Would be interesting to see the opposite, the earliest hour too.
ankokudaishogun on
this chart needs the average length of said meals to give correct understanding
pythonicprime on
The civilisation gradient remains strong even after 2000 years
High-Tom-Titty on
Does it correlate with areas where siestas are more common due to mid-day heat? I think I remember seeing a similar one showing times for main meal, and northern Europe is much earlier than southern..
iamnogoodatthis on
You are having an absolute f*cking laugh if you think that Geneva is anywhere remotely comparable to London in this regard. The title is just completely divorced from the dataset it purports to summarise.
Gyneco-Phobia-GR on
I wonder why in such related horaria we’re exactly similar to Spain. What time we eat dinner, supper, restaurant bookings etc. All have the exact same time between Greece and Spain.
At some point it becomes uncanny is all I’m saying.
In Greece saying “the easiest” at 23:00 doesn’t mean it’s super-easy. It simply means, at 23:00 the first ones (usually tourists) who went early start leaving and you might find easier.
Ashamed-Character838 on
All in one timezone or in their own timezone? If the last this map makes no sense.
ibmthink on
I mean, you can find a Döner in Berlin at 02:00 AM in the night. So not sure how accurate this is.
Gastkram on
Spain uses the same time zone as Sweden, so looks like Stockholm and Madrid are about the same wrt midday.
verilaks on
Hamburg is bigger than Munich btw and subjectively the nicer city but sure, dont include it
aigars2 on
This map just confirms southerners eat later than northerners. No surprise there.
Menkhal on
Please Luxembourg explain, how can 20:45 be late night? Night hasn’t even started by then!
gorgeousredhead on
I’m sure that you literally can get a table at a resto in Warsaw at that time but it’s not too common in my experience – like another poster said, no issue going for dinner at 1700-1730 though
14 commenti
Data based on last seating (or last food order) times in 4,400 restaurants worldwide. Source link: [https://www.chefspencil.com/the-worlds-late-night-dining-capitals/](https://www.chefspencil.com/the-worlds-late-night-dining-capitals/)
Would be interesting to see the opposite, the earliest hour too.
this chart needs the average length of said meals to give correct understanding
The civilisation gradient remains strong even after 2000 years
Does it correlate with areas where siestas are more common due to mid-day heat? I think I remember seeing a similar one showing times for main meal, and northern Europe is much earlier than southern..
You are having an absolute f*cking laugh if you think that Geneva is anywhere remotely comparable to London in this regard. The title is just completely divorced from the dataset it purports to summarise.
I wonder why in such related horaria we’re exactly similar to Spain. What time we eat dinner, supper, restaurant bookings etc. All have the exact same time between Greece and Spain.
At some point it becomes uncanny is all I’m saying.
In Greece saying “the easiest” at 23:00 doesn’t mean it’s super-easy. It simply means, at 23:00 the first ones (usually tourists) who went early start leaving and you might find easier.
All in one timezone or in their own timezone? If the last this map makes no sense.
I mean, you can find a Döner in Berlin at 02:00 AM in the night. So not sure how accurate this is.
Spain uses the same time zone as Sweden, so looks like Stockholm and Madrid are about the same wrt midday.
Hamburg is bigger than Munich btw and subjectively the nicer city but sure, dont include it
This map just confirms southerners eat later than northerners. No surprise there.
Please Luxembourg explain, how can 20:45 be late night? Night hasn’t even started by then!
I’m sure that you literally can get a table at a resto in Warsaw at that time but it’s not too common in my experience – like another poster said, no issue going for dinner at 1700-1730 though