The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 8 months ago

Stockpiling for lunch from hotel breakfast buffets: Can I give thieves a serve?

Danny Katz

One of the great joys of travelling is starting the day with an excellent breakfast buffet. However, my happiness is regularly eroded by the sight of other guests taking extra food to also service their lunch needs. Can I call them out for their despicable theft or do I just quietly accept that people are awful?
S.F., New Lambton, NSW

Photo: Illustration by Simon Letch

You’re going to hate me, but I’m one of those awful, despicable, breakfast-buffet thieves. I’ve walked away from hotel breakfast buffets with muffins, Danish pastries, croissants, doughnuts and yoghurt tubs stuffed in my pockets and bag – and then later, for lunch, I’ve enjoyed a squashed, greasy, indeterminate pastry-wad, washed down with a tub of body-heated yoghurt flavoured with berries and listeria. For free! But as much as you may hate me, am I technically a thief? The dictionary defines “theft” as “appropriating property belonging to another without their permission or consent, with the intent to deprive the rightful owner of it”. (I stole that definition without permission or consent, with the intent to deprive the dictionary of it.)

But I paid for the hotel buffet like every other guest, so am I any worse than your standard buffet greed-monger? Those hotel guests who go back for seconds, thirds, fourths, building an inverted food pyramid on their plates, with mounds of bacon perched on a stack of pancakes, balanced on clumps of omelettes, teetering on a single slice of honeydew melon?

Advertisement

Look, I know food-safety regulations may be applicable here, but don’t call us out on our awful, despicable buffet-thievery. We’re eating breakfast just like you, but we’ve chosen the all-day option. We’re spacing it out through the day, enjoying it in different locations, and adding our own unique flavours and textures: a generous sprinkling of gritty pocket lint and a chewy layer of fused-on napkin.

guru@goodweekend.com.au

To read more from Good Weekend magazine, visit our page at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and Brisbane Times.

Continue this edition

The July 26 Edition
Up next
From left: Lady Sonia McMahon, Eileen “Red” Bond, Susan Renouf made up Flemington’s “Holy Trinity”.

The real housewives of Australia: How ‘Red’ Bond led the way

Eileen Bond’s death marks the end of Australia’s socially connected, cashed-up and indomitable women.

This pink goo is mixed with butter, shallots and brandy to make a parfait, and combined with fava bean protein and coconut oil to make lobes that resemble foie gras.

Taste test: We try Australia’s new lab-grown foie gras alternative

Last month, the country’s food regulator deemed a particular form of lab-grown meat – cell-cultured quail – as safe.

Previously
  • Dicey Topics

‘I’m super-cute’: Comedian Urzila Carlson’s struggle to stay single

The South African-New Zealander on growing up in the apartheid era, coming out – and why she never fights with her ex.

See all stories
Danny KatzDanny Katz is a columnist for The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald. He writes the Modern Guru column in the Good Weekend magazine. He is also the author of the books Spit the Dummy, Dork Geek Jew and the Little Lunch series for kids.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement