Olde School wrote:This thread has gotten slightly perplexing. Everyone agrees that it's good to receive your order as ordered. Everyone would, I'm sure, also agree that orders can get screwed up whether written down or not. We've all seen paperless feats of wonder and disasters which have sprung from the written word. But I fail to see the logic that says unwritten will result in a higher (or even equal) percentage of perfection than written.
I did not read it that way.
I took it more as: getting your order correct is expected; getting a complex order correct without writing anything down is a virtuoso performance. The latter is absolutely more difficult, with a greater chance of error, but (one would hope that) daring to try it suggests a confidence, even bravado, that implies a (much) greater likelihood of getting it right. I hope the waitperson is confident, even cocky, if they dare to take the order solely by memory.
That bravado makes me more confident in their ability ("I am a professional and sufficiently adept at this that I do not need to write it down.")
But you are right that it is harder to do.
And it is a bit of showmanship. In Tapas bars (the real things in Spain) they mostly do not write anything down - you eat and drink, and then when you leave they quickly jot down a bill. Given that there could be fifty people at the bar, I was impressed that they could track all these people grabbing food willy nilly. And, since the bill is delivered in Spanish for food that I did know the price of before eating it, I gave them a lot of trust. Guess you would not like that, Olde School - but I enjoyed the whole experience.
As the Bride would say, it is a pleasure to watch a true professional in action. And I do not stress about the possibility of failure. Somehow that reminds me of the thread a while back where people objected to the wait staff taking their leftovers to the kitchen to pack up - if they go there who knows what they might put into your container if you are not watching them?
Me, I really want to go to places where they are good at what they do. And I like to trust them to be good at it. Call me Pollyanna, but I want to trust people, and I choose to trust them first. If they screw up, then I was wrong, but I refuse to question everyones' competency or trustworthiness just because I know some people are not competent and/or trustworthy. Not the world I choose to live in.
Most people want to do well, and try to do so. I want to give them that opportunity, and my trust, until they prove otherwise. And if they want to do something that seems difficult to me, I admire and applaud. Part of the show, after all.
d
Feeling (south) loopy