A restaurant in Texas recently banned children under eight after 7pm, while a café in London blamed ‘yummy mummies’ for ruining the area. So should eateries be adults only, or are children customers too?
In perhaps the most extreme example of tempers becoming frayed over children in restaurants, one father at a restaurant in Islington smashed a bottle of wine over a fellow diner’s head after he suggested he put his baby to bed. (It was past 10pm, the baby had been crying for 40 minutes, and the father got two years for assault). What is it about children in restaurants in this country that makes some people's blood boil?
The Continental approach
Our Facebook fans and listeners to Vanessa Feltz's radio show (where I spoke about this issue just the other day) praised the sun-soaked lifestyle of family dining in the Med. Children behave, join in, don't throw food, waiters coo, everyone's happy, the wine flows. Trevor Gulliver, owner of St John restaurant in London summed up the European attitude: "I was in L'Heritier, a small restaurant at the back of a fishmongers in Lille once (OK, all be it Michelin starred). We might have been a little scruffy, my wife was a little worried, the waiters were in formal clothes. At the end of the meal the patron came over to me and said thank you for investing in his restaurant. I looked at him and he pointed to our sons who were about five and seven. 'Et voila', he said, 'the future!'" Perhaps your summer holiday was spent enjoying the continental approach? Yet, when back in Blighty, for most of us all that bon homme goes right out the fenêtre.
I'll have the pasta, hold the kids
But why? Well, Adweek's Robert Klara sums it up thus: "Blame a wave of childless adults with money to spare. Empty nesters continue to wield a huge swath of discretionary spending dollars, and population dips in first-world countries mean more childless couples than ever." Eating out with kids in America is humorously summed up in this cartoon.
But what's the state of affairs here in the UK? I put a call in to a range of restaurants, from Soho to nationwide chain places, and here's what they had to say.
Giraffe (nationwide)
I ask her about the mess younger diners might leave. "We've had kids throw up. It happens, and sometimes the parents don't clear it up. You get messy days, but in 15 years I've never had a horror story, because if a child does start screaming a parent will take them out." Juliet goes on: "The worst thing is when different sets of parents argue because they think the other table is being too noisy. That's not nice, but the manager can calm it all down, and a round of drinks soon fixes things."
Polpo (London)
But more than the bottom line, Russell believes that eating in restaurants also lets children learn. "Eating in a restaurant is a life skill; it's part of growing up, part of the texture and variety of life. I think children need to be exposed to restaurants at a young age."
Wacky Warehouse (nationwide)
'The table looks like a bomb's hit it'
So restaurant owners and managers love children. Was anyone going to come out against families in restaurants? Yes – social commentator and former Apprentice contestant Katie Hopkins. So we'll let her have the last, contrary word. "Having been a waitress when I was a student, I have to say I hate families in restaurants," she says. "They are the dirtiest, messiest, meanest customers; food all over the floor, as well as empty tubes of organic puree. I have sympathy for waitresses – the table looks like a bomb's hit it and you know they're the ones on their hands and knees cleaning it all up. Or there's the mother from hell, swathed in Cath Kidston saying, 'Can you heat this milk, can you get this toasted, can we have this on the side...' All these nags at waiting staff. And don't get me started on double buggies!"
What are you experiences of eating out in earshot of children, or with your own? Tell us in the Comments box below.
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