A guilty pleasure some of us have (and, we hope, some of you do, too) is reading through the entire menu at a restaurant or cafe, looking for odd slips, grammar mistakes, and hilarious Photoshop fails. You know, for r-research purposes of course (that was a lie, we enjoy feeling superior and poking fun at bsaic grremar mstakess and anyone who thinks that Photoshop is an actual store).
Some menus, however, are so incredibly bad, so magnificently funny that people couldn’t help but take a picture and share it online for everyone to shame! Shame! Shame! The Photoshop and grammar-loving team at Bored Panda has collected this list of the most egregious menu fails to raise your mood, so have a scroll through and upvote the best of the worst.
And remember, folks, to paraphrase our glorious culinary leader Gordon Ramsay, if the menu has pictures in it, it’s time to start panicking!
Bored Panda talked about editing, proofreading, and kerning (aka the spacing between letters) issues in restaurant menus with Lisa McLendon, the News and Information Track Chair at the University of Kansas and the Bremner Editing Center Coordinator. Read on for her insights and, if you happen to be working on a menu right now, her advice on how to best present the text so its readable, clear, and doesn't cause embarrassing misunderstandings.
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It's On Their Menu
The Peas Are Upside Down
The Sushi Restaurant, That I Went To, Accidentally Put A Picture Of USB Sushi On Their Menu
"Word placement, typeface, and kerning are crucial for effective, professional-looking logos and layouts," McLendon from the University of Kansas said. "If it’s just a few words, all-caps is fine, but it’s harder for people to read longer blocks of text in all caps. It’s also harder for people to read italic or highly stylized type, or type along a curve instead of a line."
She explained to Bored Panda that if you're working with words that are stacked or circled, you ought to look for all the various ways in which they could be misread or read out of order. "Make sure the starting point for readers is as clear as it can be," she said.
Meanwhile, if the kerning is too tight, the letters could run together and create some incredibly embarrassing misreadings. (Side-note: remember that if you ever write the word 'flickering' in capitals and don't want things to get out of hand fast.)
This Seductive Duck I Found On A Menu In Vietnam, Complete With An Excellent Typo
Translated The Menu, Boss
Can I have a Dfgjkghjf Hdfhd with some kfjdrigld on the side, please?
Ugh those don't go together, everyone knows you pair Dfgjkghjf Hdfhd with eqeiuprweiu
Load More Replies...If you are having trouble pronouncing this, just remember that the k is silent
Bruh, I know Chinese, and that's NOT how you read this🤣Someone needs to go back school!
The chinese translator was like; those latin letters look all the same anyway
I don't think the menu writer even tried to translate this, all the letters of Dfgjkghjf Hdfhd come from the middle row of keys. But it might come in handy, I needed a new password, lol.
I think I'll have the Japanese brown sauce fish, I might not like it but at least I can say it.
To be honest this is my brain when it trying to spell a non alphabetic word
Chinese. It's burdock with beef. The translator was pretty close.
Load More Replies...This Menu
McLendon said that, in her opinion, we should all give the people working on restaurant menus a break. "Especially if they’re not native speakers because their job is food, not language," she said about those employees who are asked to work on the menus because of budgeting issues.
"That said, a particularly awful or amusing typo can make a business go viral in a negative way—not something any business wants. The easiest thing is obvious, but many people forget to do it: run a spell-check. Spell-check will catch any typo that is a misspelling (most typos on restaurant menus are). But spell-check won’t catch typos that result in a word that is still a word, just not the word you want."
The solution? McLendon suggests having someone else proofread the menu text before sending it off for printing. "Some printing companies provide this service, plus there are freelance editors who do proofreading, and I’ve also heard of small businesses swapping services for work like proofreading."
This “Plane” On My Airline Menu
My Friend Is In Florence, Italy And This Restaurant He's At Has An Assassins Creed Screenshot As Their Menu Background
Anyone Want Some Thai Food?
Menus with pictures in them generally indicate that the place you’re eating at is a little bit on the cheap side. (If they’re laminated, get out of there, quick! Gordon Ramsay has a point, after all.)
Now, there’s nothing wrong with eating cheap food once in a while—who doesn’t enjoy a cheeky curry or a guilt-free kebab in the middle of the night when we’re peckish? But there’s something to be said for glancing a bit deeper into unchanging menus with low-quality pictures in them.
Subway Salad Menu
This Was The Image Of Choice For An Ice Cream Menu In Austria
This Busy Ice Cream Shop In Seattle Put Their Menu On A Mirror So It’s Impossible To Read
However you might want to slice things (pun not intended), menus with pictures indicate that the owners of your chosen eatery aren’t investing a lot of money into the business, the staff, or the food. While this isn’t an automatic death sentence (plenty of businesses care about their employees, though, then again, plenty also don’t), it does mean that the quality of the food might be low.
Frozen, canned, and processed food is the norm. And if saving’s the main goal, you can bet your bottom dollar that leftovers will be reheated in microwaves and brought to you as though it was all fresh.
This Picture Isn't Blurry, That's How The Menu Looks
French Restaurant Menu
"You'll Need To Use The Flashlight On Your Phone To Read The Menu" - Waitress
Meanwhile, if the staff aren’t paid enough or motivated in some other way to act professionally, hygiene standards can drop. This can mean that the weirdly-photoshopped burger meal you’re laughing your head off at while flipping through the menu is an indication of low standards and nasty things crawling all over the kitchen.
What’s more, even if by some miracle the pics in the menu look terrific, there lies another problem: what you see and what you’re bound to get can be two completely different things. That’s why, personally, we’re in favor of small menus that only have words on them. If in doubt, you can always ask your server about each meal and they’ll be glad to tell you all about them.
