plates and food presentation . My point was to highlight how  petty the discussion had become worrying over  cups, mugs, bins and plates for chips etc   when there are thousands starving who would  eat anything from anything if it were food. Obviously you are not sensitive enough to understand that, I am and felt my comments were valid...SG2

  • neveramsure
    neveramsure Forum Participant Posts: 712
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    edited August 2016 #18

    Last year while holidaying in Wales we ate at a hotel in Llandudno. We should have known what to expect when we saw pictures of Hotel Inspector Alex Polizzi on the wall. The burger and miniscule side salad were served on what looked like a roof slate and
    the chips in a tiny tin bucket.Surprised

  • eyebrowsb
    eyebrowsb Forum Participant Posts: 554
    edited August 2016 #19

    SG2 .... I do realise that there are people starving all over the world Sad  I was not being insensitive, just keeping on topic.  

    Maybe you should start a new thread regarding your concerns?

  • JillwithaJay
    JillwithaJay Club Member Posts: 2,484 ✭✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #20

    Perhaps it's an age thing but I fail to see the logic of the various items of a dish being piled one on top of another when the first thing you need to do is knock them all down to be able to eat them.  When did it become the norm not to arrange your steak
    or whatever on a plate with your veggies and carbs nicely arranged around the plate?

    photo 78301b06-7bdd-45fe-8ae2-d4d2cae14135_zpssi5htrez.jpg

  • sailorgirl2
    sailorgirl2 Forum Participant Posts: 153
    edited August 2016 #21

    SG2 .... I do realise that there are people starving all over the world Sad  I was not being insensitive, just keeping on topic.  

    Maybe you should start a new thread regarding your concerns?

    Write your comments here...no need lynruby youhave shown yourself for what you are..... sg2

  • eyebrowsb
    eyebrowsb Forum Participant Posts: 554
    edited August 2016 #22

    SG2 .... I do realise that there are people starving all over the world Sad  I was not being insensitive, just keeping on topic.  

    Maybe you should start a new thread regarding your concerns?

    Write your comments here...no need lynruby youhave shown yourself for what you are..... sg2

    I'm not sure what you mean? Surprised

  • moulesy
    moulesy Forum Participant Posts: 9,402 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #23

    SG2, with respect, you are entitled to your views but you lost my sympathy with your last two posts to lynruby who has an equal right to her/his opinion and which I found rather rude to be honest.

    The thread was simply expressing opinions on the "masterchef" style of presenting food these days and has no relevance to the situation in Syria, surely?

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #24

    Sg, that is a wholly big nasty streak you have there, lynnruby did not deserve a retort like that, are you having a bad day?

  • huskydog
    huskydog Club Member Posts: 5,460 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #25

    Next time you eat out, take a plate with you ,and when they bring your food to the table just scrape the food off what they bring it on ( tile , wood, etc) and watch their reaction........ 

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #26

    That will probably be the next fad....bring your own plates and cutlery. Wink

  • Pliers
    Pliers Forum Participant Posts: 1,864
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    edited August 2016 #27

    What a lot of moaners we have become ,,,, at least we have food think of the Syrians no food, no real life really so perhaps we should be thankful we can fill our stomachs from whatever the food is served in or on and be thankful.....SG2....

    SG2, I think most of the topics on this website are irrelevant to the poor souls caught up in war zones anywhere in the world. 

    Are they bothered about caravan layouts, tow cars, ferry crossings, reverse polarity, unoccupied pitches, dogs, etc, etc. Oh, and alphobetical anythings. 

    Perhaps not.

    There are very, very, many more appropiate websites open to anyone who wants to discuss the inequalities of life.

  • avondriver
    avondriver Forum Participant Posts: 85
    First Comment
    edited August 2016 #28

    Perhaps the initial question is wrong. How about "what's so great about a plate that makes it obligatory?" If somthing different makes you think, laugh, admire or just savour all is good. If not, oh well there is always another day.

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
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    edited August 2016 #29

    It's the small portions that wind me up. I'm happy to have it served any which way as long as there's enough to know I've had a meal. These gastro pubs with 6 fat chips or an egg cup of mash with 3 strips of meat is a complete bummer. No one should need
    to buy a takeaway on the way home from a meal with family & friends-it just ain't rightSad. Plate?, I'll take it on a dustbin lid if there's
    enough of it.

  • Goldie146
    Goldie146 Club Member Posts: 2,448 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #30

    Last Friday we went to a local pub for supper. Nothing wrong with the food or presentation. But I'm a bit of a Gin nerd and find it hard to resist buying new ones to try. So when the waitress came for our drinks order, I asked what Gins they had. "Oh, about eight - what would you like?" She was hard pushed to remember what they were, but I picked one from her list that I knew I liked. I asked for the tonic not to be added to the Gin glass. That was OK - the tonic was in it's bottle - but the Gin was more like a flower display than a drink - a tall elegant large bowled wine glass with what seemed like a punnet of strawberries in it with the odd rose petal.. I sent it back and asked for GIn without the fruit. No problem. Butt the replacement had nine large ice cubes,Sparkly and pretty but not really wanted. (I fished them out onto my serviette).

    Style over substance.

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited August 2016 #31

    Its not the meal  that is getting pricy its the "presentationSurprisedUndecidedWink