Employment estimates vary with specialty. The amount of higher-skilled chefs and cooks employed by full service food establishments (with table service and varied menus) is projected to grow about as fast as the average. This increase is accounted for through a rising number of casual restaurants as opposed to up-scale restaurants. Current food trends promote eating out of the home, a larger number of family restaurants, and firmer limits on expense-account meals. Fast-food cooks should expect a slower-than-average increase in employment. Since fast-food cooks have limited responsibilities, most work in positions where the jobs of food preparation and serving workers are merged, rather than just fast-food cooks. Short-order cooks should expect an increase in employment about as fast as the average. Short-order cooks may work at a specific spot, such as a grill or sand which station in a full-line restaurant; however, they may also work to serve quick meals, such in lunch counters or coffee shops.