sujormik wrote:Went with our closest friends to a new place, Pleeze, in a Highland Park. The service slow as expected, no problem.
So I order this brick chicken dish, menu says its a half chicken. Meal comes and it's a breast with a small wing bone. It was good, but I was a bit surprised/disappointed. I like bringing home leftovers for lunch.
Manager asks how everything is so I tell him I was expecting a half chicken and he goes oh no, it's just a breast. I ask him to double check. So he looks at the menu, then comes over to tell me the new menu has a typo and shouldn't say half chicken. I say I'm disappointed, so he says the owner will be right over.
Owner comes over and he says, it's a large 10oz breast, "airline" style. I was expecting a half chicken like the menu said. He kind of wasn't accepting my point, asked if I'd ever been to XYZ place, they do it that way there. I tell him no, haven't been there, and I was expecting a half chicken, looked forward to the dark meat. I told him I certainly wouldn't have ordered this dish at this price if I'd known it was a breast. Ultimately hs offers to get me another meal, but I don't want to do that, I LIKE the chicken but wanted him to acknowledge the mistake. Don't imply I'm wrong because you gave me an airline breast. Didn't really get a concession but ultimately he offers to pick up dessert, and that's that. But weird guy.
There was no attitude, or tone, or anything, just wanted him to say like "oops, our bad, sorry" but when he went on about the large breast I couldn't give in.
So is "airline breast" (10 oz vs usual 6 oz breast) really a thing?
Food was very tasty, nice feel to the room, jazz guitar began around 9:30 ish.
ronnie_suburban wrote:The owner doesn't sound like the sharpest knife in the drawer and he seems like a terrible business person, too. At least the manager admitted there was an error on the menu. Only in Highland Park does a half-chicken not include dark meat. Apparently, they're going to re-write the book on this. I'll pass on Pleeze, thank you very much.
Start the clock on this place . . .
=R=
ronnie_suburban wrote: Only in Highland Park does a half-chicken not include dark meat. Apparently, they're going to re-write the book on this. I'll pass on Pleeze, thank you very much.
Start the clock on this place . . .
Cathy2 wrote:Of course, it has nothing to do with Highland Park.
G Wiv wrote:Personally not a fan of Airline Chicken, just a fancy way of saying white meat.
At Barn & Company we serve a brined/smoked bone-in half chicken. A few weeks ago one of the servers came over with a perplexed look on her face and says there's a fellow at 404 who is 'expressing annoyance' that our menu states half chicken and he was served simply a breast. She politely explained it was a half chicken, he expressed annoyance in a more assertive fashion. She asked if I would please speak to him.
Its a dad with a young, maybe 6-year-old, daughter in a sparkly dress and she is quite animated, happy, excited as they are going to see Fancy Nancy at the Apollo Theater, which is just down the street. He does not seem to be in the same happy mood as his daughter and as I walk up in my chef coat he says "so they got out the big guns" and what do we propose to do about the chicken breast on his plate.
As I walk up I take a good look and as suspected its a nice size bone-in half chicken. At Barn & Co we have a strict never argue customer is always right policy, if someone does not like something, happens, not often, but it happens, we whisk it way, take it off the bill and offer something else on the house.
I put a smile on my face and said while we have a strict policy of customer is always right, in this instance I have to break protocol as that is indeed a half chicken on the plate. He was not convinced, one again expressed annoyance, folded his arms across his chest and gave me a look.
I smiled, told his daughter she looked pretty, indicated toward his knife and fork asked "may I" and proceeded to cut his chicken into 4 pieces, leg/thigh and the breast in half. He looked at the plate, looked at me, put on his glasses and looked at the plate again. He was still not particularly happy, but did agree it was indeed a half chicken.
In the interest of good customer relations I offered to get him something else, he declined and said he was in the mood for chicken. I then offered to bring out a skillet cookie with ice cream for dessert, a sure fire hit with kids, and once again he declined saying they were running late for the show.
I'm pretty good at smoothing the waters, but this fellow was simply in a mood. Makes for a good, if somewhat lengthy, story though.![]()
Regards,
Gary Wiviott
Pitmaster, Barn & Company
sujormik wrote:So is "airline breast" (10 oz vs usual 6 oz breast) really a thing?
Cathy2 wrote:It was interesting there is cut out there called 'airline chicken breast,' you learn something new every day.
Wikipedia wrote:Airline chicken is a food dish comprising a boneless chicken breast with the drumette attached. Skin on breast with 1st wing joint and tenderloin attached, otherwise boneless.
Jazzfood wrote:The attached wing is why it's called "airline" breast.
nsxtasy wrote:sujormik wrote:So is "airline breast" (10 oz vs usual 6 oz breast) really a thing?
Yes, but it has nothing to do with size; see below.
sujormik wrote:The donut holes he comped us for dessert
Octarine wrote:The only time I've ever seen airline chicken in Chicago was at Chief O'Neills'.
sujormik wrote:Went with our closest friends to a new place, Pleeze, in a Highland Park. The service slow as expected, no problem.
riddlemay wrote:sujormik wrote:Went with our closest friends to a new place, Pleeze, in a Highland Park. The service slow as expected, no problem.
Only part that confuses me is why you'd expect slow service.
Katie wrote:. . .and the manager should have been courteous enough, not to mention savvy enough, to acknowledge as much.
sujormik wrote:Manager asks how everything is so I tell him I was expecting a half chicken and he goes oh no, it's just a breast. I ask him to double check. So he looks at the menu, then comes over to tell me the new menu has a typo and shouldn't say half chicken.
sujormik wrote:Owner comes over and he says, it's a large 10oz breast, "airline" style . . .
ronnie_suburban wrote:riddlemay wrote:sujormik wrote:Went with our closest friends to a new place, Pleeze, in a Highland Park. The service slow as expected, no problem.
Only part that confuses me is why you'd expect slow service.
Because they'd just opened?