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by SeattleAnn Posted Sat October 4, 2008 @ 8:09 PM
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the U.S. Department of Agriculture requires labels with the term 'yam' to be accompanied by the term 'sweet potato.' Unless you specifically search for yams, which are usually found in an international market, you are probably eating sweet potatoes! (in the vast majority of restaurants you eat at)
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I don't know where I stand on this issue. I agree that sometimes restaurants just have a bad day and sometimes need a second chance and I applaud you for that.
I think that had I wanted a comment card and was given the manager, I would still be happy. You could have asked the manager if there was somewhere less busy (a different part of the restaurant, s back waiting area) where you could express concerns about your meal. The fact that you decided not to talk to the mgr about this, in my opinion, makes it look like you aren't brave enough to voice your concerns in public. I do think though that if they don't have comment cards the employee should have said that they dont have any, would you like a manager.
I went to the Outback steakhouse last night and had no problems with my meal. The only downside to the restaurant was that my second favourite meal, the Wallhalla pasta is no longer offered.
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by franese Posted Fri September 19, 2008 @ 1:56 PM
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All I said was that if you watch cooking shows, you'd know that you don't get yams in the US - no matter what your supermaket says...they only sell sweet potatoes
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If you check out my shoppercast post, you'll see that I've gone from "Talk to the manager" to a much more accommodating attitude about how to complain about food/service at a restaurant.
The epiphany came while I pumped my gas this morning.
I just suggest you read it and see if it changes your mind as well.
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nice, Red!!
by SuzieCat Fri September 19, 2008 @ 5:17 PM
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Comment cards are good. When you fill a bad one out and the customer leaves, you can just rip them up and throw it in the garbage and nobody is the wiser.
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by D. R. Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 5:25 PM
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So you didn't like the soup... and then you didn't like their attempt at customer service... I think they deserve some credit for attempting to give you personal service, they were trying to PLEASE you.
This reminds me of the person who complained about Olive Garden - if you weren't happy with the place before ("I was a bit disappointed with the meal I ordered this evening (9/17/08) in your restaurant. I wish I could say this was the first such incident but that is simply not the case") why did you go back? You set yourself up for disappointment, and you set Outback up for failure.
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by me&you Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 3:55 PM
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How does suop taste like a marketplace?
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by dg132001 Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 1:45 PM
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So let me get this straight. You had an issue with a side item, which the waitress OFFERED to correct for you, and you turned her down? Then, you wanted to provide feedback on the issue. When you were given the opportunity to do so, you refused because you would rather send in a comment card? Come on!! You had the perfect opportunity to speak with an owner/manager. I think you didn't want to because they would have found out that you were given an opportunity to have your issue fixed. Maybe you were trying to get something for free and thought you had a better chance if you didn't actually have to speak with someone. I think that you are probably extremely picky and it showed when you turned down a replacement side. That would have corrected the issue. Get over it!!
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why?
by SuzieCat Thu September 18, 2008 @ 12:32 PM
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to come out front and find out what the problem was that was saying how much concern he was showing for his customers.
How many times have we seen in here where the customer has been in a restaurant and when they asked to speak to a manager they are told they are either not available or not even on the premises at that time.
However it seems this person was more comfortable not being confronted and should have been handed a card if they had these available.
I can see both sides of this.
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by franese Posted Fri September 19, 2008 @ 4:41 PM
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I agree with you except I don't see both sides. The manager did the right thing. I understand people don't want to get people fired, but I don't see anything in this case that would have caused anything to be fired. As far as I can tell, it might have been the manager for falsely writing Yams (just kidding).
Seriously, I wonder where the letter writer ever had a yam...it is possible that she is from South America but hasn 't she noticed that she's never had a yam here in the States?
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Also,
by lilydarling Thu September 18, 2008 @ 10:33 PM
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by BlueGirl Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 10:45 AM
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Is this really a complaint letter about a manager who was willing to talk to you about your complaint(s)? It doesn't sound like he was trying to be "confrontational". More like he was trying to resolve the issue. Why wouldn't you want the complaint dealt with right then and there?
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by Steve-OH Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 10:27 AM
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what you call a yam is known as a sweet potato. It's also known as a kumara, and it is a tuber. I think you wanted the sweet potato that's not even a potato, it's a bulb of some kind. I am sure the owner would have been happy to clarify for you, and probably even comp you for ordering what you didn't actually want.
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by Blackrack Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 9:48 AM
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Okay, while this is a very well-written letter, a few points.
