More Stories of Fantastically Stupid Restaurant Customers, Part 2
In DepthWelcome back to Behind Closed Ovens, where we take a look at the best and strangest stories from inside the food industry. This week, we’ve got more stories of the dumbest human beings restaurants have ever witnessed. As always, these are real e-mails from real readers.
Sam Lin:
My friend worked at a bar in close proximity to a church a few years back, so they got a decent amount of the church crowd coming in to grab a few drinks, especially wedding guests killing time or people slipping away during funerals. One busy Saturday night, a crowd of about 20-30 people suddenly came in. My friend thought one of his coworkers was kidding when he said a woman in a wedding dress was among them. Then he looked up, and sure enough, there’s a woman in a wedding dress, a groom, bridesmaids, groomsmen, and a bunch of well-dressed people. Yep, it was a wedding party.
Needless to say, the bar was crowded and all the seats taken. Somehow, the wedding party seemed surprised by this, and one older man (father of the bride, maybe) came to complain to the manager, basically telling him he should make some of the customers move so that they could get enough tables for the wedding party. The manager refused, saying he could not/would not make paying customers move, and asked why the wedding party hadn’t made a reservation. The guy’s response? “Who makes a reservation at a bar?!”
Of course by now the whole place was staring at the wedding party in disbelief and amusement. Some of the men in the wedding party headed over to some of the tables in what my friend guessed was an effort to guilt them into moving, which failed, as most of the tables proceeded to order rounds of drinks or more food.
Up next comes the angry bride, who demanded to know why they were still serving “those people” when it was her wedding day. The manager explained that they are paying customers, and he would not force them to move. The bride then accused the staff of “ruining her wedding.” The manager again asked about why they didn’t make a reservation. The bride started crying, saying that “it’s not fair,” yadda yadda yadda.
Finally, the groom walked her away and they left to find another place to eat, but not before one of the bridesmaids stormed over and snapped at the staff that she didn’t know how we could sleep at night after what we did. Of course by then half the bar was laughing at them.
Diana Trayan:
I worked a good 6+ years at a family owned Italian bakery in the heart of Surrey (BC, Canada). I was working front of staff on a slightly less than busy Friday afternoon when the precious came in. She was looking at our display trying to pick out a cake for a dinner party and pointed to one of the cakes (a cheesecake). I took the cake out and got my notebook ready for what she wanted written on it, when she scrunched up her face and makes a face like she’d just discovered the cake was made of calories or something.
She sidled up to me next to our counter and asks me in a very conspiratorial tone “What is cheesecake?” I give her the spark notes on it (cream cheese, eggs, sugar, flavor, Graham crackers, baked). “Oh, ok, but is there any dairy in that?”
I looked at her, then at my manager who was stifling a laugh. I turned back to her and said, “Ma’am, as I said it’s a cheese…cake. It’s made of cheese…which is a dairy product.”
She made the most disgusted face and said, “Eww, why would you make a cake taste like cheese and crackers?! Besides, I can’t have dairy.”
Then she bought a cream puff cake that had “real whipping cream” signage.
Aaron Kitteridge:
I bartend at a burger bar on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The bar carries more than 50 American craft beers (draft/bottles/cans), and is generally more well known for their beer/whiskey than any cocktails—although we do have a cocktail menu and the majority of our bartenders are fairly knowledgeable of the full scope of bartending.
During one particular dinner rush, I had a ticket come in from a server for a dirty vodka martini. OK, fair enough. A few minutes, later the server returned to the side station with martini in hand saying the customer sent it back. I asked why, a little taken aback—which is when I was informed that it had been sent back because the drink was “too cold.” For those who may not be bar savvy, this would be the equivalent of sending a bowl of soup back to the kitchen for being too hot.
I looked at the server, rubbed my hands together for a few seconds, then placed them around the glass and said, “send it back.” The server didn’t think I was serious, so I told her to go take care of another table and come back a few minutes later and just bring back the same drink.
The drink did not come back a second time.
Jasmine Laviolette:
I work at a bar that is inside an old theatre. We show movies, have concerts, comedy, private events, and are open for big sports games. We have a full menu and do kitchen service from the concessions in the front. They also serve popcorn, pastries that we make in house, and fountain drinks.
One day during a football game, a woman walked down the ramp holding a brownie on a plate, paused and asked me “There isn’t anything…special…in this brownie, is there?”
“Uh, no.” Yes, we totally sell brownies with illegal drugs in them unmarked, and often to children, and yet are not shut down. Definitely.
Craig Ballantine:
For four summers I worked waiting a little seafood shack on a small New England island, pretty much your idyllic teenage summer experience. Early one Tuesday evening, when we were all standing around dead slow, this dude comes in, grabs a menu on his own, then saunters into our smoking section, and sits alone. After a minute, he waves me over and says with an oily grin, “Dude, you take care of me today, and I’ll take care of you.”
No customer who says “I’m going to take care of you” ever takes care of you. The very fact that they think it means they’ll get something extra instantly proves that their view of the world is cracked.
Anyway, the guy has his entire order ready: “Okay, here’s what we’re gonna do. See this chef’s side salad you have? Yeah, to start I want two of those and I want you to mix them together in a big bowl and I want you to just DROWN them in ranch dressing.” He did say “drown.” “And then for my main course I want the surf and turf.”
We don’t have surf and turf. It’s not on the menu. We have good steaks, we have large lobsters alive in tanks ready to go, but we’re not Long John Silver or Olive Garden, and we don’t have surf and turf. I tell him I’m sorry, but we don’t have surf and turf.
