I'll never forget the waiter at Chez Panisse. His name, perhaps, but not his face and certainly not his personality.
It was the mid-80s, and I was in design school. I didn't really have the cash to be spending a lot of time at Chez Panisse, a storied restaurant in Berkeley, California, but it was only the upstairs café, not the prix fixé downstairs, and a bottle of wine and a good casse-croute went a long way to restoring my sanity during those hectic days.
My dining companion was whoever I could find. I always bought, or they wouldn't have come. I didn't have a girlfriend at the time, so it was invariably a friend from the racquetball club that I played at, or rarely, a first date.
But I made it a priority to try to make it to Chez Panisse at least once a week.
The turnover there was quite slow. After all, who wouldn't want to work at Chez Panisse? At the time, it was quite possibly the most famous restaurant in North America. But when the waiter — let's call him John, because I honestly can't remember his name — suddenly entered into the mix, we somehow clicked. John was almost completely silent, all of the time. There were no long speeches or grovelling attempts at ingratiation. When he spoke, John tended to be brief, but there was a sly underpinning that one could never put one's finger on — as if the joke was always on you, but in a nice way.
So, as is my wont with servers I like (we used to call them waiters or waitresses) I gradually started tipping him more and more. It wasn't because I wanted better service. It was simply because when John served you, he served only you. He never forgot that quick "Oh, and a glass of water, too?" like most servers. Even when the restaurant was at its busiest, and it could get very busy, the glass of water would be at your table within a minute. The man had a mind like a steel trap.
It was innocent at first. I usually tipped 20% regardless, but it started creeping up with John. He was regrettably not always my server, but I gradually learned his schedule and tried to arrange my visits around it. And the tip began to creep upwards. Back then, a dinner for two with a few glasses of wine would run maybe $50. I began to tip John 25, then 30%. And silently, always silently, the experience at Chez Panisse got better and better. There was hardly a word exchanged between John and me except for the usual orders and thanks for a good dinner.
But then strange things started happening. On a very busy night, probably a Friday, I came in with a date. It was rare. I was usually with a racquetball partner or two. But John was there, and he immediately knew what had to be done. Within minutes, we were given the bay window table — the best seat in the house. I was amazed. I said nothing but felt like the guy in Goodfellas. My date was wowed. As usual, John said nothing, and attended us with the usual slight smirk on his face, as if we were all in on a huge cosmic joke to which only he knew the punchline.
That night I tipped him 60%.
And it went upwards from there. I wasn't rich, but I did the mental math. I could have this incredible time at the best restaurant in America (and I realised it even then) and all it would cost me was a little extra. I scrimped in other places in order to save for Chez Panisse.
And it paid off. One night, John put a plate of baked artisanal goat cheese (only the best for Alice Waters) down in front of me. "John, I didn't order this," I protested. He just smirked and walked away. It was not on the bill.
Another night, one with another rare date, a half-bottle of Roederer champagne was delivered in an ice bucket with two champagne glasses. By John. I knew by this time not to protest.
By this time the tip was up to 80%. This meant that on a meal costing $60, the tip was $48.
The turning point was the day I tipped John the cost of the entire meal. It was a meal in which my companion and I —I forget who — received a literal red-carpet treatment. It was like I was Charlie Sheen and we were at Spago. Dishes came fast and furious, the wine flowed — and half of it was unordered. Orange and grapefruit salad with wild fennel. Pizzetta with spring onions and anchovies. Caymus "Special Selection" Napa Cabernet.
John's expression did not change when he came to collect the credit card payment. The half-smirk remained. "Thank you, sir," he said, tipping his head slightly, and then he melted into the hubbub.
Imagine my surprise when I next brought a date and John suddenly wasn't there any more. "Oh, John," remarked the server, "He always wanted to open his own bookstore. He went off to do that. He was a good guy, huh?"
Yep. He was a good guy.
Further Reading
You have NO IDEA how much I wish I had a regular like you, LOL!!!!
ReplyDeleteI just think a lot of people are just assholes. It's sometimes difficult to realise in the day to day humdrum of life, but there are really people who go to restaurants and leave a dollar tip for a perfectly good $40 meal.
ReplyDeleteMurderers are called sociopaths, but I say this class of socially-unconscious people are sociopaths too. They have no connection with the real world.
These people don't realise that to get service—and we're not talking good service, just any service at all—you have to act like a human being. You just have to drop the cheap act and the money-grubbing and the personal vendettas you hold against everyone who thwarts your vision of perfection, and just be a decent human being.
I have never gotten anything with a whine. On the contrary, I have gotten everything by just being a normal, thinking human being. The server is not a robot. The ticket agent is not a corporate tool designed to make your life difficult.
You are the only one who makes your life difficult.
And I would love to be your customer!
Hi Chef Nick
ReplyDeleteI found you through a long and sordid path of blog-hopping...glad I did. What a lovely post...if only more people would treat others well (whether they be waiters, call centre staff or even the person in the elevator)--not in hopes of getting something later, but just to be human :)
I'll be back.
j
Hi Jasmine,
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by! Wow, "blog-hopping." That's sure to make it into Webster's this year!
Yeah, I've never gotten anywhere by treating perfect strangers badly. Especially perfect strangers who have the power over certain decisions that concern you, like ticket agents or waiters or bank tellers. On the contrary, I have received so many good things by simply treating them like human beings.
And it makes me cringe to be accompanied by people who seem to have no sense regarding these simple human interactions. Uh-oh, better stop here, I feel a rant coming on . . . =+)
Your comment after SweetCatriona needs to be posted, well, EVERYWHERE.
ReplyDeleteEVERYBODY needs to read that.
Study it.
Memorize it.
And live it.
Oh, I live it. I wouldn't stand for anything else. People tend to "dehumanize" other people as a matter of course.
ReplyDelete"Fuck the waitress, we ain't coming back here again anyhows."
The guy in the car in front of you. Faceless. Doesn't accelerate after the light in a microsecond, so you honk.
Would you push someone who was not moving fast enough in the grocery line? Same thing, just he has a face now.
Waitress = menial worker, born to serve you, you're spending your "hard-earned money" on a "special meal" but you're "on a budget" because "times are tough" and BECAUSE YOU CAN GET AWAY WITH IT.
We've all heard the stories about the waitress who receives a 2% tip following the customer out to the parking lot yelling at them. That's as it should be.
The only time I did something like that is when I WANTED to make a statement. At Vannessi's, a "chic" place in North Beach in San Francisco, I was having a "special" double date. Which means it meant a lot to me that this was going to be good.
we made reservations, showed up on time, but were still forced to wait at the bar for 45 minutes for a table. I saw a cockroach running across the bar. I said, "Hey, bartender, there's a cockroach on your bar." He said, "Kill it."
They served us one wine and charged us $35 over the true price and only admitted their mistake after thorough grilling so I left them one cent on a $175 meal. One red cent on the table.
But that was making a statement -- leaving 10% tip as a matter of policy is just plain moronic. STAY HOME, YA FUCKS.
That's the way I see it.