- Joined
- Nov 12, 2012
- Posts
- 29,287
- Qantas
- Platinum
- Virgin
- Platinum
- Star Alliance
- Gold
In a recent post some-one asked why the Qantas menu couldn't be more about the passenger and less about Neil Perry (or something like that, can't find it now). I thought of that immediately when I went through the J menu for QF30 HKG-MEL recently.
Now I don't claim to be a great consumer of 'fancy' menus, and if I go to an Italian or say, Chinese restaurant I expect to not understand all the terms. That can be part of the enjoyment of new experiences. But for goodness sake, is it too much to expect that when Qantas presents an in-flight menu, one can reasonably understand what's on offer? In the below, I've circled the terms I don't know the meaning of:

Most of them are adjectives so you can understand what the meal will essentially be, but not in every case. I don't want "steak and chips" but equally I don't need a menu where some-one is just showing their proficiency in wan*ery.
(ps I didn't order anything from the menu - I had filled up at The Pier (and if you look at the menu I posted there, I understood it completely!! It was about the diner, not the chef.)
Now I don't claim to be a great consumer of 'fancy' menus, and if I go to an Italian or say, Chinese restaurant I expect to not understand all the terms. That can be part of the enjoyment of new experiences. But for goodness sake, is it too much to expect that when Qantas presents an in-flight menu, one can reasonably understand what's on offer? In the below, I've circled the terms I don't know the meaning of:

Most of them are adjectives so you can understand what the meal will essentially be, but not in every case. I don't want "steak and chips" but equally I don't need a menu where some-one is just showing their proficiency in wan*ery.
(ps I didn't order anything from the menu - I had filled up at The Pier (and if you look at the menu I posted there, I understood it completely!! It was about the diner, not the chef.)