My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

To think cooking in many cafes in uk is shit and overpriced?

42 replies

midlifehope · 03/07/2015 11:06

I am sick of regretting eating out lately. This am I had a veggie breakfast that was rubbish, cold toast doused in plastic margarine, microwaved veggie sausages etc....last time I ate out I had a stale jacket potato with coleslaw that had gone off and hairs on the plate..... The food takes ages and comes out crap. I can cook much better myself. Aibu to think that cafes in the uk (some of them) need to sort themselves out???

OP posts:
Report
sherbetpips · 03/07/2015 12:17

Not just the food but the attitude too, I often avoid cafe's because I am usually made to feel like I have just wondered into someones kitchen expecting food. One near us doesnt even acknowledge you when you come in, just wonders across if you indicate you are ready to order. If her friends come in however she just plonks herself down and has a cup of tea and a chat, complete ignoring any customers.

Report
sliceofsoup · 03/07/2015 12:23

There really is no sense to the fry up. It isn't a bit balanced, but I have to say I love one now and again. :o

Agree about attitude. I find people serving food are often really grumpy and sometimes very rude. A smile costs nothing.

Report
FieldTrip · 03/07/2015 12:26

A fry-up is an excellent meal (apologies, I might be about to get on my high horse)

High protein, moderate carbs, more fruit and veg than your average breakfast and calories only a problem if you're eating too much the rest of the day.

So much better than cereals, toast and marmalade, a muffin/pastry...most breakfasts are almost completely devoid of protein.

Report
midlifehope · 03/07/2015 12:28

Agreed attitude is massive part of the problem. I went to order this am and the woman said 'I've got for breakfasts to get out first' as if I was inconveniencing her. 4 breakfasts is hardly a rush Confused

OP posts:
Report
midlifehope · 03/07/2015 12:28

*four

OP posts:
Report
WorktoLive · 03/07/2015 12:33

Sounds like a completely normal cooked breakfast to me apart from it's missing the bacon, and as long as it's good quality ingredients, something I would eat, but I have a cooked breakfast most days - just low fat version if I am trying to lose weight. Not sure why anyone would expect a cafe breakfast to be 'balanced' though.

I don't generally bother with buying cooked breakfasts though, because either the ingredients will be poor quality, or it will be really expensive, and I tend to stick to things that take some skill and effort to produce, rather than things that are easy to cook from common ingredients, because I'll just make that at home.

You've quoted my post about the crap ingredients keepitsimple0, but I don't understand what you mean by 'got bit by this pre-made bought sandwich filling. really?' Confused

Report
Sansarya · 03/07/2015 12:35

keepitsimple, all greasy spoon caffs in London seem to serve the same stuff. If you want a decent breakfast then get yourself to one of the cafes run by Australians that do decent coffee too!

Report
manchestermummy · 03/07/2015 12:38

Oh YANBU!

There's a café that MIL and SIL are obsessed with so we all went there for MIL's birthday. I had high hopes but I was incredibly disappointed.

Terrible service, plates not cleared at all between courses, expensive (£12 a cheese and tomato pizza in the NW!), and my sweet potato fries had been salted so heavily they were inedible. It was also very, very child unfriendly which given it was situated at a holiday park that had a playground was odd. One highchair for the whole place (SIL had to wait!) and no childrens' choice on the menu: there were small versions of massive adult meals but that was even too much for dd1 who eats very well usually! Our dc don't have to eat nuggets and chips btw but it's really weird having a café on a family-friendly park that doesn't cater for them?!

Actually that's the other thing: I hate huge portions. Give me less food and I might spend more on an extra course!

Report
Notso · 03/07/2015 12:43

I always have a good look at the food that others are eating before I go to a cafe. It's pretty easy to get an idea of the standard of the food from having a look around.
The "four breakfasts to do first" would have had me walking out.

Report
WorktoLive · 03/07/2015 12:44

See, I would see a cafe that served smaller portions of the standard menu as the children's menu instead of assorted beige shit and chips as a good thing.

Even better if they don't call it the 'children's menu', but just the lighter appetite menu so you have a choice of buying a small or a large portion of everything on the menu - you would have room for a second course then manchestermummy. Smile

Report
barbecue · 03/07/2015 12:46

Why just "in the UK"? There are good and bad cafes everywhere.

Report
ofshoes · 03/07/2015 12:49

I don't trust Tripadvisor, I've been burned too many times by ecstatic reviews that promise orgasmic culinary feats and find out it's the same bland shit that every other restaurant or cafe provide. I'm fucked if I'm spending ?20 on "sliders" again.

I suspect that the ratings are easily skewed by owners and managers with bogus accounts.

Report
grovel · 03/07/2015 12:53

I agree about the variability of quality. Not so sure about cost/rip off. A friend of mine does the accounts for a few (mostly OK) cafes and remarked that none of the owners are remotely rich. You need to sell a hell of a lot to cover rent, business rates, utilities, insurance etc.

Report
midlifehope · 03/07/2015 12:54

Not so - I so should have walked out!!!

OP posts:
Report
midlifehope · 03/07/2015 12:55

Barbecue only because the uk is where I spend 99% of my time

OP posts:
Report
Notso · 03/07/2015 13:18

I agree WorktoLive

Report
TheWernethWife · 03/07/2015 14:26

If you are in Manchester go to Katsouris on Cross St (have a branch on Bury market as well) food is brilliant - it's only small and you have to get in early before the office lunchtime eaters get in. Bury has more seating.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.