Menu x
Our platform is most compatible with: Google Chrome/Safari

: Peter Grimes' short story titled "Menu" explores the idea that even when we have the perfect partner and a table full of delicacies like Oysters Rockefeller, we are still constantly searching for what's next, unable to truly "set the menu aside".

The concept of a "menu" often serves as a powerful narrative device, representing choice, consequence, and the curation of human experience. Here are a few interesting ways menus have been central to compelling stories: The "10 Interesting People" Menu

: Many modern restaurants use "storytelling descriptions" to make dishes more enticing. For example, rather than just listing ingredients for short rib tacos, a menu might explain that the honey cumin aioli is a secret recipe from the chef's grandmother. This technique, backed by Stanford studies , shows that evocative names like "Dynamite Chili" create a visceral emotional connection that plain descriptions cannot.

: Some educators use a "Bread Story Menu" to help children develop narratives. In this framework, the setting (like an underwater world or a backyard jungle) is the "bread," while the plot and conflict (like a quest for something lost) serve as the "filling".