Rio state adopted a law last week requiring restaurants and bars to offer physical menus for clients who lack smartphones, have technological troubles or simply want to ignore their devices and enjoy a meal with family and friends
Leafing through the leather-bound menu at a classic Rio de Janeiro restaurant, the tile-floored, wood-paneled Armazem Sao Thiago, 28-year-old Paula Cardoso says something that amounts to heresy in this establishment: "I prefer QR code menus."
Founded in 1919 and owned by the same family for three generations, Armazem Sao Thiago is a place that frowns on QR codes, those newfangled hieroglyphs that surged during the Covid-19 pandemic, letting contact-wary diners access digital menus on their cell phones.
The bar and restaurant takes pride in its menu, which waiters in impeccably pressed white shirts deferentially hand customers.
"It's the introduction to the house," says Carlos Fionda, 59, a manager at the restaurant—affectionately nicknamed "Bar do Gomes"—in the picturesque hillside neighborhood of Santa Teresa.
"That's how the client's experience starts. You chat with them, help them make the best choice... Not a cold, impersonal thing."