Anonymous wrote:Wow. I won't be going back there, though my daughter is 9 now. I don't appreciate age discrimination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids younger than 8 really shouldn't be at a fine dining place for dinner anyway. They are tired, grumpy, etc.
Also, totally random, but I get so annoyed when I see women with babies trying to eat at places like that. The husband ends up sitting there and eating while she is somewhere in the corner, holding the baby in her arms, swaying back and forth. How is that fun for anyone other than the husband?
Have you had a baby before? You could be describing some of the meals out that we had when I was on maternity leave. DH and I would take turns holding the baby if she needed to be held, but you might not see that part. In any case, those few months with a pre-crawling infant are pretty much your last where you can take your kid out to a nice restaurant and actually enjoy your meal, so maybe cut these people some slack. Unless the baby is crying the whole time or something is going on where you think "wow this is not the right venue for this" leave them alone.
why do you need to go to a nice restaurant with your newborn?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids younger than 8 really shouldn't be at a fine dining place for dinner anyway. They are tired, grumpy, etc.
Also, totally random, but I get so annoyed when I see women with babies trying to eat at places like that. The husband ends up sitting there and eating while she is somewhere in the corner, holding the baby in her arms, swaying back and forth. How is that fun for anyone other than the husband?
Have you had a baby before? You could be describing some of the meals out that we had when I was on maternity leave. DH and I would take turns holding the baby if she needed to be held, but you might not see that part. In any case, those few months with a pre-crawling infant are pretty much your last where you can take your kid out to a nice restaurant and actually enjoy your meal, so maybe cut these people some slack. Unless the baby is crying the whole time or something is going on where you think "wow this is not the right venue for this" leave them alone.
Anonymous wrote:I just went to make a reservation for my birthday in a couple weeks and Rasika now isn't allowing kids under 8? Is this new? WTF?
https://www.rasikarestaurant.com/#modern-indian-cuisine
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s awesome. I would prefer it no kids under 12. Rasika is not a place for kids. No one wanted to pay for an evening out for lots of kids to be there. Go to Bucca di Beppo where you belong.
+1. Or Silver Diner, very family friendly and kids eat free at certain times.
Anonymous wrote:Great!
Not every restaurant is for small kids. Get a sitter.
-- mom of two, who doesn't want to deal with other people's bratty kids on her night out
Anonymous wrote:I am fine with this. I have a 5 yr old who is actually pretty good in restaurants, but I still wouldn't take her to a fancier restaurant and I actually like when restaurants are very up front about the kind of place they are. A lot of restaurants will go out of their way to advertise that they are family-friendly or want to have kids there, and then you show up and they don't have a kids menu and people are annoyed about your kid.
That said, I'd love if there were more truly family-friendly restaurants in DC -- we often eat in the suburbs simply because it's easier to find a place where we know kids are truly welcome.
When I fantasize about opening my own restaurant, I imagine we'd do something called "family hour" a few nights a week, where we do an early service (like 5-7) that is geared specifically for families with young kids, with specials for the kids or family friendly shareables and the whole point would be to get lots of families in there for 90 minutes or so, and kids could learn how to behave in a restaurant without the stress of needing to get it exactly right every time because they are kids and they need more chances than that. Also just an opportunity for families to celebrate a birthday or graduation or something at a nicer restaurant but in a family friendly way. I feel like it could be good for the restaurant and great for families -- real community building and a way to create relationships with customers that could last a really long time because I would be so loyal to a restaurant that went out of it's way to become a part of my family's mealtime in that way.
Anonymous wrote:That’s awesome. I would prefer it no kids under 12. Rasika is not a place for kids. No one wanted to pay for an evening out for lots of kids to be there. Go to Bucca di Beppo where you belong.