Top-Notch Photoshop On This Greek Menu
An Online Menu For A Restaurant I Was Considering Eating At
This Menu
The Peas On This Menu Photo Are Photoshopped In
The Motherlode Of The 90s Nightmares
Got Those Drinks On The Menu, Boss
Small and clear menus don’t mean simple and boring! If it’s readable, approachable, and user-friendly, your clients are more likely to get to the meat of things (literally, if they’re not vegan) and leave a healthy-sized tip.
This Restaurant Wraps Their Menu Around A Wooden Stick. There Was Absolutely No Explanation Or Purpose To It
This Cocktail Menu
I Honestly Don’t Know What To Look At
I'm Impressed That This Thai Menu Has Text Cropping Both Over And Under The Image
This Menu That Seems To Be Upside Down At First Look
This Restaurant Pirated The Pirate Bay Torrent Site Logo For Their Menu
Seen At A Restaurant In A 5-Star Hotel In Los Angeles
This Is What I Found On The Menu Of A Pizzeria
This Salad Section On The Menu At The Pub
My favorite menu typo is a Beijing hotel with a neon sign on top of the building that declares in English, "We burn the steak every Thursday" to promote their grill night. The table menu offers "Lamp Chops."
I have mentioned this before, but my favourite typo was on a Chinese restaurant menu. There was human beef on it. My niece kicked up a fuss: "Ewwww! That's disgusting!" I told her that it was supposed to be Hunan beef. We still laugh about it.
I am a graphic designer and this makes me so depressed... but also very confident that I will never be out of work, ever. :)
I bet that most of these were "designed" by non-designers; an employee with some basic software or on-line template. This is what you get from not having a graphic designer work on something so important for your business. Yes, the Mom & Pop places do get a pass, but some of these restaurants looked high-end. I've been a graphic designer for bout 35 years, and many a time, I had to talk clients out of doing a certain thing that they wanted. Yellow text on white paper was one. I designed menus for a hospital, and made the text a bit larger as people often forget their eyeglasses when they end up in a hospital.
Our local pub managed to misspell "spaghetti" twice, on two different menu items. The third item it was spelt correctly, but then they misspelt "tomatoes"!
Hi, N G, that sounds absolutely hilarious! Any chance that you've got any photos of the menu?
Load More Replies...This was a sign I saw for smoothies in Japan. Do you want mango, banana, or Pain or a Flesh flavored smoothie? flesh-6020...0cdcdb.jpg
There is a restaurant one town over from me that categorizes the selections as "Steak," "Chicken," "Salads," "Desserts," and "Children Under 12."
One time at an asian restaurant, there was a whole page filled with just, "ASIAN RIBS" and then they had different prices. The funniest part is that the waiter explained after we asked about it. "That's just because we have different prices for each one." But that still makes NO SENSEEEEEEE
Way before the internet I travelled in India and stayed at a place where the menu included Chicken Bullet, Chicken Hens and Egg Cyloned Parrots...
#13 is a plant based ice cream store called "Frankie & Jo's". I have been there and don't remember having a hard time reading the menu.
I can just imagine Gordon Ramsay going to these places for one of his shows.
I bet most of these were made by family members considered "good at computers" because they're marginally better than say, mom & dad (whoever owns the restaurant).
My favorite menu typo is a Beijing hotel with a neon sign on top of the building that declares in English, "We burn the steak every Thursday" to promote their grill night. The table menu offers "Lamp Chops."
I have mentioned this before, but my favourite typo was on a Chinese restaurant menu. There was human beef on it. My niece kicked up a fuss: "Ewwww! That's disgusting!" I told her that it was supposed to be Hunan beef. We still laugh about it.
I am a graphic designer and this makes me so depressed... but also very confident that I will never be out of work, ever. :)
I bet that most of these were "designed" by non-designers; an employee with some basic software or on-line template. This is what you get from not having a graphic designer work on something so important for your business. Yes, the Mom & Pop places do get a pass, but some of these restaurants looked high-end. I've been a graphic designer for bout 35 years, and many a time, I had to talk clients out of doing a certain thing that they wanted. Yellow text on white paper was one. I designed menus for a hospital, and made the text a bit larger as people often forget their eyeglasses when they end up in a hospital.
Our local pub managed to misspell "spaghetti" twice, on two different menu items. The third item it was spelt correctly, but then they misspelt "tomatoes"!
Hi, N G, that sounds absolutely hilarious! Any chance that you've got any photos of the menu?
Load More Replies...This was a sign I saw for smoothies in Japan. Do you want mango, banana, or Pain or a Flesh flavored smoothie? flesh-6020...0cdcdb.jpg
There is a restaurant one town over from me that categorizes the selections as "Steak," "Chicken," "Salads," "Desserts," and "Children Under 12."
One time at an asian restaurant, there was a whole page filled with just, "ASIAN RIBS" and then they had different prices. The funniest part is that the waiter explained after we asked about it. "That's just because we have different prices for each one." But that still makes NO SENSEEEEEEE
Way before the internet I travelled in India and stayed at a place where the menu included Chicken Bullet, Chicken Hens and Egg Cyloned Parrots...
#13 is a plant based ice cream store called "Frankie & Jo's". I have been there and don't remember having a hard time reading the menu.
I can just imagine Gordon Ramsay going to these places for one of his shows.
I bet most of these were made by family members considered "good at computers" because they're marginally better than say, mom & dad (whoever owns the restaurant).