Avocado and other most surprising things ever banned in restaurants
Leave it at home

Eating too much

Use of the word literally

Red trousers

Solo women at the bar

New York restaurant Nello put a ban on solo women at the bar due to high class escort fears in 2019. When British writer Clementine Crawford visited the pricey Upper East Side establishment, famed for its $275 white truffle pasta dishes, and took a seat at the bar, she was swiftly redirected to a table. Crawford details the events in her essay The Night I Was Mistaken for a Call Girl. A Twitter user defended her saying, “In case you didn’t know – women can afford their own drinks at a bar – we are not hookers waiting for a man to pay for us."
Suit and tie

Trump supporters

Mobile phones

Bankers

Obese diners

In 2016, the pop-up, “naked” restaurant Amrita in Tokyo declared that once it opened, it would refuse entry to anyone who was 15kg (33lbs) above the average weight for their height. Guests thought to be overweight would be subjected to the humiliation of being weighed, and if they were deemed overweight, would be asked to leave without a refund. A spokesperson said: “If fat people are allowed in it could be miserable for some guests… We are aiming for a sort of Roman aesthetic." Unsurprisingly, their approach was widely derided.
Takeaway boxes

Couples

Instagramming

Bottle-feeding

Ketchup and fizzy drinks

Children

Tipping

Michelin stars

Light

Food reviewers

Perfume

Swearing

Avocados

Talking

Part of the joy of eating is in conversing while you do so, but not at the now-closed New York City restaurant Eat, located in Brooklyn's Greenpoint. They held 'Eat, Don't Speak' meals where absolutely no talking was allowed. The head chef was inspired to create the silent sessions after spending time with Buddhist monks in India who ate their breakfast without saying a word. The owner said: "It's kind of like a meditation. The silence speaks for itself."
Now read: Tasty new restaurants to try in every state in 2019
Pugs from entering a photo competition

Burger restaurant Solita in Manchester, UK, is known for running photo competitions with the winner receiving a free lunch for two. At the start of 2018 they held a pet photography contest and banned pictures of pugs, rabbits and rats being entered. A social media meltdown ensued with protesters leaving negative one-star reviews on Facebook. The managers apologised saying it had been tongue in cheek and in the past they excluded reptiles for no reason.
Now read: Restaurants hiding a surprising secret
French fries

Adults love French fries just as much as children but the owner of The Courtyard Restaurant and Garden Bar in Auckland, New Zealand, refuses to sell them as a single item to adults. He said: "I don't think chips complement a meal. The only reason there's chips on the menu is because children like them.” Instead, he encourages customers to try the fried Brussels sprouts or a layered potato dish with cheese.
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