Will America still go out to eat? One restaurateur鈥檚 moment of truth.
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| Boston
The patio tables are starting to fill up with early bird revelers as Jonathan Mendez strolls up to the greeter鈥檚 table. He鈥檚 not here to snag a table but to see how the restaurant, part of a group that he helps manage, is adapting to pandemic-era rules of dining out in a city that was a coronavirus hotspot just a month ago.聽
The tables are now spaced far apart on the patio. There鈥檚 no silverware or condiments. Waiters wear masks and gloves. Shared plates are off the menu. Tables are turned over every two hours and doused in disinfectant.
It鈥檚 the second night of reopening for sit-down dining at Porto, a Mediterranean-themed restaurant in the ritzy Back Bay district.
Why We Wrote This
For Jonathan Mendez, business hopes downshifted this spring from expansion to restaurant survival. His story showcases the challenge of reviving in-person consumerism 鈥 and its millions of jobs 鈥 at a time of social distancing.
Mr. Mendez turns to Jody Adams, his business partner and executive chef. 鈥淲e need a bigger sign,鈥 he says, pointing to the small-type note on the greeter鈥檚 table that describes the 鈥減recautionary procedures鈥 that Porto has adopted.聽
Editor鈥檚 note: As a public service,聽all our coronavirus coverage聽is free.聽No paywall.
These procedures include face coverings for all employees. In Boston, however, the same goes for anyone out in public. Ms. Adams turns to the patio and nods at a table of 20-somethings. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not wearing their masks. Some of them don鈥檛 even have a mask,鈥 she says.聽
Mr. Mendez sighs. His job is about hospitality, making people feel comfortable and happy to splurge on a nice meal in a convivial setting. Not cajoling them to wear a mask when they鈥檙e probably going out for the first time in months and want the pandemic out of mind.聽
Tonight鈥檚 turnout is testament to the enduring appeal of eating out as both a social and culinary experience. Yet between the new costs of reopening and the caution many consumers feel, the near-term survival of eateries like Porto is anything but guaranteed.聽聽
At stake are the personal dreams of people like Mr. Mendez. But it鈥檚 also more than that. With roughly 650,000 U.S. restaurants employing more than 15 million people, a wave of failures would leave long-term economic damage 鈥 and gaping holes where there were once communal anchors in city centers and small towns alike.
鈥淭he entrepreneur in me has the appetite for risk and to reopen,鈥 Mr. Mendez told me earlier. 鈥淏ut when you reopen you may only get one shot at it.鈥澛
Before the pandemic hit, Americans spent more money eating out than eating in their homes, and new restaurant openings served as barometers of economic vitality. 鈥淲e are the fabric of the community,鈥 says Bob Luz, president of the Massachusetts Restaurant Association. 鈥淲e employ your neighbors, your daughters, your sons.鈥澛
It鈥檚 a tough business even in the best of times 鈥 profit margins rarely exceed 5%. And as restaurants start to reopen, guidelines on social distancing are upending the way they operate, particularly in pricey cities like Boston and New York where dining tables are shoehorned into tight spaces.聽
Reduced occupancy by fiat means reduced revenues, says Doug Roth, an industry consultant and third-generation restaurant owner in Chicago. 鈥淗ow much volume can you do to be able to cover costs and to get to a point of profitability? We just don鈥檛 know.鈥
Since April, when 4 in 10 restaurants had closed their doors, some have reopened, propped up by a spray of federal dollars and, in some cases, rent reprieves from landlords, but they鈥檙e not yet on a firm footing, warns Mr. Roth. 鈥淭his is the eye of the hurricane.鈥澛
For the hospitality industry, the biggest unknown is us. Do we feel comfortable going out in a pandemic? Is it enjoyable to eat at a becalmed restaurant that has to keep your contact details in case an infection is reported that night? Or do we stick with the dine-in, order-in habits acquired under lockdown, our new norm in a coronavirus world?
The survival of Mr. Mendez鈥檚 restaurants depends on it. And he鈥檚 not going down without a fight.聽
Entrepreneur dreams 鈥 and flexibility
Some aspiring lawyers wait tables to pay for school. For Mr. Mendez, it was a restaurant job that delivered him from law school. After stints in arbitration courts and political consulting, Mr. Mendez was offered a job at the family-owned restaurant of a friend, Eric Papachristos, in Weymouth, Massachusetts. His deferred law-school spot could wait.聽聽
When Mr. Papachristos opened a Boston restaurant in 2011 called Trade, Mr. Mendez came along.
