this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2024
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I'm guessing you've never worked in a restaurant? Like I said, in my experience it's common in the industry
Working in fast food is pretty different from full restaurants. I worked fast food first, never heard the term until I started waiting tables a few years later. In fast food, there's not as much of a chain of communication that requires pass phrases to get info across quickly. Just one kid with an order terminal and another kid assembling the order as it was entered.
All of that aside, if I hear someone use that term IRL, it does tend to sound pretentious because you're basically using jargon outside of its typical area of use and expecting everyone to know wtf you're talking about. It's almost like you want someone to ask, so you can be like "you don't kNoW???"
Probably people don't mean to come off that way, but that is the vibe I catch most of the time.
How is "86 the cherries" quicker than saying "no cherries"? Sounds like 4 times as long.
For context, I never worked in a restaurant and I just learned that jargon now.
In loud environments "lengthening" things makes sense, especially with sudden noises. "Spaghetti, eig-CLANG-x olives" is easier to understand than "Spaghetti, CLANG olives".