| |
Restaurants
range from unpretentious lunching or dining places catering to people
working nearby, with simple food served in simple settings at low
prices, to expensive establishments serving refined food and wines
in a formal setting. In the former case, customers usually wear
casual clothing. In the latter case, depending on culture and local
traditions, customers might wear semi-casual, semi-formal, or even
in rare cases formal wear.
Typically, customers sit at tables,
their orders are taken by a waiter, who brings the food when it
is ready, and the customers pay the bill before leaving. In finer
restaurants there will be a host or hostess or even a maître
d'hôtel to welcome customers and to seat them. Other staff
waiting on customers include busboys and sommeliers.
Restaurants often specialize in certain
types of food or present a certain unifying, and often entertaining,
theme. For example, there are seafood restaurants, vegetarian restaurants
or ethnic restaurants. Generally speaking, restaurants selling "local"
food are simply called restaurants, while restaurants selling food
of foreign origin are called accordingly, for example, a Chinese
restaurant and a French restaurant..
Depending on local customs and the
establishment, restaurants may or may not serve alcoholic beverages.
Restaurants are often prohibited from selling alcohol without a
meal by alcohol sale laws; such sale is considered to be activity
for bars, which are meant to have more severe restrictions. Some
restaurants are licensed to serve alcohol ("fully licensed"),
and/or permit customers to "bring your own" alcohol (BYO
/ BYOB).
|
|