Analysis, commentLet's have a whiff of compromise(08 December 2005 00:00)As assiduous readers of Caterer will know, the magazine is, for perfectly logical reasons, in favour of a complete ban on smoking in bars and restaurants. In the spirit of open debate, however, I'd like to offer a few thoughts of my own. My problem with legislation on this issue is that one perfectly harmless source of pleasure will also be outlawed. Smoking an occasional cigar in a well-ventilated lounge after a good dinner is one of the great pleasures of the table, and it seems to me utterly unnecessary to ban it. It's not an especially dangerous pastime - less so, I would have thought, than making free with the single malt or overdoing the foie gras. No sommelier or waiter I've met has ever complained about the passive smoke from a cigar. Indeed, many pride themselves on their knowledge of cigars just as much as their knowledge of wine, and many sommelier competitions feature the skills of choosing, serving, cutting and lighting cigars. Article continues below
The manufacture of cigars is actually considerably more complicated than winemaking, involving 20 or more processes of curing, selecting, fermenting and rolling to produce incredibly complex flavours, akin to fine chocolate or old brandy. Whether you like cigars or not, they're undeniably a high-quality product, and their natural environment is the restaurant, where they can be enjoyed alongside many of life's other pleasures. Are cigars elitist? I don't think they need to be. The average 20-a-day cigarette smoker will spend 35 a week on the habit - the price of three or four good Havanas, which is more than most cigar smokers manage. If government taxes on cigars were less swingeing, it would be even less elitist. What will make it worse is if everybody needs to join the Garrick Club simply to enjoy a post-prandial cheroot. In the febrile atmosphere of the current debate, one of our great Epicurean pleasures may simply vanish in a last, wistful puff of smoke. Over to you Should cigars be banned from restaurants? Charlie McVeigh, proprietor, Bush Bar & Grill, London David Cavalier, food innovations director, Charlton House Matthew Brown, head chef at Wheelers of St James, London John Campbell, executive chef, Vineyard at Stockcross Source: Caterer & Hotelkeeper |
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