this post was submitted on 16 Apr 2025
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Either that, or oat milk isn't on the menu and he didn't have any.
I'm also referring to this thread.
Then that is a failure on the business. It is a very common request.
It's only a failure if they wanted to do that kind of business. If I open an Italian restaurant and someone orders Thai, did I fail?
"Do you have eggs? Yes. Do you have noodles? Yes. Do you have curry paste? Yes. Do you...."
~ worst customer you will ever meet
There is a difference between a restaurant of a specific cusine and plainly deniying acommodating for common dietary preferences. Be it for health or ethical reasons. I guess in most cuisines worldwide there are either plenty of suitable dishes already available or they should be at least easy to accomodate. But sometimes it seems it's even too much of an ask to leave out some simple ingredients.
Sure. There is a scale where my example was an extreme for illustration. Your point a very reasonable one as well. If I was running a a cafe I would offer it but I am Canadian. If I were french and you asked for a baguette olive loaf you would find yourself in a guillotine. Context matters and traditions matter more than commerce in many cultures.
"Deny accommodating for common dietary preference", how? Have your coffee black, there, completely lactose-free. If you ask for a latte, don't be surprised when you get milk. If you don't want milk, don't order a latte. Do you know what "latte" translates to?
It's not common at all.
"At all"?
Do you really think that Sweden, Germany and UK is all the world there is? I've got a surprise for you.
I get the sneaking suspicion you enjoy being contrarian for contradictions sake.
Yes. About 2/3rd of the worldwide population is lactose-intolerant. Hence, it is really common to ask for lactose-free products.
It's not extremely rare. Many native south europeans are lactose intolerant, too (I don't remember the exact numbers but IIRC it was the majority in places like southern Italy) and there's lots of people from other continents in Europe nowadays.
10% is not "extremely rare", though.
Most of the lactose-intolerant population isn't asking for lattes for the simple reason that their cuisine doesn't use dairy at all.
Also FWIW Italy is quite lactose-intolerant. It's why you hear things like "no cappuccino after noon" and stuff, many Italians don't vibe well with more than one of those things.
That's a myth really. Lactose intolerant don't drink lattes in the first place. But they might not be that intolerant in the first place