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Sunday, November 8, 2009

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User post: 13 Things Your Waiter Won't Tell You

Waiters share insider secrets about restaurants -- from tipping to what days to avoid dining out

From Waiter Rant: Thanks for the Tip-Confessions of a Cynical Waiter by The Waiter (Ecco/HarperCollins)



Photo: Clipart.com

1. Avoid eating out on holidays and Saturday nights. The sheer volume of customers guarantees that most kitchens will be pushed beyond their ability to produce a high-quality dish.

2. There are almost never any sick days in the restaurant business. A busboy with a kid to support isn't going to stay home and miss out on $100 because he's got strep throat. And these are the people handling your food.

3. When customers' dissatisfaction devolves into personal attacks, adulterating food or drink is a convenient way for servers to exact covert vengeance. Some waiters can and do spit in people's food.

4. Never say "I'm friends with the owner." Restaurant owners don't have friends. This marks you as a clueless poseur the moment you walk in the door.

5. Treat others as you want to be treated. (Yes, people need to be reminded of this.)

6. Don't snap your fingers to get our attention. Remember, we have shears that cut through bone in the kitchen.

7. Don't order meals that aren't on the menu. You're forcing the chef to cook something he doesn't make on a regular basis. If he makes the same entrée 10,000 times a month, the odds are good that the dish will be a home run every time.

8. Splitting entrées is okay, but don't ask for water, lemon, and sugar so you can make your own lemonade. What's next, grapes so you can press your own wine?

9. If you find a waiter you like, always ask to be seated in his or her section. Tell all your friends so they'll start asking for that server as well. You've just made that waiter look indispensable to the owner. The server will be grateful and take good care of you.

10. If you can't afford to leave a tip, you can't afford to eat in the restaurant. Servers could be giving 20 to 40 percent to the busboys, bartenders, maître d', or hostess.

11. Always examine the check. Sometimes large parties are unaware that a gratuity has been added to the bill, so they tip on top of it. Waiters "facilitate" this error. It's dishonest, it's wrong-and I did it all the time.

12. If you want to hang out, that's fine. But increase the tip to make up for money the server would have made if he or she had had another seating at that table.

13. Never, ever come in 15 minutes before closing time. The cooks are tired and will cook your dinner right away. So while you're chitchatting over salads, your entrées will be languishing under the heat lamp while the dishwasher is spraying industrial-strength, carcinogenic cleaning solvents in their immediate vicinity.


More Must-Reads from Reader's Digest:
13 Things Your Pizza Guy Won't Tell You

13 Things Your Dry Cleaner Won't Tell You

13 Things Your Grocer Won't Tell You


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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 2,851
  • Penny Lane's Avatar
    Posted by Penny Lane Tue Jun 23, 2009 12:13pm PDT

    Sad but true. The last one especially. I hated when people would come in 10-15 minutes before closing and then get upset when they find out that you'll be closing. Did you not see the sign on the door when you walked in?

    And treating the wait-staff like they are subordinate and less than a person, this always irked me. They're doing their job, don't treat them like garbage. They don't come to your office and demand things of you.

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  • Brianna's Avatar
    Posted by Brianna Tue Jun 23, 2009 12:34pm PDT

    Penny Lane, the last sentence in your comment is not always true if you also work in a service industry. I wouldn't treat them badly anyways, but I was a cashier at a car dealership for the service department and I got treated like it was my fault fixing the transmission cost them 4k. Now I work in a tax office and its my fault they owe the IRS 250k. It always sucks working the service industry, people will always treat you like less of a person because they can.

    I was actually asked by a restaurant to come in when they were about to close, we walked over and saw they were closing, were disappointed and were leaving when the server cleaning up outside asked us if we wanted to come in anyways. Makes me scared of what they did, not like it was fancy though... Johnny Rockets :P

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  • Ahleah G's Avatar
    Posted by Ahleah G Tue Jun 23, 2009 12:53pm PDT

    We used to call Saturday 'amateur night' because that is when the quality of the customers seemed to decline. More people who do not know how to tip or who would snap their fingers and make lots of special requests. We would increase our waitstaff to cover the increased number of customers, so it was not a service issue... I don't agree with number 4 though. The restaurant where I worked was privately owned, and friends of the owners came in regularly. It it's a chain then it's obviously a stupid comment, but for a local joint it could be true. We were usually alerted in advance if friends of the owner were coming in. And for number 7, if you have a legitimate food allergy, ask what items would be ok for you to order or easy to modify to accomodate your allergy. But please don't lie about an allergy just to get something special made for you.

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  • Tyche's Avatar
    Posted by Tyche Tue Jun 23, 2009 1:22pm PDT

    So, when a restaurant has the closing time posted as, say, 10:00 PM, what this REALLY means is that they are -effectively- closed at 9:30 or so, as after this time you will get subpar service and food. I will take note of this and not take open hours at face value.

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  • cindy's Avatar
    Posted by cindy Tue Jun 23, 2009 1:31pm PDT

    I think number 5 should be number 1. In all area's of your life.

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  • 80'sgirl's Avatar
    Posted by 80'sgirl Tue Jun 23, 2009 1:36pm PDT

    loved this...especially #10

    but does anyone remember Tyra Banks doing #8 on her show and acting like everyone should do this? sad!!!

    Report Abuse
  • j's Avatar
    Posted by j Tue Jun 23, 2009 1:45pm PDT

    #3 Yes waiters can and sometimes do spit in their customer's food - and when they get caught, they go to jail. Pass that around the kitchen.

    Report Abuse
  • AmandaG's Avatar
    Posted by AmandaG Tue Jun 23, 2009 7:47pm PDT

    I would like to add that "altering" a customers food, no matter how much of an ass they are is wrong and it's also assault. I used to work in retail and I can't tell you how many times I've wanted to beat customers over the head with a hanger, but I didn't do it. Why? because it's assault and it's wrong.

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  • anon's Avatar
    Posted by anon Wed Jun 24, 2009 6:42am PDT

    i've never seen a waiter spit in food, but the ones i worked with were awesome people. the rest of this makes me smile. right on.

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  • melloZee's Avatar
    Posted by melloZee Wed Jun 24, 2009 6:45am PDT

    So I am right again. I do not go to the restaurant on mother's day

    and other days that society deem are special days. As the article says the food always taste like crap. After you wait forever to get it and you pay an arm and a leg for it, then when you get home the first thing you do is hit the fridge to see if there is any left over you can pop in the microwave.

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