That is the only dish we serve. And it is always, always free.
You are already on the menu.
If no one is watching, and I am hungry enough… what is the difference between a man and a meal? the cannibal cafe
Consider the Wari’ people of the Amazon, who practiced funerary cannibalism not out of starvation or malice, but out of love. By consuming the cremated remains of their dead, they ensured the ancestor lived on—not in a cold grave or a distant heaven, but in the warmth of a living belly. What could be more tender than that? What modern funeral offers such completion? We lower bodies into dirt and call it closure. They swallowed ash and called it kinship. That is the only dish we serve
In 1972, the survivors of Uruguayan Flight 571 ate the frozen bodies of their friends to stay alive. They were not monsters. They were students, rugby players, sons and daughters. After their rescue, one survivor said: “At 30,000 feet, everyone is a cannibal.” The press called them savages. But ask yourself—would you have starved? So finish your espresso. Lick the spoon. The owner of The Cannibal Cafe is watching from behind the counter, polishing a knife that has never touched meat. Because the real meal here is not the one you eat. It is the one you think about on the walk home. The question that will keep you awake at 3 a.m., staring at the ceiling: If no one is watching, and I am
In every culture, there exists a final barrier. A line in the sand that, once crossed, redefines humanity. For most of the Western world, that line is not murder, not theft, not even betrayal—it is ingestion of the Other. Cannibalism is the monster under the bed of civilized discourse, the punchline of a joke too dark to tell. But at The Cannibal Cafe , we propose a different menu: not one of flesh, but of metaphor. The most famous cannibals in history didn’t use forks. The conquistadors wrote horror stories about the Aztecs and Caribs, conveniently ignoring that they themselves consumed entire civilizations—land, labor, language—in a feeding frenzy far more total than any ritual feast. To eat a man’s heart is grotesque; to eat his history, rename his gods, and serve his grandchildren your own tongue as the “proper” way to speak? That is lunch.
The Cannibal Cafe asks: If we are so disgusted by eating the dead, why are we so comfortable ignoring the living? Here is the secret menu item, the one not written down: You are not afraid of cannibalism. You are afraid of the hunger that reveals. Because to admit that you could, under certain circumstances, consume another human being is to admit that the boundary between you and the world is porous. It is to admit that civilization is a thin crust over a boiling magma of need.