Stories of Horrible 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 week two of that old favorite: horrible, terrible, no-good, very bad restaurant customers. As always, these are real e-mails from real readers.
Natalie Sironis:
I used to work at a prolific steakhouse chain in Vancouver, Canada called The Keg (it’s sort of like a non-à la carte Morton’s, for all you Americans). I was seated this group of 8 young-ish men on a mid-week night. I kind of sighed to myself, dreading all the work and no tip that this table was going to bring me, but I sucked it up and was as sweet and helpful to them as I could possibly be in the hopes that they would prove me wrong. All of them—all. Of. Them.—ordered steak and lobster (one of the most expensive dishes on the menu), and multiple drinks each. “Wow, they must be very wealthy,” I thought to myself.
Throughout the night, they would go out on smoke breaks, leaving the usual collateral on the table (i.e. cell phones, wallets, each other) to let me know they’d be back. After they inhaled their food, when I presented with the choice of dessert or cheque, they all opted for their own individual confections and glasses of port. “Holy moly, money is no option for these dudes,” I thought to myself.
After I served them their sugary treats, I left them their bill, all beautifully divided so there wouldn’t be any problems with who owes what. They started digging in, while a couple of them headed out for another drag. I should mention that this happened right at the end of my shift, when I was trying to finish my closing duties so I could get the hell out of there and go home—plus their section was not very visible from anywhere in the restaurant unless you were standing in it.
I went to check on them and they weren’t not back from their smoke yet, but they had left a cellphone and a wallet on the table, so I figured they’d return. Wrong. After 10 more minutes, I popped my head out of the entrance to see where they were at. They weren’t there. I ran to the table, thinking “but what about their phone and wallet?!” Turns out, the phone was a plastic fake and the effing wallet was empty. So basically, they schemed about screwing me over well ahead of time. Yay for humans!
(Editor’s Note: Soon-to-be headline on Seventeen: “You’ll Never Believe the Awesome Way These Guys Found to Eat Expensive Dinners For Free!”)
Gemma Sainsbury:
One night working at an IHOP, I witnessed quite possibly the rudest older gentleman I have ever met. Not only did he demand me to seat him at a dirty table, but when I asked them to wait while I cleaned it, he and his wife sat down instead making it nearly impossible to clean it. Luckily, this wasn’t my table and another server took over.
Where I work, it’s custom to give one napkin per person at the table when a guest asks. The server brought the couple two napkins and he responded saying, “bring some more napkins and next time don’t be so fucking stingy.” Another couple was sitting at the table next to them and they overheard the man ridiculing his wife the entire time. He even yelled at her for using too many napkins. The other couple asked their server to bring the man’s wife a peach crepe because they didn’t think they way he was treating her was right.
The other couple’s server brought the wife her dessert and the first thing the man did was complain because they left him out. She shrugged and walked away. When the wife went to eat her dessert, he ordered her to give it to him. And he ate it.
Steve Jamison:
We had this incredibly sickly looking family come into my restaurant one evening. Dad was grey, sallow, sunken-eyed and looked like he was about to burst into tears. Mom was the walking embodiment of the phrase, “Lady, suck a lemon and unpucker your mouth.” She walked in with a grimace like she could smell fresh shit from a backed-up toilet. Following them were two of the most ill-looking children you could imagine. If you’d seen photos of the childrens’ homes for kids with HIV from late 80s Romania, they looked happier and healthier than these two kids.
This was Monday night, which are always dead, so there was just one barman, one waiter and me, the manager—I was also the host and running a section.
“Good evening, guys,” I say in a nice enthusiastic way, trying to set the tone. “I’m Mike, I’m gonna be your waiter this evening. Have you been here before?”
“Yes.” says the mother, not looking at me.
Oooooooooooookay. It’s going to be one of those evenings. “Cool, that makes it easy then, I don’t have to explain the menu. Can I get you something to drink?”
“Yes. A bottle of water and four glasses.”
“Comin’ right up, ma’am. Still or sparkling?”
“If I wanted still water, I would have ordered tap water.” Yup, it’s going to be one of those evenings. I bounce off up to the bar, turn the lights down a notch, the music up a notch, and take their water over to their table with their glasses. I ask if they’re ready to order or if they need a few minutes. Now the law has recently changed in the UK and you need to point out the 14 most common allergens in food. Our way of doing it is to have two folders—one with a list of ingredients, and a second with a list of modifications that can be made to certain dishes to remove the allergens. Obviously, some dishes can’t be changed.
“My husband and I are vegan. My daughter is vegetarian and both of them are allergic to gluten, lactose, shellfish, soya, onions, peppers and GM foods.” I’m assuming the kids survive on eating air, then. Assuming it’s not red air, cause they’d probably be allergic to that too.
