Jump to content

Recommended Posts

For a treat I thought I'd have a sandwich and drink out at lunchtime today.

Tea was in a paper cup, toasted sandwich on a paper plate and plastic knife. I hate tea in paper cups , and for me part of eating out is nice cup etc.

I asked why, and the waitress said " its because of covid....."

Why I wonder. I wonder if the green agenda has just gone now?

You just need to wash cups in hot soapy water, as usual.

If you can tell me places that are still serving tea in cups that aren't disposable please let me know.

Thanks

Several months ago one cafe with outside seating (I?ve forgotten) told me there were no pots of tea because of the pandemic, so I didn?t buy. A teabag in a 250ml cup with no chance of a top up of hot water for ?2 didn?t seem appealing. It?s understandable right at the start of all this when people were even putting the mail in the microwave but not now. Takeaway, of course, needs paper cups but again, nobody is forcing anyone to buy.

Angelina Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> People should boycott paper cups anyway and take

> their own.

>

> Usually a travel mug but no harm in taking a mug

> :-)

Not sure they would fill it because in Wetherspoons for example you can have free refills BUT you have to get a fresh cup- the same hygiene rule applied before covid if you wanted a pint in the same glass- pubs wouldn't do it

Angelina Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> People should boycott paper cups anyway and take

> their own.

>

> Usually a travel mug but no harm in taking a mug

> :-)



Since Covid coffee shops are refusing to refill clients own reusable cups.

Agree :)

The fear of Covid-19 contamination were unfounded. 119 experts from 18 countries concluded reusable containers pose no threat to the public during the Covid-10 pandemic: https://inews.co.uk/news/environment/reusable-cups-coffee-safe-use-coronavirus-pandemic-covid-19-uk-452611

Either way, I don't see how having your own cup refilled is going to spread / pick-up Covid. Perhaps the fear is that just the general air you're sat in is carrying Covid, which may settle on your cup ? But if that was the case, Covid can settle on every disposable cup too.

KidKruger Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Either way, I don't see how having your own cup

> refilled is going to spread / pick-up Covid.

> Perhaps the fear is that just the general air

> you're sat in is carrying Covid, which may settle

> on your cup ? But if that was the case, Covid can

> settle on every disposable cup too.


I asked a barperson in Camden months ago when he refused to refill my used glass - he said that germs could transfer from the glass to the tap....and that was before Covid...so no-one will refill especially now- they use clean cups, glasses etc

Bread of Life cafe at Christ Church Barry Road uses china mugs/cups and plates with stainless steel cutlery. If you require sugar or condiments, they will be brought to you by staff. Open Monday to Fridays 10 - 3 pm. Laminated menu, sanitized after every use, as are chairs and tables.


Basic menu but you can check what specials they have each day.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • To be fair, a pot of tea for one in a department store is a small pot, and you only get one cup or mug!
    • I know - we have been here lots of times since it first opened,  which is why we were disappointed that it was closed at a time it was supposed to be open, but with no notice to say why! I guess we will just  have to ask the reason at our next visit, but I'm not sure we will risk Saturday lunchtime again unless we find the closure  was an unavoidable one off ....
    • Nope. I don’t have this wrong. I’ve tried to put my point across respectfully, without resorting to personal, angry insults. And all my colleagues agree that the BBC got this right in its condemnation.    All you see is confirmation bias.    If you don’t realise that, then you’re part of the problem.    
    • We have always gone during the week at lunch time - great place and good value. Husband has been several times on his own and owner knows his first name. I could not go one time for some reason and she sent him home with some spring rolls (free)
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...