4 Reasons Not to Date to Restaurants on Valentine's Day
Valentine's Day is coming soon. For couples celebrating, the moment may be a good time to do special things. There are various ways that couples often do when celebrating Valentine's Day. Starting from preparing flowers or chocolates to order a place in a restaurant for dinner accompanied by candle light.
Do you and your partner intend to dinner at Valentine? If that's your plan, maybe it's good to think again. Launching the Reader's Digest page on Wednesday (13/2/18), Valentine's Day may be for some people is not the right time to eat at restaurants. This is due to several things. Here are 4 of them.
Crowded or full
The first reason is the increasing number of diners. It's no secret if dinner together on Valentine's Day is a popular activity that many couples do. This makes the restaurant more crowded than usual and even full. If you do not go to a fancy restaurant that does not have a lot of visitors capacity, you will be caught in a very crowded restaurant situation so you can not enjoy the full dinner atmosphere. Moments that should be romantic can change drastically so static.
With the number of visitors and orders, the cooks in the kitchen can not devote his attention to the maximum on each order. They are pursued by time and order quantity. This could have an impact on the declining quality of food. Do you want to eat a dish of worse quality than the usual day when Valentine's Day is a special moment for you and your partner?
Problem time
There are many things that will make you have trouble with time to invite couples to the restaurant on Valentine's Day. With many couples eating dinner, you risk having trouble finding a place in a restaurant if you do not make a reservation in advance.
In addition, it is also possible that your food order will be long since the number of orders is soaring from the number of other visitors. Traffic conditions can be more dense that could make you much time on the road. Think also your time can run out just to find parking space.
Maybe you see there are many promos that the restaurant gives on Valentine's Day. But think again. Will the restaurant simply miss the opportunity to earn more on Valentine's Day?
It could be a promo given just a marketing strategy to attract visitors. Various tactics can be taken by restaurant management, ranging from lowering the quality of the ingredients, reducing the portion, imposing terms and conditions very much on the promo, or create a special package menu with prices soar.
Still want to go to the restaurant when Valentine? What about the idea of cooking together at home?