鈥淲hat struck me when I first met him was a sense of maturity,鈥 says Ms. Adams, who ran the kitchen. 鈥淗e was starting out in a business that I鈥檇 been in for a long time. He鈥檚 got a wonderful, natural sense of hospitality.鈥澛
He also had ideas. A foodie trip to Greece with Mr. Papachristos, who had spent much of his childhood there, left Mr. Mendez asking: Why can鈥檛 I find this food in Boston? Not the standard Greek-American dishes, but the simple flavors of everyday meals, at a reasonable price.聽
The result was the opening in 2016 of Saloniki Greek, a sandwich shop that uses modern recipes that Ms. Adams vetted with Mr. Papachristos鈥 family in Greece. The three are partners in Saloniki Greek, which now has three restaurants in Boston and Cambridge. (Mr. Mendez isn鈥檛 a partner in Porto, the other restaurant in the group.)聽
This year they had planned to open a Saloniki at Boston鈥檚 Logan International Airport and at two other locations, potentially doubling the group鈥檚 annual revenues of $19 million, according to Mr. Papachristos, the chief executive. In March, he got his board鈥檚 approval to raise money to invest in three more restaurants in 2021. 鈥淲e wanted to expand. It was exciting,鈥 he says.聽
A week or so later, that timeline was toast: Mr. Papachristos laid off his entire staff of nearly 350 people, including himself, Ms. Adams, and Mr. Mendez.聽
鈥淚t took six years to build this company from the idea to the business plan to the capital raised to opening the doors. And it took 48 hours to wind it down. It was psychologically devastating,鈥 says Mr. Mendez. 聽
Mr. Mendez is stocky, his firm biceps a mark of a gym habit that the pandemic has snapped. He wears his brown hair slicked back, and his beard, behind a face mask, has flecks of ginger.聽
By April, he was back at Saloniki鈥檚 Fenway restaurant, offering delivery and takeout at a much reduced volume. Together with Ms. Adams, he also raised $72,000 for a charity drive to feed thousands of hospital workers and supply food pantries in hard-hit migrant communities, including those of kitchen staff at Saloniki and Porto, some of whom are unauthorized.聽聽
鈥淚t unleashed all of our collective creativity and flexibility,鈥 he says of the pandemic. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much uncertainty and it鈥檚 the only way to deal with it.鈥澛犅
, as he joined the Independent Restaurant Coalition, formed in March to lobby lawmakers for relief. In June the coalition scored a victory when Congress agreed to revise the $669 billion Paycheck Protection Program for small business loans. Borrowers now have longer periods to pay back loans and aren鈥檛 required to spend it all down this summer.聽
Mr. Mendez鈥檚 group obtained a loan that allowed it to rehire workers during the lockdown. Under the revamped program, loans are now forgivable if at least 60% goes to payroll; the initial minimum was set at 75%. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 very helpful. That鈥檚 a working line of capital,鈥 he says.聽
Despite the lifeline, loans will only go so far if customers are loath to go out and to spend in a recession, says Holly Wade, director of research and policy analysis at the National Federation of Independent Business. Some businesses may never reopen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a fine line between temporarily closed and permanently closed. We鈥檒l know in the next few months what that looks like,鈥 she says.聽
Open and uncertain
Three days after Memorial Day, Mr. Mendez flipped the open sign on the door of Saloniki Greek in Harvard Square and circled back to his stool at the mosaic-and-marble bar. For months, this had been his private office: an espresso machine and an empty dining room. Now it was open, and though he knew it would be slow, he had rehired 10 more employees, and it felt good.
At a cluster of tables inside the door, where takeout and delivery orders are picked up, Daniela Rodriguez stood folding cardboard takeout containers. A Colombian immigrant, she chatted with customers in English and with Mr. Mendez, when he passed by, in Spanish.
