#sorrynotsorry
Member
Almost everything I order has slight modifications. Any good chef will happily do something like that. It's their job. It's poor hospitality not to. I won't say I wouldn't return, but I would go less for sure.
I've never asked for a special order in my life. I look at the menu and order something on it.
Come on guys, entremet posts like 45 threads a day, he doesn't have time to go to a sit down restaurant.
I've worked in restaurants too. Requests are always on a case by case basis, but if it is something so extremely simple, it isn't a big deal and certainly isn't worth disappointing a customer.That's a bit much. I've worked as a waiter and I know how this story goes. People look around and see what other people order. If one guy gets an egg on his burger it can snowball very quickly to a bunch of people requesting it and then getting pissed off because they made 1 exception.
I know some places get off on being snobs and denying simple modifications, but overall, this isn't the norm.Then the whole menu is open to a bit of adjustment here an extra sauce there. The chef created the menu, you decide if you want anything on there or not. Don't make special requests.
There's a pizza place in Atlanta that will not make any adjustments to your pizza. You cannot (to my knowledge) add or remove any toppings. You pick from a menu of pizza types. It's awesome pizza, but quite a limitation that they make it to the recipe and nothing else.
Where do you think he does all his posting?
Yes. The total bill was 71 bucks at the time.There's gotta be more to the story... Refusing a fried egg on a burger, to make sure not t run out, is insanity.
And $71 at a burger/ waffle joint (I imagine a diner of some sort?)... A party of 4 or 5 is more likely, no?
There's a place in Berkeley that only offers one kind of pizza a day with no substitutions. It's very popular. And tasty. Called cheeseboard.
Some industries you need to wine and dine business.How the fuck do you spend $75 on a restaurant unless you're paying for like 4 people? And $500 a month? Damn, that's more than I spend on food period in a month.
As for the special order, I wonder if the place just doesn't do special orders? I'm confused as to why the manager specifically turned that down but maybe he was under orders not to do it because of the waffle and egg special they were doing.
The dangers of doing special orders is that patrons are too quick to take advantage of it. We don't know what's the inventory like for the restaurant.
The fact that the manager was willing to comp his meal as an apology means they do recognize that he's an important customer.
The posts about eating meals the way the chef intended would have more validity if it were not a burger. We've all had burgers and know what they taste like with a variety of different toppings. I doubt the chef at this particular restaurant created a transcendent take on the burger that needs to be experienced without alteration.
Almost everything I order has slight modifications. Any good chef will happily do something like that. It's their job. It's poor hospitality not to. I won't say I wouldn't return, but I would go less for sure.
Some industries you need to wine and dine business.
eggs aren't some rare ingredient in season 2 weeks a year
I don't get why offer a 71 rebate when you can give p order him a waffle special for free throw the waffle out and slap that egg on his burger . Everyone is happy and restaurant loses a waffle egg special not 71 bucks .
Almost everything I order has slight modifications. Any good chef will happily do something like that.
Oh I agree. If I was owner of that situation I would make aneggceptionexception for him.
My guess is that the manager is running a tight ship with his inventory. Worrying about not having enough eggs for the waffle specials before the next shipment of food is a legitimate concern. It's a delicate balance.
I worked in a reasonably high end restaurant for three years, the idea that they would be running on such thin margins that giving someone an egg would be problematic seems ludicrous. Especially if it was a well known customer. Just charge them a stupid amount for it and be done with it. This sounds like a combination of poor customer service and overly prescriptive rules.
That said, an egg on a burger? What is wrong with this guy?
I got the original story. It's online. I'm reading the book.
Y'all want a link?
It's not me lol.
I misremembered some details.
Then the whole menu is open to a bit of adjustment here an extra sauce there. The chef created the menu, you decide if you want anything on there or not. Don't make special requests.
Again we don't know what the situation is for that restaurant at the time. I definitely agree that it's worth losing that one order of waffles though.Yes, but surely it's better to run the risk (not certainty) of running out of the waffles one order earlier, which will lead to a customer ordering something else or possibly leaving as opposed to comping a $71 meal and still having an unsatisfied customer.
That said, an egg on a burger? What is wrong with this guy?
Original story
http://theduncangroup.com/blog/the-six-thousand-dollar-egg
The comments are not kind lol
"By the way, we left immediately and went next door to Whole Foods, a gourmet grocery store. Our motive was to check on the price of their eggs."
What a dink.