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FoodCulture and Fashion

Beyond Food: How the Smallest Service Moments Stay with Diners

By Margaret Wanjiru

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Published: February 10, 2026
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Hospitality: A waiter serving food.
A waiter waiter holding a plate outside
Jacqueline Wairimu Food Critic and Hospitality Expert
Owen Thuma, Founder and Head chef of Mayi Food
Orinda notes that Consistency matters in service.
Wilson Orinda, Pastry Chef with MSC Cruises
Orinda's Pastries
A diner enjoying food
A diner enjoying food
Orinda's Pastries
A waiter picking up plates of food
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The most memorable dining moments rarely announce themselves.
They slip in quietly, through a warm greeting when a customer arrives, a thoughtful pause before you answer a question, or the way a complaint is handled without defensiveness.

Contents
  • Listening First, Serving Second
  • Service Beyond Taste: The Quiet Details That Shape An Experience
  • Small Gestures, Memorable Moments
  • When Short Staffing Exposes Weak Systems
  • What Chefs Wish Diners Understood
    • Through a Critic’s Lens: When Service Shapes The Meal
  • Emotional Currency of Service
  • Changing Cultural Expectations
  • Pastry Service: Where Consistency Is Everything
  • The Cost of Inconsistency
    • Pressure Behind The Counter
    • More Than a Meal

Long after flavours fade, and stomachs are full, service remains.

Across restaurants, pop-up kitchens, bakeries, and cruise ship dining rooms, hospitality professionals agree on one truth: Food may attract diners, but service decides whether they stay.

Through conversations with chefs, critics, and pastry professionals, a clear picture emerges, service is not a supporting act.
It is an emotional experience unfolding alongside the meal.

Listening First, Serving Second

For Owen Thuma, founder and head chef of Mayi Food, service begins with humility.
Operating a flexible, event-based kitchen without a permanent physical location, Thuma understands that every interaction carries weight.

“In service, the customer is always right, not because they’re never wrong, but because they decide whether you exist tomorrow,” Thuma says.

“Sometimes that decision is made over something as small as how they were treated.”

When faced with difficult diners, Thuma does not rush to defend the kitchen. His first instinct is to slow the moment down and listen.
“I give customers the benefit of the doubt,” he says.
“I let them speak first, because how someone feels often matters before what actually went wrong. And it is also the fastest way to understand what the real issue is.”

Before offering explanations or solutions, Thuma focuses on making diners feel acknowledged.

“I meet them where they are, sometimes even lower,” he explains.
“Only then can I understand what they want and what I can realistically offer.”

For him, resolution is rarely about winning an argument.

“Most people aren’t actually upset about the food,” Thuma says.
“They’re upset because they don’t feel seen or they are dealing with some other things in their personal lives, so it is upon us in the Service industry not to upset them further, because people react differently.”

Service Beyond Taste: The Quiet Details That Shape An Experience

The difference between feeling welcomed and feeling invisible can take seconds.

A diner walks in, pauses at the entrance, scans the room, unsure whether to sit or wait. No greeting comes. No eye contact. No one even approaches them to ask where they would like to sit. In that brief moment, the experience has already begun to form.

Some of the most powerful service moments, Thuma notes, happen almost unnoticed.

“Etiquette. A greeting. Attention,” he says.
“These things don’t stand out when they’re done well, but their absence is loud.”

A missed hello or delayed acknowledgment quietly signals indifference, especially in busy spaces.
Conversely, a brief moment of focused attention, eye contact, a pause, a check-in between or after a meal can steady an entire dining experience, even when service is stretched thin.

In hospitality, Thuma suggests, it is often these smallest, quietest details that diners remember long after the meal is over.

Small Gestures, Memorable Moments

Thoughtful gestures often become the moments diners remember most.

“Complimentary items, flowers, a small dish, or something extra during a special occasion, those little touches matter,” Thuma says.
“They show customers they’re not just ordering food, but experiencing something carefully crafted, meant to be shared beyond the plate.”

He emphasizes that hospitality is less about extravagance and more about intention.

“I always want customers to feel comfortable and heard,” he adds.
“That’s what keeps them coming back.”

When Short Staffing Exposes Weak Systems

Staff shortages, Thuma explains, reveal the strength, or weakness, of a restaurant’s systems.

“Staffing is a double-edged sword,” he says.
“Strong systems can carry a team even when it’s short-staffed. Without them, everything slows down.”

Without those systems, pressure mounts quickly.

That reality became evident during a Friday evening visit to a busy restaurant along Kenyatta Avenue. At around 7 p.m., the dining room was full, staff were stretched thin, and communication faltered.

Calling one waiter required calling another, simply to locate the server assigned to the table.
The delay was brief, but noticeable. In hospitality, even small moments of friction linger.

If the restaurant had a system like AK’s in Eastleigh on General Waruinge Street, next to BBS Mall, where each table is fitted with electronics to order, pay, or call a waiter, the experience would have been seamless.
Technology cannot replace good service, but it can remove the friction that distracts from it.

What Chefs Wish Diners Understood

Behind every smooth service experience is careful coordination.

“Most service teams want to do well,” Thuma says. “But everything has to align, staffing, timing, communication. When any one part falters, diners notice immediately, it is all a performance after-all, you put your best foot foward.”

Even small misalignments, a delayed plate, a missed greeting, or a miscommunicated order, ripple through the dining experience.

For Thuma, understanding this coordination helps diners appreciate that great service is rarely effortless; it is the product of careful planning, teamwork, and attention to detail.

Through a Critic’s Lens: When Service Shapes The Meal

For food critic, entrepreneur, and hospitality expert Jacqueline Wairimu, service is inseparable from the food itself.

