Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was paying cash in this situation, I would probably just leave $10 on the counter. If I was paying card, I'd probably pay $8. But realistically, I wouldn't eat out for what you describe. I would not pay $6 for 2 eggs and a piece of bread.
$6 is cheap! It costs $6 for one of those crummy frozen microwaved Starbucks eggs sandwiches/wraps.
Yeah, my point was that I would not purchase this breakfast in a restaurant at all. $10 will get you a dozen eggs and a loaf of bread and you can have this breakfast every morning for 2 weeks.
If I'm traveling and don't have access to my own eggs and bread, I'd choose something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's OK to leave $2. At that price point, it's the gesture that counts.
Also, please ignore the crazy people who pay nearly as much on a tip than on the order. That is very far beyond social expectations, and it really doesn't increase their odds of getting into Heaven (or whatever virtue signaling they're angling for).
For the server working extra hard to put together an income out of those small tips, it's not just a gesture.
If I order a meal that costs a lot less than the restaurant typically serves, then I will pay a tip closer to normal for that restaurant. So, if I take up a table to eat alone, and choose something cheap. Or if I take my kid out and he eats from the kid's menu and I just have water (this happened sometimes when we traveled as I get motion sickness and don't want dinner), I'll pay a tip that would be enough for 2 regular meals. I don't care about the "social expectation". I pay so that my server, who did nothing wrong, goes home with the same level of pay they would if they got the customer before or after me.
Cool.
Practically no one else does this. The people who tip normal amounts don't do anything wrong either. A tip is OPTIONAL, and the server's private life is not really your, or anyone else's business.
So before you get all emotional over your own virtuous good works, PP, just remind yourself that you are not that important.
Anonymous wrote:How is it page 2 and no one has asked where we can also get eggs and toast at a restaurant for $6? Is it in 1995?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's OK to leave $2. At that price point, it's the gesture that counts.
Also, please ignore the crazy people who pay nearly as much on a tip than on the order. That is very far beyond social expectations, and it really doesn't increase their odds of getting into Heaven (or whatever virtue signaling they're angling for).
For the server working extra hard to put together an income out of those small tips, it's not just a gesture.
If I order a meal that costs a lot less than the restaurant typically serves, then I will pay a tip closer to normal for that restaurant. So, if I take up a table to eat alone, and choose something cheap. Or if I take my kid out and he eats from the kid's menu and I just have water (this happened sometimes when we traveled as I get motion sickness and don't want dinner), I'll pay a tip that would be enough for 2 regular meals. I don't care about the "social expectation". I pay so that my server, who did nothing wrong, goes home with the same level of pay they would if they got the customer before or after me.
Cool.
Practically no one else does this. The people who tip normal amounts don't do anything wrong either. A tip is OPTIONAL, and the server's private life is not really your, or anyone else's business.
So before you get all emotional over your own virtuous good works, PP, just remind yourself that you are not that important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's OK to leave $2. At that price point, it's the gesture that counts.
Also, please ignore the crazy people who pay nearly as much on a tip than on the order. That is very far beyond social expectations, and it really doesn't increase their odds of getting into Heaven (or whatever virtue signaling they're angling for).
For the server working extra hard to put together an income out of those small tips, it's not just a gesture.
If I order a meal that costs a lot less than the restaurant typically serves, then I will pay a tip closer to normal for that restaurant. So, if I take up a table to eat alone, and choose something cheap. Or if I take my kid out and he eats from the kid's menu and I just have water (this happened sometimes when we traveled as I get motion sickness and don't want dinner), I'll pay a tip that would be enough for 2 regular meals. I don't care about the "social expectation". I pay so that my server, who did nothing wrong, goes home with the same level of pay they would if they got the customer before or after me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tenner and let her keep the change if you carry cash. $5 tip on a card. Make her day a little brighter for a couple extra bucks. Who cares.
She messed up a simple order.
I would have sent the toast back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tenner and let her keep the change if you carry cash. $5 tip on a card. Make her day a little brighter for a couple extra bucks. Who cares.
She messed up a simple order.