In This ArticleView AllIn This Article1. Making Everyone Waffles2. Reusing Your Plate3. “Fixing” the Food4. Playing Chef5. Preparing the Coffee
In This ArticleView All
View All
In This Article
Making Everyone Waffles
Reusing Your Plate
“Fixing” the Food
Playing Chef
Preparing the Coffee
When you’ve just woken up in a strange bed in a strange city, the last thing you really want to be pondering is where you’re going to get the most important meal of the day. That’s why hotel breakfast buffets are such a boon to travelers: they take the guesswork and planning out of sourcing your first bite of food in the morning.
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Many of us are guilty of making some buffet faux pas, and not only at the complimentary hotel breakfast buffet. Below are five things you might do at a buffet that you think are polite but are actually rude.
Plus, if there’s nobody directly behind you in line to make a waffle, the next person who approaches the waffle iron is going to have a very unpleasant surprise in the form of something that looks like a miniature charred sewer cap. Then some other customer or employee will have to deal with your misdirected “politeness” as they pry the fossilized breakfast treat from its iron grate.
If you really get joy out of making breakfast for others and it’s an integral part of your day, then ask a fellow diner if they’d like you to prepare them a waffle. You might just make a new friend.
You’ll see a sign posted at many buffets, and it’s there for a reason: Always use a clean plate for every trip to the buffet. An informal buffet at your home is different from a hotel or restaurant buffet. While at home, you may have a limited number of dishes and an even more limited number of hands to wash them—so you welcome people reusing plates. Commercial kitchens don’t have the same issues. But they do have bigger things to worry about, including cross-contamination and foodborne illnesses, both of which can result from customers reusing plates.
We may not always be conscious of it, but when we serve or are served food at a buffet, the serving spoons will sometimes come into contact with the plate. Now, if that plate is clean, we generally don’t have much to worry about. But if that plate has remnants of food that touched eating utensils that have been in your mouth, it can present a major health risk.
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While we may fancy ourselves good Samaritans when we “fix” culinary problems we see, it’s not our job to mess with the food on a buffet table. Firstly, our own ideas of what is properly made may not be to everyone’s liking. Besides being rude to the employees and guests, fiddling around too much with the food at a buffet can lead to the spread of illness. If something doesn’t look too appetizing, bring it up to an employee.
We’ve all been stuck at a buffet where the food was below average or just a little boring, and some of us have been stuck on weeklong cruises that have led us to blow all our souvenir money on food whenever we reached a port. But regardless of how bad the situation is and how ingenious you fancy yourself to be in the kitchen, a buffet is not the place to play chef.
But in the end, you’re opening up a huge can of worms. That genius French toast idea may drip into the machine and cause it to malfunction. Or maybe it is a success, but now six other diners are trying to do the same thing and each is adding their own twist to it. Before you know it, the dining room looks like an anarchist cooking competition, and the staff all have you to blame.
It feels rude to complain about there being nothing suitable to eat, so it may seem like a better idea to try and make something yourself. But if you really find yourself with few palatable options, just ask an employee if there is something the kitchen can prepare for you rather than showing off your cooking skills with a waffle iron.
There are few worse things than coming down to the hotel breakfast buffet and finding that the coffeepot is empty. It gives us the same feeling as going to an amusement park and discovering that all the rides are closed. But just as you shouldn’t try to operate amusement park rides on your own, you shouldn’t just volunteer to make the pot of coffee for everyone, no matter how long you’ve worked as a barista.
For starters, not all coffee makers function the same, and you may not know exactly how to operate this particular one. In addition, the hotel or restaurant may have a certain way they make the coffee that customers are accustomed to. Tampering with that may result in a whole pot having to be thrown out.
Also, you may not know exactly how much coffee needs to be made that morning. The staff will have a better idea of how many customers they’re expecting. You may be the only diner at the buffet that morning, and the staff may have been waiting for you to arrive to make you your own personal pot of coffee. Whatever the reason is, it’s always best to leave the coffee making to an employee who knows how to make the coffee in a safe and hygienic way so that everyone can enjoy it.
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The Bottom Line
Buffets are a great option for diners to get just enough of what they want to eat or try a little bit of everything. Because diners serve themselves, we sometimes assume that buffets are free-for-alls. However, many of us have seen our favorite buffets decline because too many diners think they’re being polite but are actually being rude and interfering with how the buffet operates. At hotel breakfast buffets or any other buffet, being aware of some of these rude behaviors we might think are polite can help make the difference between someone starting their day on the right foot or being grumpy until their next meal.
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