Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't. I'm a foodie and am raising my kids to be foodies also. They're not chicken nugget type of kids.
I do not want my kids to me “foodies”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Family friendly to me just means no one will be annoyed about your kids' presence. I don't want any funny looks. My kids are well-behaved, don't watch tablets but they are mac-and-cheese or plain hamburger kids (sadly) so I need something for them to eat.
We took them to a mom and pop bar and grill within walking distance of our house at 4:30 PM and some jerk confronted us about bringing our kids to a bar where adults are trying to have a good time. The sun was still up!
You had a baby... in a bar?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Family friendly to me just means no one will be annoyed about your kids' presence. I don't want any funny looks. My kids are well-behaved, don't watch tablets but they are mac-and-cheese or plain hamburger kids (sadly) so I need something for them to eat.
We took them to a mom and pop bar and grill within walking distance of our house at 4:30 PM and some jerk confronted us about bringing our kids to a bar where adults are trying to have a good time. The sun was still up!
You had a baby... in a bar?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Family friendly to me just means no one will be annoyed about your kids' presence. I don't want any funny looks. My kids are well-behaved, don't watch tablets but they are mac-and-cheese or plain hamburger kids (sadly) so I need something for them to eat.
We took them to a mom and pop bar and grill within walking distance of our house at 4:30 PM and some jerk confronted us about bringing our kids to a bar where adults are trying to have a good time. The sun was still up!
You had a baby... in a bar?
Anonymous wrote:Family friendly to me just means no one will be annoyed about your kids' presence. I don't want any funny looks. My kids are well-behaved, don't watch tablets but they are mac-and-cheese or plain hamburger kids (sadly) so I need something for them to eat.
We took them to a mom and pop bar and grill within walking distance of our house at 4:30 PM and some jerk confronted us about bringing our kids to a bar where adults are trying to have a good time. The sun was still up!
Anonymous wrote:I’m with you, OP. I drove my newborn straight from the delivery room to Ruth’s Chris.
Anonymous wrote:OP just wants to humble brag. Nothing to see here.
Anonymous wrote:I don't need all restaurants to be family friendly, but when dining out with kids ages 2 to 6 or 7, there are certain things that make the experience more enjoyable for everyone (including waitstaff and other patrons). This includes:
- reasonably quick service, including bringing appetizers promptly or even bringing out kids meals early if possible, but also having a way for people to pay and leave swiftly after they finish eating (like QR payment, running cards at the table, or simply ensuring staff aren't so overbooked with tables that they can't pick up the check quickly)
- standard kid accommodations, like booster seats and high chairs, a menu that has items the average kid can and will eat (some kids are more adventurous, others are not, even an adventurous 3 yr old isn't eating a bone in ribeye on their own), bathrooms that will accommodate a family (stalls big enough for a parent to join their kid if necessary, changing table, etc.).
- staff are not openly hostile towards families, this is a culture thing, some restaurants would prefer you not bring kids, which is fine, but a "family friendly" restaurant will hire and train staff to be welcoming to kids and families
Some restaurants do this stuff, others don't. I'm not looking for chicken nuggets and a ball pit, but there are things that make taking kids out to eat a lot easier and more pleasant. I've been to restaurants where we had a lovely meal but my kids are getting antsy because we've passed the hour mark and the waiter is MIA and we are ready to go but need to pay, or where the bathroom is lovely but I had to change a diaper on the floor because there was nowhere else to do it.
Anonymous wrote:I’m with you, OP. I drove my newborn straight from the delivery room to Ruth’s Chris.