Anonymous wrote:Man orders a $20 bottle of house red. Waiter brings bottle over, shows man the bottle, opens the cork, pours a taste, man approves, waiter pours the glass, makes a comment to enjoy the wine, walks off. Tip: 20% of $20 = $4.
Man orders a $800 bottle of Lafitte. Waiter brings bottle over, shows man the bottle, opens the cork, pours a taste, man approves, waiter pours the glass, makes a comment to enjoy the wine, walks off. Tip: 20% of $800 = $160.
See how moronic post booze is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. People are so rude and stingy and clearly haven't ever worked in the restaurant industry. I think everyone needs to have a food service job for at good six months. You really get to know the true nature of people in that industry.
ITA
Seriously? Some of you rich-ass DCUMs tip pre-tax and pre-booze!?!?
I honestly had never even heard that people do that, but it does explain why I occasionally got such shitty tips when I worked at a restaurant/bar.
Stingy, stingy.
Anonymous wrote:tipping is not mandatory and should only be given if service and food was exceptional.
Anonymous wrote:If you can't afford that extra $2, go someplace where no one has to serve you at all. Like home.
Anonymous wrote:So, my view is that you tip pre-tax 20% at a minimum for average service (good service get's more, bad service is a whole other ball game), but I generally am rounding and not getting too precise. I often go above the minimum (maybe rounding $13 to $15), but make sure I hit the minimum. Does that make me cheap since I go pre-tax?
Anonymous wrote:Wow. People are so rude and stingy and clearly haven't ever worked in the restaurant industry. I think everyone needs to have a food service job for at good six months. You really get to know the true nature of people in that industry.