“And here I thought we were getting along!” he says. “I don’t care what you call it, I want that 2-pound lobster you show there, and I want that piece of filet mignon you have there, and I want you to bring me them both at the same time. POW! Surf and turf!” I’m remembering him with a Matthew McConaughey drawl, but I’m 90% sure that’s because he had one. He also orders his second dirty martini, rocks, extra olives.
I go back into the kitchen and put the order through and tell the cooks to just go with it. I take the already-prepped chef’s side salads, dump them into a punchbowl, pour about a pint of ranch on them, toss them, and bring them out to Not-McConaughey.
“Now see, this is what I’m talking about!” he says with a grin. He digs in, and five minutes later he orders his third dirty martini. His check is now over $165. Two-pound lobsters are freaking enormous, and not cheap.
His lobster and steak is ready about twenty minutes later, when he’s kicking off martini number four. I bring out the food and he’s again over the moon. I start wondering if maybe I actually like the guy, at least a little.
The restaurant starts filling up. Eventually, I head back to High Roller’s table.
And it’s empty. He’s destroyed the lobster, steak, and fourth martini; remnants of the carnage are strewn across the table. Thinking he’s in the bathroom, I start to walk away, but then notice a torn scrap of paper stuck under his steak plate. I pull it out and there’s also two $20 bills there. Unfolding the paper, I read “Please charge to Dave Simski. Keep the tip, guy.”
Dave Simski is a local islander who owns a landscaping business and two takeaway restaurants. I run for the shift manager, who’s also the owner, who calls the cops. The local sergeant on duty comes down and I tell the story. He phones Dave Simski, talks to him for a minute, nods, chats with the owner for a minute, and leaves.
Turns out High-Roller had worked for Dave Simski for all the previous month mowing lawns and painting, and had just been fired earlier that day for doing absolutely no work and being permanently stoned. After walking out on us, he then walked directly across the parking lot to get on the one-hour ferry back to the mainland.
One hour was more than enough time for the island police to call the state police, and then plenty of time for the state police to come down to the dock and wait for the ferry to arrive and arrest High Roller as he strolled off the boat.
The owner let me keep the tip.
Candace Creeland:
When I was in college, I worked in a local pizza shop that did gourmet pizzas by the pie and by the slice. We had a lot of cool gourmet pizzas and also did a lot of custom pizzas, so I was used to taking down a lot of weird requests about toppings.
One afternoon, a particularly rushed and rude sounded woman called the restaurant to order our Philly cheesesteak pizza, with “no mayonnaise.” We never, EVER put mayonnaise on any of our pizzas, and didn’t even have any in stock, so I assured her that mayo wouldn’t be a problem.
SIDE NOTE: Most of our white pizzas (including the Philly cheesesteak) had a crème fraîche and cheese sauce instead of the classic tomato. It was delicious and we used to make it fresh in the back.
(Editor’s Note: To everyone who sees where this is headed and is about to make some dumb comment about “why didn’t she just tell the lady the pizza didn’t have mayo on it,” I hate you more deeply than I am able to express in mere human language.
…but still not quite as much as I hate the people about to smugly, snobbishly insist “ANY PIZZA THAT DOESN’T HAVE TOMATO SAUCE IS AN ABOMINATION AND IS NOT PIZZA, LOOK AT ME I’M SO CLEVER AND IMPORTANT WITH MY TERRIBLE PIZZA OPINIONS.”)
This lady’s boyfriend or husband or whatever comes to pick the pizza up, and is super nice and leaves a tip in the tip jar (maybe he was aware of what a harpy this lady was on the phone). I go about my business of folding pizza boxes and watching daytime television. About 20 minutes later, this red-faced, Oompa Loompa-looking woman storms through the door shrieking about mayonnaise.
I tried to reason with this lady, and explain that the white stuff she is having a coronary about is crème fraîche, not mayo, but the spit flecks kept flying as she got in my face telling me how stupid I am and how she “ASKED FOR NO FUCKING MAYONNAISE, DON’T YOU KNOW HOW DISGUSTING THAT IS.” I even showed her the goddamned menu that listed all of the toppings, but she wouldn’t budge. She just kept telling me how gross it was that we put mayo on pizza and how dare we put something unhealthy on her pizza that she specifically asked us not to include, didn’t I know she was trying to lose weight? Why would she want mayo on her pizza?
I calmly looked at her and told her that pizza wasn’t a good choice if she was trying to eat healthy, and if she would like her pizza replaced with a salad, it would be no problem.
Jenna Crane:
I worked as a bartender/server while in college. One night, I was serving on the floor and waited on a table of two older gentlemen. They were nice at first, but as the night went on, they got progressively drunker and more difficult to control. It was getting towards the end of the night and I was bussing nearby tables, clearing off the piles of empty beer bottles. While doing this, one of the men called me over to their table and began to slur their next beer order at me. Since my hands were full, I put down one of the beer bottles to pull out my notepad (just to be clear, I put the bottle pretty far away from him, close to the end of the table and myself).
Well, the other gentleman thought I had brought it for him and reached for the bottle. At the same time I realized what was happening and, realizing that the bottle was half full of old beer with a ton of used cigarette butts in it, reached for the bottle as well. I told him it wasn’t his beer, it was garbage, and we both grabbed it at the same time. He had the top end and was trying to put it to his mouth, and I had the back end trying to stop him from making a terrible mistake of drinking cigarette butts. We proceeded to play tug of war with the bottle while I tried to explain to his intoxicated self that it was not his beer, it was garbage, you don’t want to drink this.
Finally, I realized he was an asshole and I’d done my due diligence to prevent him from drinking it, and let go. He took a big chug out of the bottle, realized something was wrong and spat it all over himself. Then looked at me and said, “what did you do to my beer?” Then the bouncer came over after seeing the tug of war and kicked the guy out.
Erica Ogando: