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-
- For those who don't know, Dave Barry is an American Humorist who writes
- for various magazines. Since this was posted once before in the U.S., I
- don't see any harm in posting it here (I imagine that it's copywrited
- by Dave Barry).
-
- ------
-
- Dave Barry Dines Out
- Philadephia Inquirer Magazine - October 23, 1983
-
- Americans are starting to dine out again, as they react to the economic
- upturn and the toxic mold growths bonded to the piles of unwashed dishes
- left over from the economic downturn. The problem is that many of you
- have gone so long without dining out that your only concept of a
- restaurant is McDonalds's. I'm afraid you're going to go to a really
- snotty restaurant and do something stupid, such as ask the wine steward
- for your free "Return of the Jedi" glass. So let's take a moment here to
- review the proper way to behave at a restaurant.
-
- When you arrive, you will be greeted by a person dressed in an outfit
- like the one Fred Astaire wore in all those movies where he danced on
- tables. This is your maitre d', and you should tip him $5 the instant you
- walk in the door. He will then ask you the traditional question, which is
- "Do you have a reservation?" You may answer "Yes" or "No". Either way,
- he will scrutinize a piece of paper in front of him as though it has
- something to do with the restaurant, although it actually lists the
- rosters of all the Chicago White Sox teams since 1946. Then, no matter
- how empty or full the restaurant is, he will say, "Your table will be
- ready in 10 minutes."
-
- This traditional restaurant jest always draws an appreciative snicker
- from the employees hunkering back in the gloom, wearing grease-stained
- rental uniforms. The maitre d' will then ask, "Would you care to wait in
- the cocktail lounge?" The correct answer here is "Yes." If you answer "No
- thanks, we'll just wait here and eat these little mints," you will get
- your table about the time the United States establishes permanent colonies
- on Neptune.
-
- In the cocktail lounge, you will be monitored by infrared devices, and
- as soon as you have ordered, but not received, your second round of
- drinks, a uniformed person will inform you that your table is ready. Tip
- him $5. The maitre d' will then lead you to a table right next to the
- screen that the waiters duck behind to blow their noses. Tip him $10.
- Your waiter will then sidle up to your table and say, "My name is Bernard
- and it will be my pleasure to serve you in an obsequious manner tonight."
- Tip him $5.
-
- Now comes the part where things have really changed since the last time
- you ate out. In the old days, menus were easy to understand. They looked
- like this:
-
- Meat.............................. $5.95
- Fish.............................. $4.95
- Chicken........................... $3.95
- Spaghetti.......................... $2.95
-
- In those days, you'd mull over the menu for a while, and then you'd
- say, "I'll have the meat," or "I'll have the fish," and the waiter would
- say, "Excellent choice."
-
- It is much more complicated now. Your modern restaurant menu is
- written in French and Middle English. You'll see maybe two dozen items
- like this:
-
- Pleuve en Voiture
- ===========================
- (Scrumpets in Harrow Sauce)
- $26.95
-
- While you are sitting there staring at the menu and trying to avoid
- letting on that the only word you understand is "menu", the waiter will
- make the following speech: "Tonight we are out of everything on the
- menu, but we do have some very nice specials. For our appetizers, we have
- an excellent Tete de Chou au Sucre Flambe, which is a head of cabbage
- covered with sugar and set on fire. We have a very fine Poisson Sacre
- Bleu, which is a Norwegian fluke minced into very small pieces and stirred
- until dawn with attractive utensils. We have a very nice Quelle Dommage,
- which is a mussel defiled in a lemon sauce. We have a superb Papier du
- Chien dans la Cage, which is..."
-
- This speech will go on for maybe 10 minutes, after which you should tip
- your waiter $10 and say, "I'll have the meat."
-
- Next the wine steward will hand you the wine list, and help you make
- your selection:
-
- You: "How is this $12-a-bottle wine?"
- Wine Steward: "We use that primarily as a disinfectant."
- You: "Oh. Well, then, we'll have something much more
- expensive, please."
- Wine Steward: "Excellent choice."
-
- When the wine steward returns with your wine, he will pour some into
- your glass. You should take a little sip, then nod in a meek and grateful
- fashion, unless the wine is unsatisfactory, in which case you should still
- nod in a meek and grateful fashion, because if you complain, he will stab
- you repeatedly in the eyeball with his corkscrew. Tip him $15.
-
- The first food course to arrive will be your salad. Your modern
- high-class restaurant salad does not contain tomatoes or cucumbers, nor
- does it contain those wide, smooth healthy-looking leaves of lettuce you
- purchase at the supermarket in spheres. Your modern high-class restaurant
- salad consists of a few fronds of a darkish, kelp-like plant that has
- clearly forgotten everything it ever knew about photosynthesis.
- Nevertheless, you should make every effort to choke it down (using the
- extreme left-hand fork), because your main course, especially if it has a
- French name, is going to consist of maybe two square inches of a thickly
- sliced food substance, accompanied by a sprig of parsley placed there by
- the kitchen staff as a test of your common sense ("Look!" they shout,
- crowding around the kitchen window. "He's EATING it!").
-
- After your main course has been served, your waiter will wait until you
- have placed a wad of food in your mouth, then he will sidle up and say,
- "Is everything to your satisfaction?" Your should nod and smile in a meek
- and grateful fashion and try to say, "Just fine, thanks," without letting
- any partially masticated food dribble onto your clothing. Then slip him a
- five.
-
- The size of the tip you leave at the end of your meal depends on the
- quality of the service. Ordinarily, you should leave between 15 and 20
- percent of the cost of sending three children through the University of
- Pennsylvania medical school, but feel free to increase this amount if the
- waiter has performed any special service, such as not spitting in your food.
-
-