Now I’ve got a degree in genetics and biochemistry and I know that it’s not possible to be allergic to GM foods. So I explain that I’ll go and get the folder and show them each dish in the allergens folder. It’s basically the print out of a spreadsheet with the name of the dish across the top and the allergens listed down the left. I tell them that anything with a cross against it means they can’t have it as there’s an ingredient in it we can’t change. Anything with a tick is fine, and anything with a tick on a blue background means that there’s something in the dish we can remove or substitute. This is where the second folder comes it, and that’s just for staff to use. That tells us what we can change to make the dishes suitable. The soy and onion allergy is about to come in pertinently here as we’re a FUCKING ASIAN RESTAURANT and that pretty much all our sauces have either soy, onions, or both in them.
So mother and father end up ordering the vegetarian ramen, subbing ramen noodles for udon, taking out the asparagus and courgette and subbing in a mix of shiitake, oyster and enoki. To which I was then informed that they weren’t paying for the mushrooms—even though they’re more expensive than the courgettes and asparagus—plus, no spring onions on top. Easy, sorted. I write this down on their placemats, spend five minutes typing it into the computer and then move onto the kids.
For the girl: one vegetable ramen, udon not ramen, no courgettes or asparagus, sub mushrooms—but only shiitake and button mushrooms. By this point, I can’t be arsed typing things, so I hit the “see waiter” button on the pad and move onto the boy.
“Can I have the chicken kare lomen please mum?”
“I’m sorry,” I say, “it’s got shrimp paste in the sauce, and seeing as you’re allergic to shellfish…”
“Oh he’ll be fine. He’s only allergic to whole shellfish.” I want to cry. I don’t mind if you don’t like things, but don’t lie and tell me you’re allergic to things. By this point, I’d already had the kitchen clean down two of the hotplates and the woks because of “allergies”.
So the food is ordered. I write everything down, go through it with the table and then take my notes to the kitchen and explain everything to the senior sous.
The food comes out. The food gets sent back. The vege ramens are “Too greasy, you can see oil floating on the top.”
“Yes, MADAM.” I replied tersely, “That’s sesame oil and there are five drops of it in each bowl.” AS IT SAYS ON THE SHITTY MENU IF YOU’D BOTHER TO READ IT I rage internally.
“Well, we’re allergic to sesame, like I told you.”
“I’m sorry MADAM *growl*, I get some fresh ones made up for you, give me a couple of minutes.”
Foods #2 come out and are passable. At least I they were. I did my checkback as you’re supposed to and asked if anyone wanted another drink. I got a grunt from father and ignored by the rest.
The kicker to this story? They ordered two lots of vanilla ice cream, one passion fruit cheesecake and one banana fritter with ice cream, a latte, a cappuccino and two hot chocolates for the kids.
And they stiffed me 25p, rounding their bill down.
Ali Cornish:
So I am old enough that when I was a senior in high school, I worked at Starbucks. Our store was on the west side of Vancouver (Canada), pretty near the university in a really nice neighborhood, and most of the people that worked there were pretty young kids in high school or early college. We were also mostly women, so our closing shifts were often 100% female and under 25. Starbucks used to have this asshole policy where you would close at 10 or whatever, but you couldn’t lock the front door until 10:10 or something, I have no idea why.
One night we were pretty much done—it was like 10:09 and we had already run Purecaf through the espresso machine (a toxic degreasing chemical) and started to mop the floors. One of us walked over to lock the doors, and as she was doing it, this middle aged douchecanoe shitbag manperson shoved the door towards her and aggressively entered the store. She told him we were closing RIGHT NOW, and he started yapping about how he knows Starbucks policy and it’s 10:09 and technically we have to serve him. My co-worker was like, ok, whatever guy—easier to say yes than no with raged-out older guys, as all women know—so this dude storms up to the counter and demands an Americano (a coffee drink made with hot water added to several shots of espresso). We say “sorry guy, Purecaf is circulating through the machine, it’s poison, you will die, please take a drip coffee instead, no charge even.” Ragedick INSISTS that DRIP COFFEE IS UNACCEPTABLE and he MUST have an Americano.
I’m behind the espresso bar. I’m in high school. It’s Canada (circa 1992) and I have never heard of the word litigious, so I’m like, fine have your cup of poison, I will happily make it for you, SIR. I make the Americano, hand it to him, and he demands a metal spoon to stir it. I hand him the spoon, he stirs the coffee, and then proceeds to try to throw this lava-hot drink at my goddamn face. Fortunately I had a terrible relationship with my sister as a teenager, so I was the queen of dodging projectiles. He burned my hand a bit, but not my face, and then he ran out of the store. I was totally in shock.
Fortunately, we had a pretty good relationship with the local cops (again, this was Canada, not America, so all the young cops had Women’s Studies degrees and wanted to help poor people and shit). These two undercover cops had been sitting at a table inside the store the entire time. They saw this shit go down, immediately booked it out of the store, got in their cruiser, turned their siren on, and pulled this asshole over. He had priors for sexual assault (no surprise there) and a couple of outstanding warrants, so they threw his ass in jail.
This is probably the only story in my entire life where cops look like heroes.
Kara Sakov:
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