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Fine dining is not welcome here. Long live the depressing food court

Desperately, when I was in high school, I scanned the hall for the fascinating Lebanese man, Ronald, Ronald, but there was no place to see.

Instead, the options are slippery, bright and very fancy. A Wagyu feature in the middle of the week, a luxury Vietnam restaurant with a set menu and my personal favorite, a meat restaurant that offers a romantic wine and pasta bar by the Fabbrica team.

Did everyone in the shopping center shopping date long longing for pumpkin flowers and Sicilian red while walking themselves as the best and less passing?

Chadstone Market is a pasta bar in Pavilion. Fancy? Certainly.

And still, in surprise, as it seems, this is not an isolated event. Earlier this year, the Chadstone Shopping Center, a very famous center, underwent a multimillion -dollar renovation of its own Biddow Plot (Chaddy). The new Food Court has some of the most respected names in the world of kitchen, including the famous Italian café Brunetti, Restaurant David Mackintosh (Lee Ho Fook and Movida fame) and Vic’s meat – Sydney Butcher’s first outputs to the Victorian market.

Fanclation of food courts is properly in the belief that something is more magnificent, that it feels and tastes, is so good, so good, but very modern (but very misled). This desire for each eating experience exaggerated from oyster to the taste menus at the airports in football, this desire has robbed us from daily delicacies.

The food court had to be a classless utopia where everyone and everyone could take a break from the brutal quest for acting better than us.

Don’t you believe me? George Lucas, when let’s not forget Star Wars Fame (and $ 8 billion net value) was photographed in 2016 by eating a 6 -dollar hokkien plate plate at an Adelaide dining court.

Lucas, who wears a wrinkled shirt and looked completely exhausted, was celebrated online online and also inspired some great hashtags, including #maytheForkbewithyou.

Even though I accept that trying to stop progress is often empty and that the humble Food Court has stayed in the past, I will not give up the hope of returning to the victory days. At a time when the food courts are dim and a little depressing, but you can still get a donut that looks like a donut. Of course, it may seem like a stretch, but to borrow a line from Lucas’ Star Wars The Evren said, “Rebellions have been built on hope”.

Find more than the author’s work Here. Send E -POSTA at thomas.mitchell@smh.com.au. Instagram @thomasalexanderMitchell And on Twitter @_thmitchell.

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