Waiter Rant: Thanks for the Tip - Confessions of a Cynical Waiter
I**8
There was more going on at that dinner out - than you knew!
If you ever have eaten or plan to eat in a nice restaurant (and who hasn't?) this is a book you need to read. Below is a list of key areas he covers with grace, humor and insight that any foodie will want to know.1. The differences between the crazy worlds of the kitchen staff and waiters- engagingly described as like "the Palestinians and Israelis - seperate but distinct nationalities uncomfortably sharing the same space."2. The very different breed and perspectives of Managers and Restaurant Owners.3. How to avoid having your food spat on (or worse), or to have yourself made the butt of waitstaff humor. (Plus, what they're really thinking - while they're being "oh, so polite".)4. How to get better treatment. And yes, tips are a big part of it - but that ain't nearly half of it.5. Which category of diner you fall into - in waitspeak tipping language.6. Why you don't want to be a waiter --- and what's great about being a waiter. (Think living like a gambler with great adrenaline rushes, hours the opposite of everyone else, and working with a wild cast of familial characters!)7. Added Bonuses: How to turn an anonymous blog on an everyday situation into a published novel, an interesting brush with Russell Crowe, and the crude world behind that "oh so, refined dining experience".BOTTOM LINE FOR SHORT ATTENTION SPAN FOLKS:Along with Kitchen Confidential Updated Ed: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (P.S.) , it's the behind-the-scenes tour of what's really going on while you and your guests dine that you need to know - if you want the best experience possible.While, as a self-proclaimed "waiter/wanna' be writer" the author is justifiably not as good of a writer as Bourdain - he still has a natural writing talent which makes this a thorougly enjoyable read.
M**R
Great read
Writes simulate to Anthony Bourdain
T**S
At turns interesting, boring, depressing
I pre-ordered this book after seeing some kind of pre-publication publicity online. Even though I knew it was based on a blog I waited for the book and never read the blog until after finishing the book."Waiter Rant" is less a book about working as a waiter in a New York restaurant than it is the observations of a guy in a dead-end job facing a mid-life crisis. There is surprisingly little information about the restaurant business here, possibly in part because he was trying to maintain the anonymity his blog, but for example, it would be nice to know more about what was on the menu, what were his personal favorites, was there anything he really didn't like, how often did the menu change, and why, how much money did the restaurant make on a typical night, what are the most profitable things they sell, what do they do with the leftovers and the unused food, etc. These are the mysteries of successful restaurants that have always intrigued me, less so how obnoxious some customers are about getting a "good" table and how customers are seated in different sections to distribute the workload among waiters and to parcel out the good tips.I got the impression that in his six years working as a waiter that not much really happened. He alludes to hearing stories about other waiters spitting in the food or playing hockey on the kitchen floor with a customer's hamburger, but he (thankfully) never did these things and never really witnessed them. He mentions that if you forget to bring your wallet and can't pay your tab they'll let you owe it to them if you are a regular customer but if not they'll call the police. Is that really what happens? Did a non-regular customer ever forget to bring any money and did they call the police, or is this all just hypothetical? My guess is nothing even that interesting ever happens.There's a lot here about a guy growing old, lonely, in a dead-end job, with no paid vacation, no retirement plan, and little or no health insurance. It's clear that being a waiter is not much of a career. That's the depressing part: the life of "quiet desperation." I think most readers will find themselves rooting for the author. I'm glad the guy got his blog published and I'm glad I bought his book. I just wish it were better.
K**S
Purchased as a gift
I long ago gave my copy away to another member of the hospitality industry... "It's kitchen confidential for front of house."Happy when I found a used copy to save a few bucks on Amazon and even happier when it arrived packaged neatly and in near perfect condition. Gifted with happy results.
J**N
A good read and great insight into the world of fine dining
Welcome to the world of fine dining hell. This is a great read from the author of the Waiter Rant blog. Step into a world you may or may not know and spend a couple of hours with the uber-stressed, people who bring you your fois gras and pour your $200.00 wine. It's a trip worth taking.
R**E
Cuidado con gasto de importación
Libro llegó en buen estado, solo que hay que pagar 6 euros de gastos de importación por cada libro que pides. Así sale más caro este costo de importación que el libro.
P**G
Rock On!!
Mr. Dublanica, a.k.a. The Waiter, dishes out his take on life as a professional waiter. After hitting rock bottom in his personal life and finding himself on the brink of a breakdown, he started working as a waiter so he could sort things out . Several years later, his supposedly temporary gig slowly solidified into a permanent profession. He started to write down his observations and thoughts on his blog in 2005. Soon the popularity of the blog grew, and it gave birth to the book Waiter Rant.Since Mr. Dublanica has worked in the industry for a shorter period than Mr. Bourdain, his book's contents are notably thinner than those of Kitchen Confidential.As the title suggests, Mr. Dublanica mostly rants. He rants about the dysfunctional work environment, the misfit workers, the paranoid owners, the lousy tippers, the holiday horrors, the good (or bad) money, and the madness of a waiter's life.The first half of the book is devoted to exposing the ugliness and the craziness of the restaurant industry. In his own words, waiters today are expected to be 'food allergy specialists, sommeliers, cell-phone-rule enforcers, emergency medical technicians, bouncers, receptionists, joke tellers, therapists, linguists, punch bags, psychics, protocol specialists, and amateur chefs.'As his journey progresses, Mr. Dublanica realizes that he is also supposed to know how to fix air conditioners, find a bottle of replacement wine within ten minutes, stop customers from having sex in the washroom, cut drunk patrons off, and wring tips out of cheap guests. The tales are arranged into a fictional year, from New Year's Eve to Valentine's Day and then on to Mother's Day, the 4th of July, Labour Day, and Thanksgiving.As time goes by, fewer and fewer facts are presented and more and more personal reflections are added to the mix. Money, power, alcohol, and stress gradually overtax him until Mr. Dublanica is desperate to get out of the waiter's life. Only after he quits his job as headwaiter does he realize that perhaps it is possible to find inner peace by starting all over again.
P**O
a brilliant book about the trials and tribulations of an American ...
It is the FOH (Front of House) version of Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential.In short, a brilliant book about the trials and tribulations of an American waiter and those around him, both customers and staff. With his own personal story and point of view thrown in.Anyone within the catering industry will relate to this book, and those who want a better understanding of what they put waiters and chefs through when you dine out SHOULD read this book.
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