borborigmy wrote:I also still have a slight personal guilt about going to a restaurant who's owner is so religious that it closes on Sunday - but that is my own issue.
Not aiming this at you in any way... but this is the third or fourth time that Ive seen
something similar to the above in this thread (there was something else upthread
about being "gacked out" about the religion at Chick-fil-A too IIRC).
Ive never eaten at Chick-fil-A I dont think.. but whats so different about them?
One of my favourite places anywhere (and new GNR-winner) Uncle John's
BBQ falls into the same category - they have never been open on Sunday's
either (and the last time I was there, they had fliers up for their church). In
fact, almost the entire south-side falls into this category - when Iam often on
the southside, in the summers, I try to arrange to be there on Saturdays,
because most of my favourite places are closed on Sunday... Uncle John's,
Barbara Ann's, Abundance Bakery, Old Fashioned Donuts (another GNR) etc,
are *all* closed on Sunday. (I usually end up eating at the only choice left,
Uncle Joe's Jamaican Jerk on Cottage Grove on 82nd street).
Or about how an LTH-beloved place like Khan's? GWiv has now missed lunch
there 4 times, apparently [

] ... those Friday-afternoon-closures are *all*
for religious reasons, Khan's is never open for lunch on Friday because Friday
afternoon is "prayer-time". Heck, Iam not even sure how much food Khan
serves during Ramadan (for an entire month!) .. a friend went for a late-lunch
on a normal day a few weeks ago, and they told him theyd have food only
after "fast opening" that day. (I *know* the LTH-beloved restaurant Hyderabad
House is *always* closed for the entire day, every single day for one entire
month of every year, serving food only after sundown due to Ramadan).
In all the LTH-discussions about these places (and there have been
several), I dont think Ive ever seen a single "gacked out" reference about
not wanting to eat there because of the owner's religious sensibilities.
As for religion intersecting with food in a pretty obvious way.. the old location
of Khan's (much missed on this board) used to play religious sermons in Urdu
and Arabic constantly on TV.. the new Khan's has more "mainstream" Pakistani
television accompanying your food, but even that can sometimes be "interesting"
in this sense (the last time I was there late one evening, my chicken-boti was
accompanied by a TV-discourse from a "religious scholar" about how
neccesary it was to abstain from food and water all day during Ramadan
without making the excuses so often made in the "modern world".. the promised
punishment for those who did not, if I remember correctly, was "being hung by
hooks driven thru their cheeks in hell" or some such

) Why is it that this
sort of overt religious-intersection with food is merely considered
"wonderful atmosphere" at a place like Khan's, but AmyGrant music grates
enough by its religiosity to be gackworthy?
The chicken boti happened to be really "on" that day at Khan's, when the bearded
mullah was chattering on about hellish punishments for all sinners. If Chick-fil-A's
chicken sandwich is of a similar quality, I personally will be perfectly happy to listen
to Amy Grant while consuming it
c8w