China Daily

The 7 sins Brits always commit at a hotel breakfast buffet

- By DEBORA ROBERTSON

Perfectly civilised people, people who remember birthdays, smile at old ladies in the street, never hog a secondseat­onthebus,tipgenerou­sly, return phone calls and hold open doors — that is people like you and I — lose it at breakfast time. Specifical­ly, hotel buffet breakfast time. While at home, a quick slice of wholemeal and a hastily slurped cup of tea may suffice, when it comes to the allure of the hotel morning buffet, however, it seems many of us discard any thoughts of dignity in the race to pile our plates high in a horrific game of gustatory Jenga.

If the true indication of a person’s character is who they are when they think no one is watching, then many of us are greedy pigs.

But the truth is, people are watching. Specifical­ly, Alan Bennett. And he is very disappoint­ed in us. In an extract from his diary published in The London Review of Books, he describes a trip to Venice in November:

“The greed at breakfast in our hotel is also dispiritin­g, one young woman this morning with such a passion for fruit that she piles her plate with melon, pineapple, grapes and kiwi fruit and fills her pockets with tangerines to the extent that in the process nature itself is demeaned.

“Hard to be a waitress at breakfast and retain a respect for one’s fellows. Some of the well-to-do guests can’t wait to get the food back from the breakfast bar to their table, one young man downing a tumbler of orange juice en route and a boy stuffing himself with sausages before he even sits down.”

It is something most of us recognise both in others and ashamedly ourselves. There is an anxiety that comes over many of us as we approach a hotel’s chafing dishes filled with sausages, bacon and eggs, platters piled with sweet, sliced fruit, tiny jars of jam and neatly arranged pots of yogurt (which often get taken, but then never get opened), pitchers of juice and pots of tea and coffee. Are we getting our fair share? Will an extra slice of toast, a stolen tangerine, or a pile of pancakes offset spending a king’s ransom on a room with no view and a hanger deficit?

We need to get a grip and pass on the granola, or the kedgeree, or the goat’s cheese frittata — at least all at once, on the same plate. It’s only breakfast. Other meals are also available.

Butitisjus­tsohardtor­esistthepu­ll of the buffet. Here are the signs you too are part of the bad breakfast club. How many of these crimes against decorum have you committed in pursuit of nourishmen­t? Or, maybe, just simple old fashioned greed. 1 Leaning tower of chipolatas: We see you, with your master engineerin­g strategy of cantilever­ed sausages, on a bacon foundation, holding up a scrambled egg elevation topped with a cupola of fried mushrooms and tomatoes. Never pile a plate higher than your own head. It’s just not a good look. 2 Save it for later: Noonebelie­ves that thing about your low blood sugar. Don’t be the person who wraps Danishes up in a napkin and secretes them in a handbag, or sleight-of-hands a boiled egg into a pocket ‘for later’ (true story) or — worse — as I once observed in a hotel recently where I saw a man butter up a stack of bacon sandwiches, complete with ketchup, and tuck them intohisruc­ksack.Youwillfor­getthey are there. When you do find them they will be full of sand. Your bag will end up full of bits. You deserve the dry cleaning bill, frankly. 3 Just because you can: There’s a reason that no one, before you, ever put homemade granola, hash browns, scrambled eggs, buttermilk pancakes and baked beans on the same breakfast tray. Oh and all topped off by a fruit mountain — including watermelon, kiwi and loads of pineapple chunks which, quite frankly usually turn your stomach, but you find yourself strangely drawn to every time you hit the buffet. The choice can be overwhelmi­ng, but it’s the grown up thing to make a reasonably rational one or you just look like some kind of deranged breakfast lunatic, and it seems Chris Evans already has that job. 4 Pretend purity: You’re not kidding anyone with your Gwyneth Faux-trow act. That is so elegant, your big white plate with its tiny blob of live, whole goat’s milk yoghurt and perfect arc of mango. Youaresoab­ovethevulg­arityofoth­ers as you sip your hot water with lemon. Statistica­lly, you are also the one most likely to be piling into a £10 tube of Pringles from the mini bar by 11am. And it is a scientific fact that you are also most likely to make off with a suitcase bulging with pilfered Cowshed body lotion. 5 Pick a lane: Beware. It’s as easy to be a fashion victim first thing as it is later in the day. Teaming your avo on toast with Birchermes­li and double stuffed French toast is just as much a faux pas as head-to-toe labels and logos. Transcend the trend — simpler is better. Remember, in the words of Coco Chanel (and maybe Alan Bennett), ‘Elegance is refusal’. 6 Bottomless pits: The recent ‘bottomless’ restaurant trend really is the pits. Whether it’s the weird Goop inspired fruit juice or prosecco later in the day, resist, resist, resist. It is a truth universall­y acknowledg­ed that hotel coffee, even in some very good establishm­ents indeed, is utterly dire and you’d be better off popping round the corner to some neighbourh­ood joint for a real hit. A chalkboard outside and an off-duty lumberjack/ burlesque dancer vibe inside are often promising signs. 7 Hunter Gatherer: Weirdly, a breakfast buffet can induce the sense of the desperate forager in even the most mild mannered of weekend trippers, or conference wallahs. Suddenly, rubbery scrambled eggs and bacon that’s been sweating pinkly in a dish for three hours seem like quite the prize. They’re not. You wouldn’t eat it at home and if you ordered it from a menu rather than piling it onto your plate yourself, you’d probably send it back. This isn’t a Ray Mears situation.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Eggs, French toast, syrup, wedges and ice cream all on one plate? Only at a breakfast buffet.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Eggs, French toast, syrup, wedges and ice cream all on one plate? Only at a breakfast buffet.

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