“Service shapes how I experience a meal, and it absolutely influences my professional reviews,” Wairimu says.
“Food is never experienced in isolation. How it’s served, the timing, the attention, the gestures, the care, all of that shapes how you perceive it. Even a perfectly cooked meal can feel flat if the service is inattentive or rushed. A thoughtful service can elevate an average dish into a memorable experience.”

She adds that these moments are what diners remember long after the last bite.

“It’s the combination of food and service that creates an emotional memory,” she says.

She recalls a time she returned an Ethiopian dish while tasting it for the first time.
It was not just the flavour that disappointed her, it was how it was presented, the care behind it, the way it arrived.

The colours seemed dull, the textures flattened, and the attention she expected from the kitchen was nowhere to be felt.
Even before the first bite, the experience felt incomplete, like the dish had lost the story it was meant to tell.

“Plating matters too. Presentation is part of service,” she explains.
“I’ve had dishes arrive cold, and no matter how good the food is, it instantly changes the experience. Food loses its impact when service is bad.”

For Wairimu, these moments are a reminder: service and food are inseparable.

Emotional Currency of Service

Wairimu describes service not as a set of tasks, but as an emotional exchange between the staff and the diner.

“Service sells emotions,” she says.
“It’s how a guest feels while they eat, the attention, the care, the small gestures. When that emotional expectation isn’t met, that’s where poor service begins.”

For her, the red flags are rarely about food itself. Lack of accountability, slow responses, and inattentiveness signal to diners that their experience is not valued.

“Mistakes happen, that’s inevitable,” she says.
“But it’s how staff respond that defines the experience. A quick apology, a solution offered, or even just genuine attention can turn a misstep into a moment that’s remembered positively. Ignoring it? That’s when service fails.”

Wairimu says if someone had explained how the dish is best eaten, suggested a pairing, or offered even a small sample, I could have appreciated it fully. Instead, the plate was placed on the table and forgotten.
No check-in, no context, not even a glance to see if it was her first time trying it.

These small lapses are more than inconvenience; they diminish the emotional connection between the diner and the dish, leaving the experience flat even before the first bite.

Changing Cultural Expectations

Wairimu sees a shift in Kenyan dining culture, one where service is no longer invisible.

“Checking in during a meal, offering guidance when a customer feels unsure, maintaining a good attitude, these are expectations now, even at a local cafe,” she notes.
Diners are becoming more aware of the small gestures that elevate an experience, and more willing to reward them.

Tipping, she adds, is slowly gaining traction in Kenya.
“If the service and food are good, I tip,” she says.
“It’s a simple way to show appreciation, and it reinforces that good service matters.”

For Wairimu, the reason service leaves such a lasting impression goes beyond etiquette or efficiency.

“People forget flavours,” she says,
“but they don’t forget how you made them feel, when they were at your hotel or restaurant. Service is remembered for how it made you feel, seen, valued, cared for, long after the meal is over.”

Vibandas Making More Money That High End Restaurants

She notes that this does not only happen in high-end restaurants.
In Kenya, diners often return to dingy vibandas or small hotels, sometimes daily, for their regular meal.

Despite being simple and basic, Wairimu notes that the service is precise: within a minute of sitting down, the food is on the table.

They eat in less than five minutes and move on to the rest of their day.

“Being fast, efficient, and reliable is also a form of service,” she says.
“People have different agendas for the day, so every minute counts. It’s a different kind of care, but it still leaves a lasting impression.”


Pastry Service: Where Consistency Is Everything

For Wilson Orinda, a Pastry chef with MSC Cruises, changing diner expectations have reshaped dessert service entirely.

“People used to focus only on taste,” he says.
“If it was sweet and well-balanced, that was enough. Presentation didn’t matter as much. Today, the eyes eat first, the visual story of a dessert sets expectations even before the first bite.”

In the age of social media, that first impression has become almost instantaneous.
“People take pictures before they taste, and that image sticks,” he explains.
“Even a small sugar decoration, a carefully placed garnish, or the way a dessert is plated can elevate the entire experience. It reflects care, skill, and though, and it matters far more than most diners realize.”

The Cost of Inconsistency

One of the most common, and damaging, mistakes Orinda sees in bakeries and restaurants is inconsistency in presentation.

“Desserts and food must deliver consistently,” Wilson says.
“If one day a dish wows and the next it falls flat, diners notice, even if they won’t give feedback. Over time, inconsistency diminishes trust and the inconsistency now drives them away.”

Missing garnishes, rushed finishing, or uneven plating quietly erode trust.
“People return expecting the same experience that first captivated them, often bringing friends or family along,” Orinda says.
“When that expectation isn’t met, it severs the connection.”

Pressure Behind The Counter

Maintaining quality during busy periods remains one of the biggest challenges in the hospitality industry, Orinda notes, and while waiters, critics, and founders often take the spotlight, people forget the chefs, who are the engine behind every dish, juggling timing, precision, and presentation under pressure.

“During peak hours, one person may juggle almost everything in the kitchen. At times, it gets overwhelming.”

“If the team isn’t fully trained or coordinated, the strain doesn’t stop at the stove. Plates are delayed, presentation suffers, servers are slowed down, and the guests feel it.

In the end, inconsistencies in the kitchen become inconsistencies in the dining experience, also affecting the reputation of the whole restaurant.”

More Than a Meal

From pop-up kitchens and bustling city restaurants to cruise ship pastry stations, one message echoes clearly: service is not an EXTRA.

It lives in the greeting, the gesture, the attention to detail, and the consistency diners come back for.

Long after plates are cleared, it is these moments, subtle, human, and emotional, that remain.
Because in the end, people don’t just remember what they ate. They remember how it made them feel.

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TAGGED:ChefCustomer ServiceDining ExpereincefoodFood criticJacqueline WairimuOwen ThumaPastryServiceService 101Service TrainingWilson Orinda
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