Haneda Airport in Japan has a vending machine, and a shop, selling frozen in-flight meals that passengers from Japan get on flights. That's bizarre.
The airline food by Cosmo Company, which provides in-flight meals to big airline companies like Qatar Airways, Cathay Pacific, Singapore Airlines, and Air New Zealand, can be purchased by fans of the meals, who want more, before or after, a flight.
Not overly surprising to me. In 2019 I was on a flight from Phoenix, Arizona to Singapore. One leg of the trip was on ANA (All Nippon Air). They had, bar none, the best airline food I have ever had. The service, quality, and selection was amazing. I would happily eat it on a daily basis!
oh I can assure you in 1995 you could. I was in the Navy, we stopped into two ports, and while in one, took a trip to Tokyo, and I don't remember how. Train or bus, but not the high speed train, too expensive for an E4. While in Tokyo, I had one goal, find that damn Hard Rock Cafe, and get a souvenir shirt. This was way back when a Hard Rock Cafe shirt was proof you, or someone you knew, had been to an exotic far off country (when you wore it back home in the states) That was the smallest damn Hard Rock I've ever been to
I don't think I've ever had an airline meal that was good enough that I'd want to eat it back home.
ReplyDeleteNot overly surprising to me.
ReplyDeleteIn 2019 I was on a flight from Phoenix, Arizona to Singapore.
One leg of the trip was on ANA (All Nippon Air).
They had, bar none, the best airline food I have ever had.
The service, quality, and selection was amazing.
I would happily eat it on a daily basis!
Apparently you can buy anything from a vending machine in Japan.
ReplyDeleteoh I can assure you in 1995 you could. I was in the Navy, we stopped into two ports, and while in one, took a trip to Tokyo, and I don't remember how. Train or bus, but not the high speed train, too expensive for an E4. While in Tokyo, I had one goal, find that damn Hard Rock Cafe, and get a souvenir shirt. This was way back when a Hard Rock Cafe shirt was proof you, or someone you knew, had been to an exotic far off country (when you wore it back home in the states)
DeleteThat was the smallest damn Hard Rock I've ever been to