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Home / World

Covid 19 coronavirus: Virus is pummelling Europe's eateries — and winter is coming

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25 Oct, 2020 11:34 PM6 mins to read

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The coronavirus pandemic is gathering strength again in Europe, with winter approaching. Photo / AP

The coronavirus pandemic is gathering strength again in Europe, with winter approaching. Photo / AP

As the Friday night dinner service began earlier this month at the De Viering restaurant outside Brussels, it seemed the owners' decision to move the operation into the spacious village church to comply with coronavirus rules was paying off. The reservation book was full and the kitchen was bustling.

And then Belgium's prime minister ordered cafes, bars and restaurants to close for at least a month in the face of surging infections.

Hospitality workers protest in Parliament Square in London. Photo / AP
Hospitality workers protest in Parliament Square in London. Photo / AP

"It's another shock, of course, because — yes, all the investments are made," said chef Heidi Vanhasselt. She and her sommelier husband Christophe Claes had installed a kitchen and new toilets in the Saint Bernardus church in Heikruis, as well as committing to 10 months' rent and pouring energy into creative solutions.

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Vanhasselt's frustration is Europe's as a resurgence of the virus is dealing a second blow to the continent's restaurants, which already suffered under lockdowns in the spring. From Northern Ireland and Italy to the Netherlands and France, governments have shuttered eateries or severely curtailed how they operate.

More than just jobs and revenue are at stake — restaurants lie at the heart of European life. Their closures are threatening the social fabric by shutting the places where neighbours mix, extended families gather and the seeds of new families are sown.

Table settings are empty in the middle of the restaurant De Viering in Heikrus. Photo / AP
Table settings are empty in the middle of the restaurant De Viering in Heikrus. Photo / AP

A restaurant remains "a place where very special moments are celebrated," said Griet Grassin of the Italian restaurant Tartufo on the outskirts of Brussels. "It's not just the food, but it's the wellbeing."

The governments of Italy and Spain announced new measures Sunday that are aimed at curbing spiraling infections but also detrimental to dining out.

Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte announced that restaurants and bars will be required to shut at 6pm daily for at least a month. Most restaurants in Italy usually don't even start to serve dinner before 8pm. Milan has already seen protests over a local curfew that took effect Thursday.

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In Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez declared a national curfew from 11pm-6am and said he would ask lawmakers to keep in place until May. The curfew starting Sunday night means Spaniards will have to watch the clock if they want to indulge their love for a late, leisurely meal with friends. The measure could end chances for the recovery of the country's large nightlight industry.

The reduced hours that businesses can stay open and people are allowed to be out is particularly painful since they might stretch into the Christmas holiday season, nixing everything from pre-holiday office drinks to a special New Year's meal.

Restaurant owners clang spoons and casseroles at a demonstration against restaurant and bar closures in Marseille, southern France.
Restaurant owners clang spoons and casseroles at a demonstration against restaurant and bar closures in Marseille, southern France.

When it comes to purely calories and vitamins, "of course we can live without restaurants", said food historian professor Peter Scholliers.

But, he asked: "We can live without being social? No, we can't."

Successful restaurants have always had to adapt quickly — but never has there been a challenge like this.

The European Union said the hotel and restaurant industry suffered a jaw-dropping 79.3 per cent decline in production between February and April. Try bouncing back from that.

Summer, with its drop in Covid-19 cases and a hesitant return to travel, brought some respite, especially in coastal resorts.

But then came fall. Any giddiness that the fallout from the pandemic could somehow be contained faced the sobering reality of relentlessly rising coronavirus cases and hospitalisations. Overall, Covid-19 has killed over 250,000 people across Europe, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. Leaders are now warning that things will get worse before they get better.

Restaurant owner Paolo Polli stages a protest in Milan, Italy. Photo / AP
Restaurant owner Paolo Polli stages a protest in Milan, Italy. Photo / AP

But many restaurant owners have bristled at the new restrictions and some are openly challenging them.

In London last week, the preeminent chef Yotam Ottolenghi banged pots on the street to protest restrictions that include earlier closing times.

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"It's really hard, we've got a great industry with lots of heart," Ottolenghi said. "And there's so many people who depend on it."

If the mood of any nation is set by its stomach, surely France's is. And it is turning as sour as a rhubarb tartlet. The streets of Paris, the culinary capital of Lyon and several other French cities were eerily empty at night during the first week of a 9pm curfew scheduled to last for at least a month.

Xavier Denamur, who owns five Parisian cafes and bistros that employ around 70 workers, said the French government is unfairly punishing the industry.

"It's a catastrophic measure," he said, arguing any curfew should be pushed to at least 11pm to allow for a proper dinner service.

Still, highlighting how the world is feeling its way in the near darkness, restaurant and food delivery business owner Matteo Lorenzon argued the opposite. "Having a curfew starting at 11pm, it's too late."

Customers seated in small glasshouses enjoy lunch at the Mediamatic restaurant in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Customers seated in small glasshouses enjoy lunch at the Mediamatic restaurant in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Already in September, more than 400,000 employees of restaurants and cafes in Italy, a nation of 60 million, were unemployed, according to an estimate by Fipe, the restaurant lobby group. Its prediction for the coming months was even more dire: "Hundreds of thousands of jobs risk being erased definitively."

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In the Netherlands, which has one of the highest virus infection rates in Europe, more than 60 Dutch bars and restaurants sought to overturn a monthlong closure order but failed. Lawyer Simon van Zijll, representing the bars and restaurants, warned that the Dutch hospitality industry faces "a tidal wave of bankruptcies".

The first lockdown in the spring caught the owners of Tartufo, the restaurant on the outskirts of Brussels, off guard.

This time, Grassin and her husband chef Kayes Ghourabi, were ready: They will ramp up their takeaway service and even offer their own gin with Mediterranean spices. Still, income will drop by about 70 per cent to 80 per cent.

"We lose, but it helps the costs. The electricity, the insurance that keep on going, even in a lockdown," she said.

Across Europe, the stories are the same — of chefs thinking creatively, making something of a bad situation, showing resilience to save something they often built from scratch.

"I have a son, and I always say to my husband, 'the restaurant was our first child.' And you want to fight for it," Grassin said.

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Takeout food is also a lifeline for Paolo Polli, who owned five bars and restaurants in Milan before closing four recently. His staff was cut from 60 to six. He said he made more money during the lockdown with his pizza-delivery service than when he reopened for regular service.

A waiter checks the final revenue as he closes a bar terrace in Paris. Photo / AP
A waiter checks the final revenue as he closes a bar terrace in Paris. Photo / AP

Down south, a balmy fall offered some reprieve, allowing restaurants to serve on outside terraces.

Despite this, in Portugal, the AHRESP restaurant association said restaurants lost more than half of their revenue. Now the chilly weather, stronger winds and rain are forcing everyone back indoors, where the virus spreads most easily.

"It will be impossible,″ said Artur Veloso, who manages the Risca restaurant in Carcavelos. "Winter will bring more ruin."

People enjoy drinks in a cafe terrace in Paris.
People enjoy drinks in a cafe terrace in Paris.

-Associated Press

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