Most examples of an establishment having a kitchen, but no provision for 
customers to eat on the premises, would fall under the fast-food category, but 
not all.  For example, there is a small Chinese restaurant in the central 
business district of Nashville, known for preparing just one or two dishes each 
day, usually something unfamiliar to Westerners.  The clientele are office 
workers, who have to take the food back to their offices because the restaurant 
is a single small room without any customer seating or tables.

-------Original Email-------
Subject :Re: [Tagging] craft= Proposal
From  :mailto:[email protected]
Date  :Wed Aug 25 02:45:26 America/Chicago 2010


Am 25.08.2010 03:53, schrieb M∡rtin Koppenhoefer:
> 2010/8/25 John F. Eldredge<[email protected]>:
>> "Food delivery" and "meals on wheels" both imply that the food is brought to 
>> the customers.  I am talking about an establishment in a fixed location, 
>> having a kitchen but little or no provision for customers to eat on the 
>> premises.  The customers are expected to take the food with them and consume 
>> it elsewhere.  A fast-food establishment with a drive-in window, but no 
>> dining space, would be one example; another would be what is sometimes 
>> termed a "cook-shop", a small restaurant operating out of a storefront 
>> location, dealing with walk-up customers, but without space for a table for 
>> customers to use.
>
> the will IMHO generally not be restaurants but fast_food.

maybe with extra takeaway=yes and drivein=yes :)

Peter

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