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Oh if she doesn't mind being around meat, go to Papparich! It's cheap and it's really good food. My gf is vegetarian and liked the stuff they had there.

Awesome, do I need to make reservation on Sat for lunch? Or would I be good to rock up?

So much for Evos being the new import to own. Craze lasted like 6 months, now everyone hates them lol

I like the evo, it's just gutless... which I plan to fix when i have ca$h

that's why you buy an entertainment book, buy one get one free so it does cost $5-$6 a burger

276251_Papel-de-Parede-Meme-Are-You-Kidd

chef's don't do entertainment books.

I thought if you used one of those books the chef spat in your food.

or at least used yesterdays leftover ingredients they were throwing out

not spit....

but you will definitely get worse food...

chef will definitely cheap out on the food though... portion size, expensive ingredients and effort. you will also get the oldest, shittest piece of steak/fish etc.

They will also either push the food out right away to get you out and a paying customer in, or put your order to the back of the queue.

I did this every time. without any guilt.

and before you get all up in my shit about it, think about it from the chef's POV

1) people that use the guide are not return customers, they only come once a year at best.

2) even if you try to give them the good shit and it's awesome, they are most likely to go to somewhere else next time to use more vouchers

3) better off to keep the good shit for your core customers, that spend more and will return.

4) experience shows that most of the time they come in, use the voucher, drink free water or 1 glass of wine at best don't tip and are more likely to be rude to waitstaff.

I see where your coming from but:

Why does the owner then advertise in these entertainment books?

If it is for increased advertising of the restaurant then surely it is in the best interests of the restaurant to serve good food to the customer so word spreads.

Disclaimer: Have never owned one of these entertainment books

overall it's a profitable venture... nothing like a restaurant full of paying customers every night though..

end of the day it's guaranteed custom but at a lower return than real customers

If it is for increased advertising of the restaurant then surely it is in the best interests of the restaurant to serve good food to the customer so word spreads.

of course... that's restaurant tactics 101... but it goes a lot deeper than that in practice

you have to hedge your bets, so you do.

also, work in restaurants for a while and you start to notice that a high percentage of voucher customers complain about every little thing possible and are never happy anyway lol

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