JeffB wrote:Steve Plotnicki wrote:But having said that, a simple request, like put the sauce on the side or don't make my meal too spicy, should be, and can be, easily honored by all restaurants.
And yet it is not so, thank God.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:They aren't providing their customers with the level of service they deserve.
Steve, you and I can very likely go toe to toe on high end and even Michelin 3-star restaurants. You want the relationship to be something other than what it actually is.Steve Plotnicki wrote:JeffB wrote:Steve Plotnicki wrote:But having said that, a simple request, like put the sauce on the side or don't make my meal too spicy, should be, and can be, easily honored by all restaurants.
And yet it is not so, thank God.
Actually it is so in 99.9% of the restaurants in the world which makes one wonder why the other .01% have such a hard time with the concept.
I know, the people who run them are schmucks. Could there be any other answer?
jpschust - I don't know what your dining experience is but, the Michelin 3-star experience is premised on the ask/demand concept you say doesn't exist. So not only does it exist, it is actually the model that the entire high-end restaurant industry is built on. That is why I go out of my way to point out restaurants that aren't with the program. They aren't providing their customers with the level of service they deserve.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Of course they are, but what does that have to do with the service they are refusing to offer which they are supposed to offer the people who ask for something different.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:I just I don't understand how you can argue against such a simple concept. When my wife and I go out to eat Szechan food and she asks for it to be medium hot, can you imagine if the restaurant refused and insisted she eat it super-hot because they decided their sliced fish soup in boiling oil was art? It doesn't make any sense.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:JPschust - I am sure that we couldn't because indeed, the relationship you say I would like to have is the relationship I actually have with many of these restaurants, and I know many other people who have the same relationship. Just because you don't have it, don't project the dynamic of your own situation on the rest of us.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:JeffB wrote:Steve Plotnicki wrote:But having said that, a simple request, like put the sauce on the side or don't make my meal too spicy, should be, and can be, easily honored by all restaurants.
And yet it is not so, thank God.
Actually it is so in 99.9% of the restaurants in the world which makes one wonder why the other .01% have such a hard time with the concept.
I know, the people who run them are schmucks. Could there be any other answer?
Next time you're in one of these venues with which you have this relationship, ask them to find the nearest cow, milk it, and make you some cheese on the spot. If it doesn't happen, I look forward to your explanation that JPschust wasn't right, it's that it wasn't actually a three Michelin-starred restaurant.
Fact. Hamburgers and steaks aren't art. The closest you can get to a hamburger being art is the DB Burger as it is a composed dish. Toppings on a hamburger just don't rise to the level of being an actual culinary composition.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Since I have work to do and I am scheduled for a lengthy massage in a bit over an hour, let me sign off this thread with the following post. In my opinion, the reason that the people here are so bent out of shape with what I am describing is that they are too insecure to demand this type of treatment for themselves when it comes to high end dining.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:But in my opinion, the position that most of you have taken works against your own best interests, and allows restaurants to continue to deprive diners of the treatment they are entitled to.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Because I have to tell you, for every 10 people who react the way you guys react, 1-2 pop up out of the woodwork and thank me for showing them a way to eat better.
Dmnkly wrote:...but thank you for confirming that you believe diners are entitled to the kinds of requests you detail on your website.
Santander wrote:Perhaps you should take that 10-20% for a nice trip to Guyana. Or establish a series of "true" full-service restaurants in the Sudetenland.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Dmnkly wrote:...but thank you for confirming that you believe diners are entitled to the kinds of requests you detail on your website.
But saying you are not entitled is just another way of saying you are too insecure to ask for it.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Since I have work to do and I am scheduled for a lengthy massage in a bit over an hour
cilantro wrote:Steve Plotnicki wrote:Since I have work to do and I am scheduled for a lengthy massage in a bit over an hour
Finally this thread has a happy ending.
Steve Plotnicki wrote:Since I have work to do and I am scheduled for a lengthy massage in a bit over an hour, let me sign off this thread....
eatchicago wrote:This is the same guy who once walked three blocks back to a McDonald's to return a plain hamburger because it had a pickle slice on it and he specifically requested "plain". "A pickle touched it. I wont't eat it. I'll walk back and they'll re-make it for me."
Athena wrote:My bigger gripe is with someone refusing to even try something in the first place because they've already pre-decided they aren't going to like it. How can you tell unless you try at least one mouthful?
dansch wrote:eatchicago wrote:This is the same guy who once walked three blocks back to a McDonald's to return a plain hamburger because it had a pickle slice on it and he specifically requested "plain". "A pickle touched it. I wont't eat it. I'll walk back and they'll re-make it for me."
"By this point I had had it and I picked the dish up off of the table and held it out and said to the waitress, 'Take this back I don’t want to eat this.'"
Pie Lady wrote:I can't believe a guy that's this big of an asshole as the guts to call the chef out on schmuckiness.
Kennyz wrote:Quite cunning to do the Plotnicki namecalling in this thread. It's got such an innocent title that it'll surely be awhile before the Mods notice. Once this one eventually gets locked, I propose the Happy Pi Day thread next.
Kennyz wrote:Quite cunning to do the Plotnicki namecalling in this thread. It's got such an innocent title that it'll surely be awhile before the Mods notice. Once this one eventually gets locked, I propose the Happy Pi Day thread next.