<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR>Restaurant charged as much for water as it did for tea
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->MY FAMILY regularly patronises Din Tai Fung restaurant. I had quite an unusual dining experience at the branch in Junction 8 last Saturday.
Normally, my husband takes the queue number and indicates four plus two persons, meaning four adults and two children. My children are aged four and six.
This time, I took the queue number and I indicated six persons. Even so, we ended up being squeezed into a table for four.
We had a lovely dinner but when I went to pay the bill, I found I was charged $1 per child for the warm water served to them. We adults paid $1 for tea per person.
I do not understand why I had to pay for the warm water only this time. The only reason I could think of was that I had indicated six persons instead of four plus two persons.
I am not one who refuses to pay for water. Most restaurants do not charge more than 30 cents for warm water. I wonder what is so special about the water served at this restaurant that I need to pay as much as I would for tea. Moreover, I was told I would not have been charged if my children had been seated on baby chairs. What a strange management practice.
Tessa Sng (Ms)
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->MY FAMILY regularly patronises Din Tai Fung restaurant. I had quite an unusual dining experience at the branch in Junction 8 last Saturday.
Normally, my husband takes the queue number and indicates four plus two persons, meaning four adults and two children. My children are aged four and six.
This time, I took the queue number and I indicated six persons. Even so, we ended up being squeezed into a table for four.
We had a lovely dinner but when I went to pay the bill, I found I was charged $1 per child for the warm water served to them. We adults paid $1 for tea per person.
I do not understand why I had to pay for the warm water only this time. The only reason I could think of was that I had indicated six persons instead of four plus two persons.
I am not one who refuses to pay for water. Most restaurants do not charge more than 30 cents for warm water. I wonder what is so special about the water served at this restaurant that I need to pay as much as I would for tea. Moreover, I was told I would not have been charged if my children had been seated on baby chairs. What a strange management practice.
Tessa Sng (Ms)