The Junk Drawer

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I learned this yesterday when ordering from a restaurant and wanted to share.

What is the concept of a ghost kitchen?



Image result for ghost kitchen


The kitchens themselves don't have a storefront and the staff prepares dishes off of their menus that are only available for delivery. Think of it as a virtual restaurant operating as a digital storefront, with a few back-of-house staff members working on fulfilling online orders.Aug 8, 2022

What is an example of a ghost kitchen?


Essentially, they are restaurant kitchens entirely detached from restaurants. In ghost kitchens, there's no host stand, no seating, no customer-facing space. Just a kitchen, some tablets for orders, and a pick-up window for delivery drivers.Sep 24, 2021

What is the importance of ghost kitchens?


Ghost kitchens (also known as cloud kitchens) are the perfect way for existing restaurant owners to capitalize on down times or unused space because they bring in more revenue through delivery demand, scale business in a reasonable way, and create entirely new business opportunities.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
I learned this yesterday when ordering from a restaurant and wanted to share.

What is the concept of a ghost kitchen?



Image result for ghost kitchen


The kitchens themselves don't have a storefront and the staff prepares dishes off of their menus that are only available for delivery. Think of it as a virtual restaurant operating as a digital storefront, with a few back-of-house staff members working on fulfilling online orders.Aug 8, 2022

What is an example of a ghost kitchen?


Essentially, they are restaurant kitchens entirely detached from restaurants. In ghost kitchens, there's no host stand, no seating, no customer-facing space. Just a kitchen, some tablets for orders, and a pick-up window for delivery drivers.Sep 24, 2021

What is the importance of ghost kitchens?


Ghost kitchens (also known as cloud kitchens) are the perfect way for existing restaurant owners to capitalize on down times or unused space because they bring in more revenue through delivery demand, scale business in a reasonable way, and create entirely new business opportunities.
People are getting creative in these troubling times.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
People are getting creative in these troubling times.
i don't know about that, way back in the late 80s and early 90s, when i lived in Tampa, if you were from around the neighborhood, you found the old cuban ladies houses that made lunch...most of them would have a big porch with tables, or a few picnic tables in the back yard. there was no menu, they made what they made, and it was always good, pork and plantains and rice and red or black beans, roasted chicken, 3 or 4 bucks for a plate that never left me with room for more.
We went to one ladies house for almost two years, marietta's, till she died...I never knew her last name, but she was a damn good cook.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Here is an example of how dangerous racism and bigotry can be in this age of social media and cellphones. It can cost people their businesses and jobs and must be suppressed, they want freedom, they can't quite put their finger on what they want to be free, except to own weapons without restrictions and rage against "wokeness". The woke are those who call them out for being idiots and bigots, who along with those they fear and hate, are the source of their discontent. It basically amounts to; they want to hurt other people's feelings for no good reason and resent it when people hurt their feelings. They are now being held accountable for their private civil war by technology mostly, cellphones and the documentation and archiving the internet provides. Woke is the new liberal, a term which seems to be going out of fashion on the right, since it means free, which is opposite of fascist authoritarianism that they prefer.

What does "woke" mean? As far as I can see, it means a compassionate, considerate and prosocial liberal outlook, mind your own business about things that are none of them and become part of a normal caring sharing human community. All people are human beings deserving equal rights and dignity only those who are blinded by hate and fear can't see that. The weak minded and hateful don't make up a majority of any country, so why should they run one, most often into the ground.


 
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cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Here is an example of how dangerous racism and bigotry can be in this age of social media and cellphones. It can cost people their businesses and jobs and must be suppressed, they want freedom, they can't quite put their finger on what way they want to be free, except to own weapons without restrictions and rage against "wokeness". The woke are those who call them out for being idiots and bigots, who along with those they fear and hate, are the source of their discontent. It basically amounts to; they want to hurt other people's feelings for no good reason and resent it when people hurt their feelings. They are now being held accountable for their private civil war by technology mostly, cellphones and the documentation and archiving the internet provides. Woke is the new liberal, a term which seems to be going out of fashion on the right, since it means free, which is opposite of fascist authoritarianism that they prefer.

What does "woke" mean? As far as I can see, it means a compassionate, considerate and prosocial liberal outlook, mind your own business about things that are none of them and become part of a normal caring sharing human community. All people are human beings deserving equal rights and dignity only those who are blinded by hate and fear can't see that. The weak minded and hateful don't make up a majority of any country, so why should they run one, most often into the ground.


some detail.

 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
I learned this yesterday when ordering from a restaurant and wanted to share.

What is the concept of a ghost kitchen?



Image result for ghost kitchen


The kitchens themselves don't have a storefront and the staff prepares dishes off of their menus that are only available for delivery. Think of it as a virtual restaurant operating as a digital storefront, with a few back-of-house staff members working on fulfilling online orders.Aug 8, 2022

What is an example of a ghost kitchen?


Essentially, they are restaurant kitchens entirely detached from restaurants. In ghost kitchens, there's no host stand, no seating, no customer-facing space. Just a kitchen, some tablets for orders, and a pick-up window for delivery drivers.Sep 24, 2021

What is the importance of ghost kitchens?


Ghost kitchens (also known as cloud kitchens) are the perfect way for existing restaurant owners to capitalize on down times or unused space because they bring in more revenue through delivery demand, scale business in a reasonable way, and create entirely new business opportunities.
They have been around for a bit, think it's a great idea. Something that had caught on here are food halls, basically a bunch of small independent places coming together that can offer a great dish or two. As the end consumer it's rad all around. I first got into the idea when I lived in Boston and the Asian grocery had a food court with like 10-15 places that offered an amazing dish or two, not enough to run a real restaurant on, but enough that they could pull a steady stream of folks.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
i don't know about that, way back in the late 80s and early 90s, when i lived in Tampa, if you were from around the neighborhood, you found the old cuban ladies houses that made lunch...most of them would have a big porch with tables, or a few picnic tables in the back yard. there was no menu, they made what they made, and it was always good, pork and plantains and rice and red or black beans, roasted chicken, 3 or 4 bucks for a plate that never left me with room for more.
We went to one ladies house for almost two years, marietta's, till she died...I never knew her last name, but she was a damn good cook.
They still do it in Little Havana- a good memory.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
They have been around for a bit, think it's a great idea. Something that had caught on here are food halls, basically a bunch of small independent places coming together that can offer a great dish or two. As the end consumer it's rad all around. I first got into the idea when I lived in Boston and the Asian grocery had a food court with like 10-15 places that offered an amazing dish or two, not enough to run a real restaurant on, but enough that they could pull a steady stream of folks.
I saw a report on that. They use one large kitchen for all restaurants that's how they can swing the cost.
 
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