鈥淭his is my first day back. I was at home almost three months,鈥 she says, her eyes smiling above her mask. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited. I鈥檓 feeling good. I missed my co-workers. And my work.鈥
Harry Asimis, her Greek co-worker, has been busier. Mr. Mendez rehired him in April to work in the kitchen at Fenway, which gave him a chance to learn new skills, he explains while preparing an iced cappuccino. 鈥淭he situation was super-intense for everyone. Many people lost their jobs. I mean, we could not move to see our families, especially if our families are abroad,鈥 he says.聽
He hopes his former co-workers can all eventually return. 鈥淓veryone is worried, especially in the restaurant business. We don鈥檛 know when it鈥檚 going to get back to normal,鈥 he says.聽
Before reopening, Mr. Mendez had run staff through new sanitary routines. Everyone had brought two sets of clothes so they could change before entering the kitchen. Having gone over the safety measures, each staffer was asked to sign a document that committed them to social distancing outside work hours, a mutual coronavirus-prevention pledge.聽
The costs of reopening are high: retraining staff, buying protective equipment, refitting dining rooms for social distancing. According to the National Restaurant Association, 7 out of 10 U.S. restaurants are individually owned. A real risk is that, even as deeper-pocketed national chains survive, grit and customer goodwill won鈥檛 be enough to save many of these local eateries that help define a community.聽
Pandemic meets a different brutality
As expected, Thursday lunchtime at Saloniki鈥檚 Harvard branch is slow. Six customers show up in the first hour. Still, many seem delighted to see that a local eatery has reopened.聽
鈥淭he food鈥檚 good. It鈥檚 affordable,鈥 says Andrew Viglas, who cuts hair across the street, as he waits at the door to pick up a chicken souvlaki. Unlike the restaurant, his barbershop has been 鈥渟lammed鈥 since opening a few days before, but today is calmer, he says. Asked about dining out again at a restaurant, Mr. Viglas is wary. 鈥淚鈥檓 still a little nervous, but that鈥檚 today鈥檚 world.鈥
On the walls inside are poster-sized black-and-white photos of waiters and customers smiling and laughing at a seaside restaurant in Thessaloniki, Greece. One shows Mr. Mendez and Mr. Papachristos during a trip they took two years ago in search of culinary inspiration. Mr. Mendez points out that everyone is elbow-to-elbow and no one is wearing a mask.聽
When Mr. Papachristos flew to Greece on May 1 this year to visit his fianc茅e 鈥 the two had planned to marry in the U.S. this summer 鈥 he barely left the house for the first week. 鈥淚t was a serious lockdown,鈥 he says. Then Greece started to ease up, and restaurants and bars filled up again. So far, it has worked: Greece has one of the lowest coronavirus infection rates in Europe.聽
Mr. Papachristos began thinking that perhaps the U.S. could do the same, and that his restaurants would revive. On May 31, having postponed his wedding, he flew back to Boston.聽
That night, Mr. Mendez was driving back from New York to Boston. Two days earlier, Gov. Charlie Baker had released his reopening plan for Massachusetts that put restaurants on notice of a tentative June reopening for outdoor dining that was the talk of Boston鈥檚 restaurant scene.聽
But as he drove home, Mr. Mendez got a flurry of texts from friends and colleagues about something else. Turn on the news, they told him. It鈥檚 going crazy here.聽
That weekend, protest marches against the killing of George Floyd had convulsed cities across the country, including Boston. On May 31, nighttime protests turned violent in downtown Boston, with vandals smashing windows and looting stores near Porto.聽
Mr. Mendez drove slowly into a city of flashing police sirens and broken glass, unsure if Porto had been hit and wondering if it even made sense to reopen a patio restaurant in a city aflame.聽
鈥淚t was one of those moments when you throw up your hands and you surrender to the ridiculousness of everything 鈥 2020 has been one wave after another,鈥 he says.聽
But while looters ransacked next-door Saks Fifth Avenue, Porto was spared.聽
A week later, Ms. Adams was on the phone with the landlord asking to expand their patio onto a pedestrian walkway. Waist-high concrete planters were slid into place and more tables set widely apart to prepare for the return of outdoor customers under the coronavirus guidelines. (Indoor dining resumed last week in Massachusetts, subject to distancing rules.)聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 more truncated hospitality,鈥 says Mr. Mendez of the Porto dining experience. 鈥淏ut everyone is cool with it because everyone is on the same page. It鈥檚 been a lot of downtime for restaurants and they need to make money.鈥澛
His third Saloniki branch near the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is still closed, as is Trade, the restaurant that serves an affluent office crowd. Nobody is sure when that crowd will be back in force, nor when Cambridge鈥檚 student population will return.聽
鈥淚 envision a slow climb. Each step has to be taken very carefully,鈥 says Ms. Adams, who is the group鈥檚 chief culinary officer (Mr. Mendez鈥檚 title is chief operating officer.)聽聽
At a table at the end of the patio, Benjamin Sullivan and Jennifer Granger clinked glasses and dug into their first restaurant meal in three months. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great. It feels nice just to be outside,鈥 says Mr. Sullivan, who was dressed casually in shorts and a Red Sox polo shirt. He had been chatting to diners at the adjacent tables. 鈥淚t feels like months since I said hi to anyone.鈥
In January, the couple swapped a condo in Boston鈥檚 suburbs for a high-rise apartment in this swanky district, thrilled by all the amenities at their doorstep. They only made it to two Celtic games before the shutdown, says Ms. Granger, a director of student activities and orientation at Lasell University. 鈥淲e enjoyed our neighborhood for a hot second,鈥 she laughs.聽聽
It was their first time at Porto and they were loving it. 鈥淛ust to be able to sit outside and smile and enjoy the view and the weather,鈥 says Mr. Sullivan, who works in health care.聽
When they found out Porto was to reopen they checked out the seating and safety precautions, then booked a table. After all, this was city living, the dream they nurtured in the suburbs.聽
鈥淧art of the reason we moved here, to live here, is for the restaurants and other activities,鈥 Mr. Sullivan says. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 support them now they won鈥檛 be here for us later.鈥
Staff writer Stephen Humphries contributed to this article.
Editor鈥檚 note: As a public service,聽all our coronavirus coverage聽is free.聽No paywall.