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Dining Tips
In 2004, the travel tips thread sparked some interesting ideas for us to consider. Might it be a good idea to start a thread specific to dining? If not, just let this thread pass into the abyss of threads unanswered. Here are my two:
Turn on the hot water before you use the restroom so it will be warm when you need to wash your hands. When dining at a Mexican restaurant, throw trash and plates into empty chip baskets for your server to pick up so your table stays nice and clear. |
Great idea.
When eating raw oysters in a restaurant, always sit at the oyster bar. Oysters are shucked ahead of time for the tables in most places. (Also, you may be given a few freebies if you strike a conversation with the shucker) If you are sitting at the bar and are drinking beer, drink draft. On many occasions, even first visits, I have seem to haved paid for less beer than I have consumed. :) Hopefully this is what you meant. |
Great idea for a thread!
When eating at a restaurant that you think you might visit again make a point of speaking to the manager or owner (compliments are nice but even just "saying hello" is good). Over the years I have received all sorts of nice "extras" from complimentary drinks to dessert to wonderful dishes (tapas portion) made esp for me and whomever I am with "to taste", to gift certificates at Xmas time as a "thank you for being our customer" or in the case of Asian restaurants as Chinese New Year gift certificates "to bring the restaurant good luck" ( by giving something away I was told they will receive good luck in business for the coming year). And even without the "extras" it is always nice to go to a restaurant where you are greeted warmly and made to feel truly welcomed. And some times you will meet the most interesting people that way. |
A. If you're a non-smoker and are visiting a restaurant with a smoking section, don't just ask for "non-smoking," asked to be seated as far away from anyone smoking as possible. (In far too many restaurants, "non-smoking" tables are be right next to "smoking" tables or sections.)
B. Find the restaurants that the locals (or fellow FT'ers) are going to, which may not be the ones in the guidebooks or recommended by the Concierge. |
experiment!
if you are trying a new restaurant, perhaps ethnic, that you haven't tried before, try going "off the menu." sometimes chefs are looking for an open minded patron to really show off, especially if they are not busy.
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Always ask the name of the Maitre'd...helps when you call back for another reservation.
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When you are out with a group and splitting the check, add your items up, then add 25% on top to cover the cost of tax and tip.
So if you ordered the $14 entree and $6 drink, take your $20 and divide by 4, add another $5, and $25 should cover the food, tax and gratuity. This would be especially helpful at FT Do's, where it seems so often that whoever kindly offers to tally the check ends up with a huge shortage at the end of the night. The 25% will never leave you short and might actually account for a few pennies overage on the total tab. :) |
Originally Posted by percussionking
Turn on the hot water before you use the restroom so it will be warm when you need to wash your hands.
Other tips: Regular table salt doesn't do it for me, so I bring my own mini grinder filled with sea salt into a lot of mid-tier restaurants. When you bring your own bottle of wine, the corkage is often waived if you share with the maitre'd or sommilier and also order a second bottle of their list. If I've ordered a bottle of wine and can't drink it all, I bring the unfinished bottle home. I'm not really sure what legal restrictions are on this - and I'm sure they vary from state to state - but some restaurants I frequent recork the wine and put it in a bag without my even asking. At others, I just walk out with it. Carry it in your trunk - at least in California. |
Ask a Supermarket
I've always followed this dining rule when visiting foreign or interstate cities. I visit a supermarket, be it inner city or suburban, and simply ask a staff member "where can I get a good meal?".
Why ? Simple. You don't get the $500 a steak restaurants that are in the tourist guides, and get honest opinions and information from locals. Think about this - is your favourite restaurant in your town in the local tourist guide ? Mine certainly isn't. |
Always ask your server if what you are thinking of ordering is any good. More then a few times I've been told not to order that, try this instead, and have never been let down.
My favorite is at a chinese place we go to, many items are on the menu because it's what americans want, but as the owner says, taste like cardboard. When they tell you not to order something, believe them. |
Originally Posted by cordelli
Always ask your server if what you are thinking of ordering is any good. More then a few times I've been told not to order that, try this instead, and have never been let down.
My favorite is at a chinese place we go to, many items are on the menu because it's what americans want, but as the owner says, taste like cardboard. When they tell you not to order something, believe them. |
Originally Posted by dannyr
I've always followed this dining rule when visiting foreign or interstate cities. I visit a supermarket, be it inner city or suburban, and simply ask a staff member "where can I get a good meal?".
Why ? Simple. You don't get the $500 a steak restaurants that are in the tourist guides, and get honest opinions and information from locals. Think about this - is your favourite restaurant in your town in the local tourist guide ? Mine certainly isn't. And if you haven't enjoyed Trillin's hilarious "Tummy Trilogy" of food-related books -- American Fried, Alice Let's Eat and Third Helpings -- get thee to a bookstore (or website) and find them. |
Thanks for the tips! I have one that I read in Kitchen Confidential -- don't order a seafood omelete for Sunday brunch. It's usually just the leftover seafood from the weekend and may not be so fresh. That book actually has lots of dining tips, like when the best nights are to go out for sushi (NOT Mondays!).
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This tip from Least Heat Moon's, "Blue Highways to America," has proven accurate as a law of nature in the 20 years since I read the book.
Moon says the quality of a mom-n-pop eatery can be judged by the number of calanders behind the registers. Your M&P, unlike chain resturants, exists in the network of favors given and taken among local businesses. The more calanders, the more the joint depends on repeat, local customers. Hence the better the eats. This has served me well, not only in the blue higheays of the USA, but in other lands as well. |
Originally Posted by percussionking
When dining at a Mexican restaurant, throw trash and plates into empty chip baskets for your server to pick up so your table stays nice and clear. I'm bothered when people I'm dining with start stacking dishes at the table for the servers. And as a former server myself, it doesn't help the process at all. I think this is rude and hope that no one I'm dining with does this when I'm at the table. |
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