PeskyToaster
Member
I would ask and if they say no because x and x I would say that's fine because I'm a reasonable person.
Welcome to the restaurant industry where comps and free drinks are given out like candy and your own employees constantly steal from you.
$25 entry
$10 appetizer
$10 drink (note: this is a glass of cheap house wine)
$10 dessert
+ Tax and Tip gets you near $75.
This is a cheap order at a restaurant Yelp would give $$ (out of a maximum $$$$).
You mean entree right? Because I wouldn't pay a cover charge for a restaurant unless there's lewd activity.
It's bad business and worse customer service over a request that so extremely easy, cheap, and simple. It's a burger, not foie gras. So I don't get the point of mentioning upscale given the item itself is extremely casual.
If it were me, as I mentioned earlier, I'd be more concerned about other people seeing the special order and then wanting to do it themselves. You risk alienating ever patron in the restaurant.
It is odd that there doesn't appear to be any other sources on this aside from Todd and a Facebook post redirecting to Todd.
When you order a tea you don't get charged for the hot water in your cup.
Wait, did this happen at the Fashion Island R&D? I believe it. They're huge dicks there and the wait staff seemingly enjoys screwing with the customers. I ordered a french dip there one day and the waitress said they were all out, but then a bunch of people who arrived and ordered very soon after I did all got french dips without issue.
It's not an issue of my reading comprehension. For the sake of argument if the teabag cost 10 cents and charges you accordingly then he loses a $2.90 in sales.
Since you waited tables for so long then you should know that you don't always get preferential treatment no matter how much you spend with them. They're not obligated to recognize you no matter how often you go.
I apologize for making an assumption but you can certainly be less condescending.
It's only bad business if your customers are unreasonable or unfamiliar with restaraunts other than Friday's. Many places do it and succeed just fine.
He wanted a fried egg on his burger. Simple enough right?
... the bill was only 71 bucks. So the GM was willing to burn a bridge on loyal customer for an egg that only costs probably 10 cents with bulk pricing.
If the customer was a regular and in the "wine and dine your clients" industry, then I might have an idea what happened. Is it possible that the customer wanted to show his influence to his clients? This would apply if this was a highend restaurant.
Just a thought
In my experience this is usually for stupid shit like "I want chicken noodle soup, but can you make it without chicken stock " this is more like asking for a lemon with your Diet Coke and them saying "no special requests"This. Most of my favorite places even have a "unfortunately we are unable to accept requests to change dishes".
Who spends $500 a month at the same restaurant?
Yeah. Sunny side up eggs work really well on burgers. The egg also is (one of) the reason McDicks breakfast burgers are better than their regular ones.
Nah, it's better to take the very simple request versus offering to comp a meal for $71 dollars to extract the egg from it.
This applies to this specific situation. Obviously if a request is something where the restaurant does not have the ingredient, would be complex, take extra time, etc. It makes sense. Other than that, it's just pretentious and snobby on part of the restaurant to worry about defiling a burger or going against the chef's vision.
In my experience this is usually for stupid shit like "I want chicken noodle soup, but can you make it without chicken stock " this is more like asking for a lemon with your Diet Coke and them saying "no special requests"
Are you a NYT best seller too?
Who gets their panties in such a twist over an egg that wasn't on the menu?
He said it was a higher end local chain.
Stay away from the cheesewhat is this McDicks place? it sounds like a great place to eat.
Who spends $500 a month at the same restaurant?
Haute cuisine burgers and waffles.A higher end restaurant that has burgers and waffles on the menu?
I just don't get why they would rather give him $71 worth of food for free, over potentially not serving one additional $15 waffle entree.
In my experience it comes down to the capability of the staff. If they're good at mixing drinks and understand what flavours complement one another, they'll be able to deal with anything you request without complaint. If they're not, and they only know how to mix a few drinks by following a recipe, they tend to freak out if you ask for something off book, and tell you it's not possible.It's weird, I know - I was thinking that when putting myself in that situation. My best explanation would be that, as has been discussed above, the restaurant most likely buys to order assuming they will make X number of a certain special, so they cannot just randomly use up the ingredients on other dishes whenever someone feels like adding something on then menu.
However, and I used to work in a cocktail bar, the whole point of cocktails is to mix something new and interesting - we buy alcohol to create these cocktails that are on the menu, but also to experiment and find new and interesting creations. I guess for me, if I can see that the bar has all the ingredients for a certain drink and isn't busy (2-3+ people being served) then I would politely ask for a mix of X,Y and Z to create something I know tastes great.
A higher end restaurant that has burgers and waffles on the menu?
It's almost as if comping the Neal was worth it to them if it meant not honoring a request. You can disagree with that if you want, but it's not uncommon or unique to this restaraunts and plenty of people are ok with it. Lots of other restaraunts for you.
What's the downside to people seeing this and buying the waffle special to do it too?
I mean they offered to comp his meal? Accept it and keep it movin.
I would hope an egg costs less than 10 cents wholesale.
It's not about disagreement. It's just bad business.
Spending $0.10+the upcharge to the customer is better than spending $71. The math doesn't lie here. I guess if this business operates on pride or something that they were able to deny an egg. But I'm not sure how often pride works in business versus math.
Probably why the business overall has such a high failure rate.
The story makes NO sense whatsoever. Why on earth would they comp you a $71 meal over a ten cent egg? I call bullshit.
That being said, I would totally discontinue going to a place if I was regular and they refused a simple request. It's virtually no effort whatsoever to put an egg on a burger.
You are paying a premium to eat out, and your wishes should be accommodated.
When I was 19 or so I used to frequent a deli near my place of business every day. I spent at least $15 a day there for 6 months or so. One day I asked for an extra tea bag in my tea because I wanted some extra caffeine. The owner charged me double for the tea, so now instead of the already hugely marked-up $1.50 I usually paid he's asking for $3.00 just because he put another five cent teabag in there. When I mentioned it he acted like he was doing me a favor for even granting my request. I politely thanked him, took my food, and never stepped foot in the place again. He threw away a customer that had spent $75 a week at his place over a teabag worth pennies.
edit: finished looking at more replies and I'm astounded at how many people are defending the restaurant. It's not entitled to want your food a certain way especially when you are generally paying a huge premium for food when eating out.
That's certainly your view. Which is subjective itself. So we'll have to disagree here.It's not a math problem. It doesn't make restaraunts fail.
Your feelings on this are subjective. If you don't want to go to restaraunts that won't honor the whims of every customer, don't. That's your right. But the decision to run the restaraunts that way is not objectively wrong or incorrect or bad business.