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Breakfasts in hotels

(349 Posts)
JaneJudge Sat 10-Aug-24 10:26:55

I’m going away for a few days with my husband. It’s a place we go on special occasions. The hotel we stay in does a glorious breakfast. Fruit, yogurts, toasts, breads, cereals, pastries and jans. Then they do a really good cooked option. Generally we both just have the cooked option as it’s plenty. Other people seem to have loads of food before the cooked option.

My question is..is it extremely wrong to discretely put a couple of pastries or some bread, cheese and fruit in a zip lock bag so that we could have that for lunch? Or is it a complete no no 🙃 it’s not a budget hotel, we stay for dinner etc just wondered on others thoughts. Normally we would just buy a sandwich from M&S to share, which we may still do..

MissInterpreted Fri 16-Aug-24 12:20:08

JaneJudge

I really wouldn’t have put ricotta and eggs together tbh but it was actually lovely. The tomato juice hit the fruit button. Why has fresh tomato juice gone out of fashion? It’s so lovely and refreshing

That sounds lovely. And I agree with you about the tomato juice - I love it too.

Aveline Fri 16-Aug-24 14:27:05

DH is a big fan of tomato juice but, disappointingly, it's often from this premixed tomato juice cocktail bottles.
Once while staying in Malta we found that German women just cleared the buffet breakfasts leaving nothing for us! The hotel staff just shrugged. We ended up having to go earlier and earlier to get anything and shamelessly pushing to grab something edible.

Sennelier1 Mon 19-Aug-24 08:53:16

For us it's a big non-no. I agree on taking a banana or a wrapped biscuit if you're travelling with a small child but anything more than that is just greedy, not done. If you plan to spend the day somewhere with no shops or restaurants you can always ask the staff for a packed lunch. We use a hotel where they do just that on simple demand, they provide you with a nice hamper if you want to have lunch on the beech. Or they might tell you to take anything you want from the buffet, and charge you extra, or not! Much better than popping food in your handbag 😊

JaneJudge Mon 19-Aug-24 11:45:17

I'm back. We just had the cooked option. The food was out of this world really. I felt I'd eaten too much rich food in a 3 day sitting smile but it was lovely. The hotel made us home made macarons for our anniversary which was a lovely touch. I feel I have been spoiled

Norah Mon 19-Aug-24 11:48:20

Lovely!

MissInterpreted Mon 19-Aug-24 11:49:27

Oh, that sounds lovely, JaneJudge - glad you enjoyed your break!

Aveline Mon 19-Aug-24 11:59:39

Sounds like a really nice hotel.

Lydie45 Mon 19-Aug-24 15:56:07

Many years ago we went to France to see the eclipse of the sun. At the hotel there was a big display of food for a continental breakfast. People descended on it like a plague of locusts filling bags with food. By the time we got there there was hardly anything left. Our friend asked for more and the waiter said there was no more “the greedy British have stolen it all” and in truth they had.

mabon1 Mon 19-Aug-24 17:13:53

You are stealing and greedy to boot, shame on you.

JaneJudge Mon 19-Aug-24 17:26:02

mabon1

You are stealing and greedy to boot, shame on you.

Who? 😂 who would have thought it would get to 14 pages long ..

Grannynannywanny Mon 19-Aug-24 18:00:24

Glad to hear you had such a lovely hotel break for your anniversary JaneJudge 🥂

(I’m a little disappointed you didn’t sit a croissant into the bottom of your handbag and take a photo of it to post on this thread. I’d love to see the reaction 😆)

MissInterpreted Mon 19-Aug-24 18:12:28

mabon1

You are stealing and greedy to boot, shame on you.

Who is that directed at? No-one is stealing or being greedy - but you are being very rude!

Mollygo Mon 19-Aug-24 18:14:44

The greedy British, the greedy French, the greedy Dutch, definitely the greedy Germans and the Greedy Italians (at the hotel where we stayed in Italy recently),
The greedy students, the greedy wedding guests, the greedy carvery customers who pile their plates to overflowing . . .
They all play a part in making others feel better.

MissAdventure Mon 19-Aug-24 18:16:15

I expect this is the longest thread you've ever started, Jane. wink

NotAGran55 Mon 19-Aug-24 18:21:52

So pleased that you had a great time JaneJudge.

OnwardandUpward Mon 19-Aug-24 18:25:50

JaneJudge

mabon1

You are stealing and greedy to boot, shame on you.

Who? 😂 who would have thought it would get to 14 pages long ..

😂 It might be me, but I'm still satisfied weeks later! 😂😂

I regret nothing! grin

JaneJudge Mon 19-Aug-24 18:28:53

It has been quite a journey 😂😂😂

Galaxy Mon 19-Aug-24 18:31:36

An emotional rollercoaster.

MissAdventure Mon 19-Aug-24 18:33:02

grin

JaneJudge Mon 19-Aug-24 18:59:48

Galaxy

An emotional rollercoaster.

Filled with imaginary pastries and boiled eggs. Like the Father Christmas film by Raymond Briggs when St Nick gets food poisoning in France..also for being a glutton

OnwardandUpward Mon 19-Aug-24 19:01:40

Well, it's been an egg-cellent post, even though some got in a scramble! 😂😂😂

Oreo Tue 20-Aug-24 17:11:29

And I’ve poached a few tips from the thread👍🏻🍳🥚

Tuaim Tue 20-Aug-24 21:09:17

kwest

One of the meanest people I have ever known would always ask for a doggy bag to take home any food left on her plate when going out for a meal. It made me cringe. She was not remotely hard up.
I would not ever consider taking extra food for later. it is demeaning and would spoil the whole experience of having a meal out if I was with anyone who thought it was o.k. to be skulking around with bags of left over food.

I liked reading your post. A relative had an 80th birthday and one of the guests, after the main course was finished, went around with her freezer bag collecting all the bits of food left on the guests plates. It was sooooooooo embarrassing. She said it was for her cat. Poor cat!