Your soup tasted like a market? No, I joke. Seriously, though, bits of pottery in it? Alright, I'm done.
Aren't yams a type of sweet potato? Maybe I'm wrong, but I thought they were either an offshoot of them or very closely related. If the skin colour is the only way to tell them apart, what's the point?
So you're a person who likes to complain anonymously instead of giving the information to someone who can actually do something about it? Bravo. As long as you state your complaint in a calm manner, you're hardly "making a scene".
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by Donno Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 9:29 AM
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The fact that you are upset that they supplied the restaurant owner to field your complaint, and not a piece of stiff paper, shows you know little about giving feedback. Who better than the owner to hear your complaint?
You wanted to give feedback and they gave you that opportunity. It didn't have to be a confrontation - all you had to do is say exactly what happened. And justify to the owner's face your outrage that you received a yam instead of a sweet potato. Perhaps that was hard to do.
I ask for managers all the time. They often sit at the table with me and listen to my feedback. When justified they make an adjustment or give me a dessert, etc. They shake my hand when leaving the table. Hardly confrontational.
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Yams and sweet potatoes are used interchangeably, and I believe they are related (both having originated from the indigenous Indian cultures of South America--they gave us over 300 varieties of potatoes!) ("Indian Givers: How the Indians of the Amercias Transformed the World"). Anyway...
All of this gnashing of teeth and wringing of hands over something about which you weren't even right?
Wow. Happy dining out in the future.
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I do not like Outback...never have. I think their food is over priced and the customer is paying for the atmosphere and the idea that its an "Australian" based restaurant.
But you had an opportunity to speak directly with the owner and to state your displeasure with this restaurant yet you refused because you wanted to write your comments instead.
I applaud this owner for coming out front to inquire why a customer was unhappy. But it seems you took this as a form of aggression instead and felt that he backed you into a corner.
I have no idea why you feel that you cannot talk civily to someone and explain your issues with their food. IF it was because you felt uncomfortable then you could have asked if there was someplace quieter where you could speak to him. He may have accomodated you.
I would jump on a chance to speak to an owner of a restaurant if I had a complaint. Managers are fine and they do for the most part intercede and try to make things better...but when an owner offers their asistance its just something you do not see very often.
As for the sweet potato incident...why blame the cook when yams are what the restaurant orders? Its not his/her fault. If you did not want it send it back and substitute something else for it.
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by SiotehCat Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 8:06 AM
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Ok, this intrigued me, so I did a little reading about the differences in yams and sweet potatos.
What I have found, and I am sure everyone will if they just google it, is that what we refer to as yams ARE actually a type of sweet potato."Yams," as the industry and general public perceives them, are actually Sweet Potatoes with a vivid orange color and a soft moist consistency when cooked, and tend to have a sweeter flavor. True yams have nothing to do with sweet potatos, and those can usually be found in an international market.
Several decades ago when orange flesh SweetPotatoes were introduced into the southern United States, producers and shippers desired to distinguish them from the more traditional white flesh types.The African word "nyami" referring to the starchy, edible root of the Dioscorea genus of plants was adopted in its' English form, "yam".
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I don't understand why so many people equate speaking with a manager (in this case restaurant owner) with confrontation. Part of the manager's job is to resolve customer issues. If your experience in the restaurant was unsatisfactory, speaking with a manager/owner at the time of the incident is always best as they can resolve the issues on the spot rather than weeks later (or sometimes not at all).
Actually I give a lot of credit to this owner for coming out on his own. It shows he cares about your experience in his restaurant.
As for the comment card, frankly I don't trust they'll get to the right person. I'd rather speak with a live human than fill out some anonymous comment card.
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by ~Fiƒi-la-ƒlea~ Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 7:57 AM
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The owner wanted a chance to make it better for you so you did not leave feeling unhappy.
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by ♫Venice♫ Posted Thu September 18, 2008 @ 3:22 AM
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Why would speaking with the owner create a scene or confrontation? There would only be a scene if you chose to make one. You didn't even give the owner a chance. I'm sure the other people in the semi-crowded restaurant would have had no interest in your conversation with the owner. Why hide behind a comment card if the owner was available to listen to your complaint? Sorry, but that doesn't make sense to me.
Also, since you are so picky about your potatoes, maybe you should make certain you'll be getting a sweet potato and not a yam before you order. Most people wouldn't know the difference, and even if they did, they wouldn't care. Since you obviously do care, I think next time you should make it clear that you do not want a yam.
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