Spain's tapas culture eerily quiet even as country begins to open up again
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MADRID - Spain's normally bustling restaurant terraces remain eerily quiet as the country's tapas culture has been brought to a standstill -- for now.
Sharing a plate of food in a busy bar or eatery is as Spanish as paella but all that stalled since the government brought in one of the most draconian lockdowns in the world to contain the coronavirus.
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Kissing friends or family – another natural part of this tactile Spanish life – was also outlawed as Spaniards found themselves barred from meeting for fear of spreading the infection.
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The cost to the country has not just been in losing an essential part of its culture.
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Since the lockdown, 200,000 employees in the restaurant sector have lost their jobs, according to the consultancy EY Bain & Company.
The hotels association Hosteleria de España estimates the summer season, when bars and hotels are normally full, will be even worse for a sector that accounts for 6 percent of Spain's GDP.
At Noa, a cafe in Barcelona, the terrace is deserted.
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Ernest Cebrian, owner of the cafe, said: “We have been allowed to open as we are a bakery and so are classified as a food shop but we also operate as a cafe. So, our takings are 70 percent down.”
However, as the death rate has fallen, Spain's left-wing government has announced a slow easing of the lockdown.
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From May 11, restaurants with terraces will able to open to 50 percent capacity as long as they clean the premises twice a day and customers and staff observe social distancing measures.
If the infection rate continues to drop, restaurants will be allowed to reopen at a later date.
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Desperate to save their businesses, some businesses have proved inventive.
In Madrid, La Hornada restaurant has installed hygiene partitions between diners of the future.
They are made of methacrylate, the same material which is used to protect supermarket workers from customers.
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Manuel Gil, of llenatubar.com, a company that makes the screens, said: “They allow you to see each other but the famous drops (of saliva) cannot reach the other person,” he told Telemadrid television.
Many in the business worry, however, that dining out Spanish-style will never be the same again.
Rubén Martín, a chef who won Spain's first virtual tapas competition after the state of emergency was imposed in March, said the feeling will be artificial for customers.
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“We cannot make bars into places where people are confined to little boxes like on an Excel sheet,” he said.
Juan Diez Nicolas, a senior sociological investigator at the Real Elcano Institute, a think-tank in Madrid, said Spaniards, like other southern Europeans, live their lives spontaneously in the street.
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“It is part of our life, partly because of the weather. So is the kissing and being tactile,” he told Fox News over the telephone. “Tapas is part of this tradition. It has gone for now but I have no doubt that when these restrictions are lifted we will return to doing exactly the same as before.”