bern bern wrote:I once saw something similar to this at Parky's on Harlem and Madison in Forest Park. There was an out of state man, ( the state shall remain nameless) who ordered a combo with relish, ketchup and mustard. The woman taking orders warned him that it was a different kind of sandwich that does not require condiments of this nature and in fact abhors such dressing. He replied that he ate everything with ketchup, mustard and relish and she said, "this is the first time I have ever served a sandwich this way."
He went outside to eat it on the picnic bench while everyone inside started with the same fascination as watching a car accident.
Unfortunately, the this thread does not seem isolated.
See, this kind of response to a customer seems as nutty to me as the incident at Lao Sze Chuan where a waitress refused to serve GWiv a dish because she was sure he wouldn't like it. What arrogance!
Now, I'm not saying that it's good or bad to want a specific condiment on a sandwich, and I am definitely saying it's weird to put catsup on an IB, but when a customer wants to eat a sandwich his or her way, how in the name of Customer Service can a server suggest that his or her way is wrong? That's just totally wack to me and much more odd than having catsup on an IB.
Incidentally, Parky's on Roosevelt is now gone -- replaced by a Mexican place called, I think, Los Compadres or something like that.
Hammond
PS. I believe the server was being less than truthful when she said she'd never served a sandwich "that way" before. Never? Balderdash!
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins