Curious to see what folks on this issue of tipping I recently encountered.
Went out with a big family gathering the Friday before Mother's Day to an Italian restaurant. I was not in the mood for pasta, so I ordered meal that had a steak and mashed potatoes. It was, hands down, the worst steak I ever had, and that includes Ryan's and Golden Corral. For starters, it was barely warmed. It had a sickly gray color to it. I ordered it medium but it was cooked well. It tasked about like a dish sponge. It gave every appearance of having been previously cooked and then warmed up for my order. Also terribly tough. My father also got the steak and his was terrible, so it wasn't worth sending it back to have them try again. Also, I didn't want to wait for them to cook another steak while everyone else was eating. Potatoes were also barely warm. I'll add, I'm not even a steak snob like a lot of dudes pretend to be. Sure, I thoroughly enjoy a truly great steak, but I can make do with a family steakhouse kind of steak as well.
Here's the dilemma: the service was good. I wouldn't say it was GREAT, but it was good. Nothing to complain about.
I know all these restaurants split/share tips, so it killed me to know the person who served me a steak that should be illegal would get some tip money. I've been in restaurants where I've had good food and bad service or bad food and good service, but this was the biggest discrepancy I've ever had between food and service quality. So the question....
Do you factor food quality into the amount of your tip? I would say I typically do not, but when it's genuinely one of the worst food items you've ever had, I don't see I couldn't take that into consideration.
Went out with a big family gathering the Friday before Mother's Day to an Italian restaurant. I was not in the mood for pasta, so I ordered meal that had a steak and mashed potatoes. It was, hands down, the worst steak I ever had, and that includes Ryan's and Golden Corral. For starters, it was barely warmed. It had a sickly gray color to it. I ordered it medium but it was cooked well. It tasked about like a dish sponge. It gave every appearance of having been previously cooked and then warmed up for my order. Also terribly tough. My father also got the steak and his was terrible, so it wasn't worth sending it back to have them try again. Also, I didn't want to wait for them to cook another steak while everyone else was eating. Potatoes were also barely warm. I'll add, I'm not even a steak snob like a lot of dudes pretend to be. Sure, I thoroughly enjoy a truly great steak, but I can make do with a family steakhouse kind of steak as well.
Here's the dilemma: the service was good. I wouldn't say it was GREAT, but it was good. Nothing to complain about.
I know all these restaurants split/share tips, so it killed me to know the person who served me a steak that should be illegal would get some tip money. I've been in restaurants where I've had good food and bad service or bad food and good service, but this was the biggest discrepancy I've ever had between food and service quality. So the question....
Do you factor food quality into the amount of your tip? I would say I typically do not, but when it's genuinely one of the worst food items you've ever had, I don't see I couldn't take that into consideration.