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Food

Would anyone pay to eat your home cooking?

September 17, 2013 13:01
eatwith crowd shot

By

Victoria Prever,

Victoria Prever

3 min read

How important is the food that a restaurant serves? For Guy Michlin, the Israeli founder of EatWith, the food is less important than the company: the social aspect of dining is the key to creating a memorable experience.
Three years ago, on holiday in Crete with his wife Michal and his baby Alma, Michlin endured a week of less-than-rewarding meals in over-priced tourist traps. Through a half-remembered connection he ended up having a meal in the suburban home of the hospitable Papadakis family. His wife was nervous and reluctant to try something unusual, but for all his family, it turned out to be a highlight of the holiday.

“Everyone has memories of lousy meals,” he explains, “but if you’re abroad how do you find an alternative which you can trust?”

As soon as Michlin returned home he began establishing a network of amateur chefs who were prepared to throw open their doors and offer authentic dinners in their own homes. His website EatWith.com has quickly become the restaurant industry version of Airbnb — which enables home owners to rent out spare rooms to tourists.

Originally Michlin’s intention was limited: he wished to create authentic experiences for travellers, meeting local people and breaking bread with like-minded travellers. “When we travel we spend too much time looking at people like they are in an aquarium: I wanted to lift the cover and give people the chance to go deeper.”