Asian airlines are selling in-flight meals directly to the public
Nostalgic travel junkies are actually buying them
MOST TRAVELLERS see the food as one of the least palatable aspects of air travel. Rubiyanto Haliman is not most travellers. A worker at an Indonesian shrimp hatchery who flew four to six times a month before the pandemic, he collects in-flight menus, magazines and tumblers, and likes to post pictures of aeroplane food to his Instagram feed—not in an ironic way. The past few months, with airlines largely grounded, have been difficult for him. He so misses the experience of flying that a couple of weeks ago he bought a few in-flight meals from Garuda, the national carrier. The food, which was delivered to his home, was packaged in white plastic containers and served with plastic cutlery, on a tray, just as it would be on a plane. The dishes—spinach and pastrami quiche and nasi daun jeruk (rice infused with coconut milk and lime leaf), each costing 30,000 rupiah ($2)—actually “taste better than normal in-flight meals,” he says.
This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Grounded beef”
Asia August 29th 2020
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- The murderer of 51 Muslims in New Zealand last year is sentenced
- Asian airlines are selling in-flight meals directly to the public
- As natural disasters strike, North Korea cuts itself off
- Politics is spreading covid-19 in Indonesia and the Philippines
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