Water, please!

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What the heck!

OK, I’ve never confessed to being a quick learner, and this confirms it. About a week later, I added some salt to my mealtime wound. Out to eat again in that same town, we ordered two cups of decaf coffee instead of those Diet Cokes.

My fault. I really didn’t even look at the price on the menu. I mean, come on! How much could a couple of cups of coffee really cost? The answer: $5. No kidding. It was OK coffee, but at $2.50 a cup, I should have been at Starbucks or Neiman Marcus on Chicago’s Michigan Avenue. I don’t mind paying that at Starbucks or a prissy restaurant, where I might get a great cup of Kona coffee or the like, but this was just a little nothing cup of coffee ... for $2.50 each. I won’t do the math again, but you get the idea.

At the risk of having somebody spit in my next bowl of soup when I’m dining out, let me say I wouldn’t want to own/operate a restaurant. OK ... I might want to own a restaurant, but only for about a week. After that, the fun would be gone. In other words, I tip my hat to restaurant owners because I know it’s a thankless job and the profit margins are slim, not to mention the work involved. Please don’t write me letters about how tough it is to own a restaurant; I get it, but I guess I’d rather you charge me an extra $1 or $2 for my meal, rather than the blatantly overpriced drinks.

But it’s a restaurant’s prerogative to charge whatever they want ... So I guess it’s up to us, the consumers, to decide how much is too much. As for me, I’ll still go out to eat, but when it comes to my drink order, I think I’ll just pocket that extra $5 and say, “Water, please.”

Note: Remember ... your waiter/waitress don’t set the prices. Please remember to tip these hard-working folks.

BCR Editor Terri Simon can be reached at tsimon@bcrnews.com or you can follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/bcrnews.tsimon.

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