And weirdly, it's OK.
Mostly OK.
The restaurant is Bunyadi,
a newly opened eatery in a quiet corner of central London that
encourages customers to disrobe while enjoying a "natural" dining
experience.




Bunyadi has made headlines in recent
weeks by attracting 46,000 people to its waiting list for a three-month
pop-up run over the summer.
I
was there for the press launch, alongside 25 or so other journalists
dispatched to report from the front line of naked dining.
So what's it like?
From outside, the restaurant isn't much to look at -- which is probably the idea.
It's
discreetly located in a converted street-corner pub with blacked-out
windows a few quiet streets away from London's highest skyscraper, The
Shard.
The front door leads into a
small bar area, which looks pretty standard until folks start emerging
from the changing rooms wearing hotel-style bathrobes.
When
tables are ready and guests have had the requisite number of freshly
mixed looseners, they're then guided into the main dining area.
At first it's disorientating.
It's
impossible not to surreptitiously double-take at the topless waitress
leading the way through the candlelit maze of bamboo screens that almost
shield diners from heavy scrutiny.
Time to strip
Then,
once the eyes grow accustomed to the bare flesh of the young male and
female waitstaff, things get (relatively) more normal.
Until it's time to strip off.
Before
that happened, we got to chat to some of the staff about how they came
to be working in a naked restaurant, and what it's like to work there.
"I wanted to be around people who shared
the same thoughts as me," says Eloise Knight, a 20-year-old student who
says she approached the restaurant for work after reading stories about
it.
Knight and her fellow
employees wear only skimpy briefs adorned with a few strands of fake
vine leaves as they deliver food and drink to the tables.
She
says that she feels safer at Bunyadi than at other restaurants since
any customer acting inappropriately will be instantly ejected.
The
restaurant has a strict no cameras or cellphones policy, partly to
protect the privacy of those disrobing within, but also in line with its
back-to-basics natural feel.
"It's about being comfortable with nudity," she adds. "And it's nice to help people feel that way. It's not a sexual thing."
Apparently it works.
Bunyadi's
designer and manager, Ignacio Jimenez Blanco, says about 80% of diners
have gotten naked during trial runs (it's totally optional).
Naked bar
As
the employees feel more comfortable, so do the customers, he adds.
There are plans to introduce a naked bar area for those who feel
comfortable mingling in their birthday suits.
"I
think people want to free themselves," he says. "I see it as a therapy,
it's very liberating. People want it and we're just providing a
location and a service."
Blanco has
created a restaurant interior that more closely resembles a spa than a
restaurant. It's a dimly lit space scented by aromatic candles and
soundtracked by soft music.
So it seems appropriate that we're all wearing gowns, for now.
I'm seated opposite another journalist, a
man who I've never met before but who is in the same situation as me --
nervously contemplating whether to disrobe.
The
food -- mostly raw, natural and seasonal in keeping with the
restaurant's naked theme -- is delivered in earthenware bowls and eaten
using edible cutlery.
It's
delicious. There's an English garden soup paired with pickled apple and
salted cucumber for starters followed by salmon and seaweed salad.
The five-course menu costs about $100 without drinks but including the gown and slippers.
When
the steak tartare with goji berry and cilantro arrives, my fellow diner
and I gulp down the accompanying Argentinian Malbec and agree to get
naked.
And it does turn out to be curiously liberating.
Mostly it's a relief. It's very warm inside Bunyadi and a thick toweling robe starts to become uncomfortable after a while.
The darkness of the venue, the bamboo partitions and the strategically designed wooden furniture help maintain some dignity.
Social experiment'
But what should be an awkward moment, getting unclothed with a complete stranger, proves to be anything but.
Unable
to resort to looking at our phones, we chat unreservedly about work,
families and whether the female magazine journalists at the next table
have also stripped down.
Seb Lyall, the entrepreneur behind the Bunyadi, describes it as a "social experiment," and that's kind of what it feels like.
It's certainly a new way to experience some truly excellent food.
Lyall
says he hopes it'll help tackle body objectification and perhaps
inspire other venues to at least strip away such modern distractions as
cell phones.
With that in mind,
when the naked waitress arrives we concentrate very intently on making
eye contact and talking about the food.
It's all rather exciting for a while.
This
is a totally new experience for me. I'm not someone who would ever
contemplate stripping off in public -- I am, after all, English.
I suddenly feel like I've been granted entry into a secret, exhilarating new world.
Then my dining companion announces he has to leave early.
Depressingly, I'm now just a naked dude eating dessert, by candlelight, on my own.
Time to get dressed.
1 Comments
This offers a fun way to taste even more varieties. It is never too late to try a Chinese restaurant. And it is never too soon to go back again. phoenix pizza restaurant
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