It’s Time for Restaurants to Stop Serving Bread Before Meals
Photo by Boshoku/Unsplash
Let’s get this out of the way—I love bread as much as the next person. In fact, I was one of many who had a homemade bread phase during the pandemic (shoutout to my family for accepting, and ultimately, consuming, that time in my life). I often served the loaf before or beside a meal—restaurant style—at home. When restaurants ramped up service again, so did the pre-meal bread. In fact, most of us, if not all, will quickly notice if free bread isn’t offered before putting in a meal order. Why is that?
In a society that expects instant gratification, serving bread before a meal gives diners something to do before their meal arrives, so some diners may be disappointed when a basket doesn’t appear on their table. But apart from giving patrons something to snack on while they wait for their entrée, what purpose does pre-dinner bread actually serve?
Every time a restaurant serves rolls, I do exactly what’s expected: I eat them. Maybe it’s the infamous Texas Roadhouse rolls served with cinnamon butter. Or maybe it’s the perfectly crunchy-on-the-outside, soft-in-the-middle bread served with pads of butter at my favorite fine dining spot. Or maybe— just maybe—it’s my local go-to restaurant that serves three kinds of bread: white, rye and multigrain (and I’ll be trying all three, obviously). Whatever the case is, I will eat the bread if it’s put in front of me. And it’ll be so mouth-wateringly delicious that I’ll eat another slice. And then the conversation will distract me, so I might even go for a third without realizing it. Do you see where the problem lies? I’m now too full to enjoy the meal that I came for.