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I have one customer who insists on her drink being heated to 220 degrees. it is SO disgusting and such a pain to get it that hot because it turns into bubbling exploding lava. i once heated it to 200 degrees and she brought it back complaining that it wasn't hot enough =|
I have an extra thermometer calibrated 20 degrees hotter than normal, then after I finish the drink, I stick it in there, show them, and say "A perfect 180!"
Just kidding.
We have a couple of insistors. All you can do is educate them, then make a choice if you want to keep them as a customer or not. I'd keep them as a customer and just keep educating them with peer pressure.
Funny. That whole "being physically impossible" thing never bothered her at all, eh? Looks like someone needs to calibrate their thermometers...
I have one customer who insists on her drink being heated to 220 degrees. it is SO disgusting and such a pain to get it that hot because it turns into bubbling exploding lava. i once heated it to 200 degrees and she brought it back complaining that it wasn't hot enough =|
Bryan Wray said:Brendon Parsons said:I've told customers that it's a safety hazard, since overheated, quickly swirling milk could do some real damage to my hands if it splashed out of the pitcher. 200 degree latte customers are rediculous.
Wow, 200? Really? Like you've had customers ask for 200, or you're just throwing a number out there...? My idea of extra hot is 175. I've never even attempted to take milk to 200. I wonder what that tastes like... *shivers.*
-bry
I have one customer who insists on her drink being heated to 220 degrees. it is SO disgusting and such a pain to get it that hot because it turns into bubbling exploding lava. i once heated it to 200 degrees and she brought it back complaining that it wasn't hot enough =|
Bryan Wray said:Brendon Parsons said:I've told customers that it's a safety hazard, since overheated, quickly swirling milk could do some real damage to my hands if it splashed out of the pitcher. 200 degree latte customers are rediculous.
Wow, 200? Really? Like you've had customers ask for 200, or you're just throwing a number out there...? My idea of extra hot is 175. I've never even attempted to take milk to 200. I wonder what that tastes like... *shivers.*
-bry
Sometimes I question myself on this whole "customer is always right" business.
I think about gourmet chefs, and I wonder how they would react to a patron marching into their kitchen and demanding something be overheated or overspiced or otherwise abominably destroyed....
Brendon Parsons said:I've told customers that it's a safety hazard, since overheated, quickly swirling milk could do some real damage to my hands if it splashed out of the pitcher. 200 degree latte customers are rediculous.
Wow, 200? Really? Like you've had customers ask for 200, or you're just throwing a number out there...? My idea of extra hot is 175. I've never even attempted to take milk to 200. I wonder what that tastes like... *shivers.*
-bry
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