OK. I Googled Time Out, Lisbon. It appears to be a large area of chairs and tables in the center, with a number of food vendors around the periphery. A person enters and walks around, checking out the food stalls until they decide to buy a meal. The food is served on a plate, which the customer takes to a table.
I will grant you that the food vendors do not appear to be the run-of-the-mill chains, but the concept is pure food court. Maybe just with better food.
To me, its like saying that Bistro Ristoro and Nandoâs are NOT both restaurants.
Still confused, I turned to the all-knowing Google, and asked for Food Halls in Ottawa. It returned
- Queen Street Fare â considered the premier upscale food hall in downtown Ottawa;
- CF Rideau Centre Dining Hall â an elevated experience with high-quality, diverse, and often healthier options; and
- World Exchange Plaza Food Court â offering a selection of, largely independent, high-quality vendors.
Iâm obviously missing the significance of the Time Out Market. Letâs look at its vendors. OK, they are not A&W or Thai Express. There is a taco place (advertising âLocally Sourced Mexiâ), a pasta bar, a deep-fried fish and rice (instead of âchipsâ) place, a hotdog place (with octopus meat added to the dogs), the âFunky Chunkyâ cookie place, a Gelato place (which is not unusual for Europe), âCrush Doughnutsâ (which donât look any better than some of the donuts I had on âThe Underground Donut Tourâ in Vancouver), and a seafood place (again, not unusual for Europe).
Maybe you are classifying the two differently because the Food Hall might be slower serving the food. Although not necessarily. The pictures of some of the stalls at the Lisbon Time Out Market appear to have almost a buffer look about them, with dozens of, say, desserts, waiting to be handed out. Others will take the time to cook some pasta for 6 minutes (until Al Dente) before scooping sauce from the kettle onto it. Of course, by that measure, having a guy make omelettes at the breakfast buffet means that it is no longer a buffet.
For me, an upscale food court is still a food court. I was recently in a âfood Courtâ (Yes, it was called that) in Sydney, Australia. The lady made my Ciabatta sandwich for me by hand, and served it on a plate. There was also a Shawarma guy who made food to order, and his was a locally-owned, non-national, food outlet. Does that mean that I was actually in a Food Hall? Oh, it couldnât have been because there was a Hungry Jack (Burger King to the rest of the world) over in the corner.
Google did offer one gem. A Food Hall will often have a bar and be licenced for alcohol consumption. Queen Street Fare serves alcohol â so it must be a real Food Hall. Dang, apparently, the St Laurent Mall Food Court has âThe Thirst Responderâ.
Maybe you had to be there.