Cynthia wrote:A pet peeve of mine is people who take a box of cookies or donuts off the shelf at the store, open it, give a cookie or donut to the shrieking child sitting in their shopping cart, then put the box back on the shelf.
Cathy2 wrote:
That's simply stealing. I would call that to the attention of the management.
Cynthia wrote:Cathy2 wrote:
That's simply stealing. I would call that to the attention of the management.
That's probably a lot smarter than what I've occasionally done, which is grabbed the box and then, with a sweet smile, said, "oh, you forgot your box of donuts." If looks could kill, I'd have been dead on the spot. Except for the ones who simply look baffled. (That "not thinking" factor again.)
aschie30 wrote:I won't use non-squeeze bottle condiments at restaurants. I've seen too many people take a knife, dirty from using it to cut something like a burger, and then stick it into a jar of Grey Poupon, ketchup, etc. Which leaves nice, floating residue of foreign substance on top. It's then capped up and left for the unsuspecting next person to use.
I realize I'm a bit of a neat-nik, but this type of thing makes me want to wretch.
Sundaysous wrote:What no mention of double dippers?
aschie30 wrote:I won't use non-squeeze bottle condiments at restaurants. I've seen too many people take a knife, dirty from using it to cut something like a burger, and then stick it into a jar of Grey Poupon, ketchup, etc. Which leaves nice, floating residue of foreign substance on top. It's then capped up and left for the unsuspecting next person to use.
I realize I'm a bit of a neat-nik, but this type of thing makes me want to wretch.
s4shon wrote:I was at a Steak 'n Shake somewhere in central Indiana. A family of four sat down at an adjacent table. They had a boy who looked to be around 4 or 5 years old. While the parents were perusing the menu, I watched the boy pick up the salt shaker and suck on it, as if it were a bottle full of delicious goodness. No reprimand from the parents. No response to my shocked, gimlet-eyed glare. So I told the cashier about the incident on the way out.
David Hammond wrote:
I must admit to a rather phobic attitude toward salt shakers, reduced in no way by sightings such as these. The reason for my phobia: people touch them after bringing food to their own mouths, licking their fingers (an action I cannot bear to watch), etc. To minimize my exposure to bacteria deposited on these condiment containers, I always use my left hand when shaking salt on my food and I try to never use my left hand to eat (this is very problematic when I'm eating a sandwich or hamburger).
Of course, such a left-handed strategy does no good against the youthful barbarism you describe, but it helps a little (at least psychologically).
s4shon wrote:David Hammond wrote:
I must admit to a rather phobic attitude toward salt shakers, reduced in no way by sightings such as these. The reason for my phobia: people touch them after bringing food to their own mouths, licking their fingers (an action I cannot bear to watch), etc. To minimize my exposure to bacteria deposited on these condiment containers, I always use my left hand when shaking salt on my food and I try to never use my left hand to eat (this is very problematic when I'm eating a sandwich or hamburger).
Of course, such a left-handed strategy does no good against the youthful barbarism you describe, but it helps a little (at least psychologically).
Yup, I started formulating anti-contamination strategies after that incident. The best one I came up with: bring hand sanitizer everywhere go, and use it after applying condiments but before touching food with bare hands.
GardenofEatin wrote:s4shon wrote:David Hammond wrote:
I must admit to a rather phobic attitude toward salt shakers, reduced in no way by sightings such as these. The reason for my phobia: people touch them after bringing food to their own mouths, licking their fingers (an action I cannot bear to watch), etc. To minimize my exposure to bacteria deposited on these condiment containers, I always use my left hand when shaking salt on my food and I try to never use my left hand to eat (this is very problematic when I'm eating a sandwich or hamburger).
Of course, such a left-handed strategy does no good against the youthful barbarism you describe, but it helps a little (at least psychologically).
Yup, I started formulating anti-contamination strategies after that incident. The best one I came up with: bring hand sanitizer everywhere go, and use it after applying condiments but before touching food with bare hands.
The neat-nik germaphobe husband has got me doing the sanitizer thing, as well as trying to use a napkin around whatever condiment bottle/shaker I'm picking up, if possible.
Seriously, once you start to think about it, it can make you a little crazy.
abe_froeman wrote:I have a friend who bases her faith in humanity on the fact that you don't hear about psychos putting strychnine in ketchup bottles at restaurants.
riddlemay wrote:So, I was forced to conclude that the reason random murder doesn't happen more often than it does is that, hard as it is to believe, people actually do have a moral compass.
Josephine wrote:A moral compass? Perhaps. But maybe, like most of us here on the board, they are just looking forward to their next meal.
David Hammond wrote:To wit, a person of disgusting habits grabs a morsel from a buffet table and then eats it over the serving platter from which it came. What is the sense in that? Vile dribblings are thereby permitted to cascade from the chomping mouth, falling to the plate and dusting the remaining contents of the still full serving vehicle and its contents with a microbial-laced patina of spittle and slop. And for what? One could as easily grab the item – dip-covered vegetable, chip laden with salsa, chicken drummie slopped with cheese – and eat it over one’s own plate or simply over the floor and thereby cause fewer ill effects and offense to those of more delicate sensibilities such as myself. What exactly is wrong with people who do this?
I could not say, for I am a well-mannered individual.
Hammond
Cathy2 wrote:Hammond,
You really need to stop going to at-home buffets. You want the cheery ambiance of a steam table graced with a sneeze guard above. These can be found at Old Country Buffet, Chinese buffet restaurants and brunches.
Thank you for giving me a new aspect to people watch.
Regards,
aschie30 wrote:I won't use non-squeeze bottle condiments at restaurants. I've seen too many people take a knife, dirty from using it to cut something like a burger, and then stick it into a jar of Grey Poupon, ketchup, etc. Which leaves nice, floating residue of foreign substance on top. It's then capped up and left for the unsuspecting next person to use.
I realize I'm a bit of a neat-nik, but this type of thing makes me want to wretch.
imsscott wrote:aschie30 wrote:I won't use non-squeeze bottle condiments at restaurants. I've seen too many people take a knife, dirty from using it to cut something like a burger, and then stick it into a jar of Grey Poupon, ketchup, etc. Which leaves nice, floating residue of foreign substance on top. It's then capped up and left for the unsuspecting next person to use.
I realize I'm a bit of a neat-nik, but this type of thing makes me want to wretch.
My father used to have a way to keep the butter in the butter dish free of knife residue by sticking his used knife in his mouth and pulling it out between his lips to clean it off before he used it to take butter. Whenever I confronted him about it he always denied that he had done it.