View Poll Results: What time do you usually eat dinner (supper)?
4-5pm



1
4.00%
5-6pm



2
8.00%
6-7pm



10
40.00%
7-8pm



6
24.00%
8-9pm



3
12.00%
9-10pm



1
4.00%
Other



2
8.00%
Voters: 25. You may not vote on this poll
What time do you eat dinner (supper)?
#16


Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 4,523
Some years ago I worked for an organisation where people from across the planet came together for a few days. It produced tremendous arguments between the USA contingent and everyone else as the Americans wanted to eat so early
When we stopped work at 17.30 the Americans wanted to go back to the hotel to dine. Everyone else wanted to waste an hour on the internet, go swimming go shopping or just do nothing.
At least the South Americans followed the Castilian practice of an early dinner at 22.00, suits me!
When we stopped work at 17.30 the Americans wanted to go back to the hotel to dine. Everyone else wanted to waste an hour on the internet, go swimming go shopping or just do nothing.
At least the South Americans followed the Castilian practice of an early dinner at 22.00, suits me!
#17




Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: ORD
Programs: UA Silver, Marriott Platinum/LT Platinum, Hilton Gold
Posts: 5,639
Some years ago I worked for an organisation where people from across the planet came together for a few days. It produced tremendous arguments between the USA contingent and everyone else as the Americans wanted to eat so early
When we stopped work at 17.30 the Americans wanted to go back to the hotel to dine. Everyone else wanted to waste an hour on the internet, go swimming go shopping or just do nothing.
At least the South Americans followed the Castilian practice of an early dinner at 22.00, suits me!
When we stopped work at 17.30 the Americans wanted to go back to the hotel to dine. Everyone else wanted to waste an hour on the internet, go swimming go shopping or just do nothing.
At least the South Americans followed the Castilian practice of an early dinner at 22.00, suits me!
I also find it interesting how comparisons are always "the Americans" vs. "everyone else". In a lot of cases these comparisons are actually "Some or most of Europe (but not all)" and everyone else.
I'm not saying this is an expert article, but it's at least interesting:
https://www.thedailymeal.com/1310452...-around-world/
According to this, dinner in the US is typically much later than several European countries.
All that said, I do believe in adapting to the customs of the country you're visiting, even for work. When in Spain, I would typically eat dinner around 9 pm/21:00.
#18
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: USA
Programs: MB Ambassador, WOH Globalist, HH Diamond (Aspire), IHG Plat (CC), UA (*G) Gold, AA Plat (OWS)
Posts: 10,097
Im American, and I have to eat dinner by 5 or 5:30 at the latest. Thats just how I am. However, I wouldnt extrapolate that to make a conclusion about all Americans. In fact, most of my American friends find my dinner timing quite frustrating. If I have an event dinner, I might even need to pre-eat ahead of time to avoid getting hangry. I often eat dinner before Mother even eats what she calls her lunch between 4 to 7 PM :-) (note that she doesnt eat a meal after that, so its just semantics).
#19




Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: ORD
Programs: UA Silver, Marriott Platinum/LT Platinum, Hilton Gold
Posts: 5,639
Interestingly, for many years I would have been horrified by a pre-7 pm dinner time. It was common when I was commuting to an office that I wouldn't get home until after 7 pm and my body adjusted. Now I've settled into a "between 6 and 7 is fine" schedule.
#20




Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Northern California
Programs: UA Premier Gold, 1.5 Million Mile Flyer
Posts: 3,696

#21


Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Chicago, IL., U.S.A.
Programs: Global Entry WN, UA, AS, DL, NH; IHG, Wyndham, Hilton, Best Value Inn, Marriott, Starwood, Ramada
Posts: 645
It depends. When I had lunch figures in. If I'm at a bar | restaurant with a happy hour [e.g.: 16:00-18:00] when appetizers are discounted, I will stuff myself with the appetizers. This includes venues like Beer Club Popeye in Ryogoku, Tokyo.
#22




Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: On an A380
Programs: OZ, QF
Posts: 264
I eat quite late on work days (7-10pm start), but much earlier (6-8pm start) when I'm on vacation and not finishing work so late. I also adjust a little depending on the local customs of the country I'm in.
#23




Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: ORD
Programs: UA Silver, Marriott Platinum/LT Platinum, Hilton Gold
Posts: 5,639
With this thread in mind, I paid attention to when we ate dinner while on vacation over the last 5 nights: 7:30 pm, 6:30 pm, 8:30 pm, ~8 pm (long wait for service so I can't be exact), 7:30 pm. I will say the 6:30 and 8:30 were both determined by when a reservation was available. But safe to say I eat a little later when on vacation.
#25
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: London & Sonoma CA
Programs: UA Plat, MM *G for life, AY Plat, BA Silver
Posts: 10,539
As I get older, I can cope with eating earlier than I used to. I always used to eat after the theatre, for example, so around 9:30-10pm, but I can't cope with that anymore. Instead I'll eat pre-theatre at 6pm. The advantage is that I'm not particularly hungry then so I don't order nearly as much: the key then is not to have a snack on getting home at 10:30!



