by Jenise » Sat Mar 22, 2008 1:39 pm
After changing my order to get the caesar, which pleased our friends a great deal and affirmed their original choice (they've been there before), I didn't have the heart to get uppity. Had it been just Bob and I, yeah, I'd have objected.
On the way out, I did manage to earn back $4 of the meal cost. My friend won $96--this was in abour four minutes while the boys went to the mens room.
Hey, want to talk about weird service, though? The restaurant is presided over by a tux, Wilhelm. He seems to be the onduty manager and sommelier and he personally supervises the service at each table--laudable. So when he came to our table to greet us, I said warmly, "So I finally get to meet the famous Wilhelm!" He seemed pleased and asked why famous, "For your fabulous service. I also understand you take a personal interest in the wine," I added while handing him two bottles of '95 Bordeaux I'd brought from home to add to our friends' bottle which was already in a decanter. So off he went to fetch glassware, and meanwhile our waiter took pre-dinner drink orders. Anne and Ron ordered martinis, and I said I'd like a cold glass of chardonnay and was told they were serving something like "Le Perculay". I passed on that and ordered a bottle of Trefethen chardonnay off the good-looking wine list. They were out of that. Okay, how about an X. Out of that too. And what about X? Out. Wilhelm meanwhile returned and said slyly, "I have a lovely French chardonnay for you that's not on the list." He proceeds to describe it in shelftalker terms and goes after same. While he's gone, our friends tell us that on prior visits, they also had a hard time finding a wine on the list that was actually in stock. Wilhelm returns with bottle in hand. It's the Le Perculay. He pours. It's light, crisp, and a bit stemmy. Tastes like a cheap Italian. I am now convinced that it's the only chardonnay they've got, so to test him, I said, "I don't love it and I don't hate it. But at least it's chilled." If he'd had an alternative, he'd have offerred it. He didn't. Instead, he looked pleased, bowed, and claimed that we would not be charged any corkage this night.
Pretty amusing. Fabulous steaks, though, and if you can make enough on your way out to pay for your dinner, well worth the trouble!
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov