apostolic4life
Chef Grumpy
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2005
- Messages
- 1,092
splashmtnman said:I'm just saying what I have charged for a small plate of pasta when requested by a child. It would have nothing to do with what the cost of any pasta dish is on the menu after all they are not removing the sauce. Besides, I'm sure she wasn't ordering from a menu listed entree and asking to remove the sauce.She just wanted a plate of plain pasta which was probably not even the same quantity as the entree.From "experience" you are not looking at what the cost or profit is on a plate of plain pasta but again what a perceived value may be. The restaurants that I have been Chef in are as expensive as any at WDW, and I'm saying you would not charge that for a plate of plain pasta for a child. Yes if someone order a caesar w/no dressing the charge would not differ but if they just wanted a small plate of romaine lettuce(no croutons,cheese,anchovies) I would not charge for a caesar but probably a small house salad.On your fast food, a more appropriate example would be ordering just a bun with no meat or fish filet... my daughter the bread lover has done this-not charged for a whopper.. The main cost of a pasta dish is the addded ingredients not the pasta as in a composed salad the cost of the lettuce is nothing. In fact a caesar salad is a very inexpensive salad to make but is usually charged as an expensive salad mainly because of perception. People will pay for it. Now if a menu listed a wonderful 3oz cooked to perfection plate of plain pasta I'm sure at $16.79 they would sell very few. I'll repeat, they probably rang up a Rigatoni w/"plain see server". Customer does not care what is charged for this because they have already paid.The customer probably asked if they could get a plain,dry pasta not "my daughter will have the Rigatoni with no sausage,mushrooms,tomatoes,cheese or olive oil, or she'll have the Fettucine Alfredo but could you leave off the heavy cream, butter and parmigiano reggiano. Now the waitperson wants a larger tip and definetely deserves one so they charge the max. possible. OOP they don't get charged this without complaints I can bet and WDW does not like complaints.A more appropriate charge would be maybe charging for the most expensive childs entree, but also being 11 she would be two years removed from being able to order from the childs menu.Now if they are going to allow a small child that is 11 to order off the childs menu why would they not also charge for a childs portion of pasta? Why would they not you say, because the customer in question has already paid for the meal using the DDP, so they could usually care less what is printed.The waitstaff does not get the standard 20% tip that you would see added on but somewhere closer to 10% when you are using the DDP. That's why we always leave extra when we used the DDP. I guess we can agree to disagree on this but my two cents worth comes from 28 years of experience.
WOW, it's like we are of one mind...are we twins seperated at birth???
) The Apprentice comes back on the air in February!