Food

Sky-high: Japan airline offers US$540 meals on parked planes

The airline plans to expand its "restaurant with wings" after demand proved sky-high

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 02 Apr 2021 4:00PM

Sky-high: Japan airline offers US$540 meals on parked planes
First-class dining onboard with ANA airline. – ETX Studio pic, April 2, 2021

AIRLINE food might be one of the last things people are missing during the pandemic, but one Japanese carrier has customers flocking to sample luxury in-flight meals on its parked planes.

Foie gras, crabmeat mousse, and wagyu beef fillet are all on the menu aboard aircraft belonging to Japan's All Nippon Airways – for a cool US$540 (about RM2,235).

The airline launched its "restaurant with wings" for just a single day on Wednesday, but with demand proving sky-high, they are now planning to expand the offering.

The restaurant offered either first class or business class meals usually served on international flights, with "passengers" boarding a Boeing 777 at Tokyo's Haneda airport holding tickets designed to look like boarding passes.

The experience came complete with crew announcements, according to the company, with meals served in-cabin seats, though seatbelts were not required.

Demand appears strong, despite the prices – ¥59,800 for first-class meals and ¥29,800 for a business class offering.

"The tickets for the restaurant sold out in a day," a spokeswoman said yesterday, and the company now plans an additional 11 dates.

The airline said it could extend the service further if virus restrictions are not tightened.

The "restaurant" already observes virus measures, using only 60 seats on the plane to ensure customers can maintain some distance between them.

The Japanese carrier is not the first Asian airline to offer meals aboard grounded planes to travel-starved customers.

Hundreds of travel-starved diners ate lunch and watched seat-back films on two parked Singapore Airlines jets in October last year, with tickets selling for up to S$642 (US$470).

Like airlines around the world, ANA has been hit hard by virus-related travel restrictions.

In January it upheld its forecast for a record US$4.9 billion net loss this financial year to March 2021, compared with ¥27.6 billion in net profit the previous year.

ANA Holdings' nine-month net loss came to ¥309.6 billion (US$3 billion) – also a record – and a sharp drop from the ¥86.4 billion in profit it logged during the same April-December period last year.

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