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Wednesday, June 30, 2010
News ~ Fish Dish Cost $1,200 At RWS
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Can you believe this? Remember to check the price before ordering.
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http://tnp.sg/news/story/0,4136,247008,00.html
Man upset at $1,200 fish dish at RWS
Waiter did not mention price during order.
RWS says goodwill discount given
By Yeo Sam Jo
June 30, 2010
A 35-year-old diner and four friends feasted on a steamed fish dish at a restaurant in Resorts World Sentosa (RWS). At the end of the meal, upon receiving the bill, his jaw hit the ground.
What seemed like a simple dish ended up costing a whopping S$1,224.
The diner, who only wanted to be known as Mr Liu, took his four friends to RWS’ Feng Shui Inn restaurant on June 12. He had initially asked for marble goby, better known locally as “soon hock”, but was told there was no stock for the fish.
A waiter then recommended the white sultan fish instead. The group agreed, without enquiring about the cost of the dish. But when the bill arrived, the five diners were shocked to find that the single sultan fish, weighing 1.8kg, set them back by a staggering S$1,224.
“(The waiter) didn’t mention the price (of the fish), and we also didn’t think too much about it and just said okay,” Mr Liu told Lianhe Wanbao.
He complained about the price of the fish during payment and the restaurant responded by giving him a 15% discount on the bill as a gesture of goodwill.
“The customer has the right to know and the restaurant should have made clear its price so we could decide whether it was worth it,” Mr Liu said.
In response to the incident, an RWS spokesman claims that the practice of not disclosing menu prices is common in upscale restaurants. “It is not always appropriate to state menu prices to high-end customers who have come to expect a certain discretion when they entertain high-level guests, ” he explains.
RWS conceded that the incident could have been a “lapse of judgement” but it was smoothed over quickly with an on-the-spot discount.
But is S$68 per 100g for a sultan fish a reasonable amount?
A quick comparison with Capital Restaurant, which has been selling sultan fish for 36 years, reveals that the dish can go for as low as S$6 per 100g. This is less than a tenth of Fengshui Inn’s price tag on the fish.
Chef Pung Lu Tin, 50, of Seafood International Market and Restaurant, explained the sultan fish is sought-after because it was not easy to catch. He added that its meat was “very smooth”.
“The flesh is tender and snow white. It’s a wild river fish, so it eats fruits that drops from trees and bears the fragrance of fruit,” Chef Huang Ching Biao, 58, kitchen operations director at Jin Shan restaurant at MBS told The New Paper.
But despite its draw, both chefs added that they have not come across any commanding such a high price. One seafood distributor known only as Mr Lee even described the price of the fish at Fengshui Inn as “outrageous”.
This seafood shocker is reminiscent of an incident that occurred in March last year, where six American tourists were charged S$239 for a mere eight tiger prawns at Newton hawker centre.
The stall involved had its licence suspended for three months by the National Environment Agency (NEA) for breaching licencing conditions.
Incidents like these throw the spotlight on questionable charging practices in Singapore. For a country positioning itself as a tourism hub, these bad dining experiences are sure to leave a bitter after-taste.
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Can you believe this? Remember to check the price before ordering.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://tnp.sg/news/story/0,4136,247008,00.html
Man upset at $1,200 fish dish at RWS
Waiter did not mention price during order.
RWS says goodwill discount given
By Yeo Sam Jo
June 30, 2010
A 35-year-old diner and four friends feasted on a steamed fish dish at a restaurant in Resorts World Sentosa (RWS). At the end of the meal, upon receiving the bill, his jaw hit the ground.
What seemed like a simple dish ended up costing a whopping S$1,224.
The diner, who only wanted to be known as Mr Liu, took his four friends to RWS’ Feng Shui Inn restaurant on June 12. He had initially asked for marble goby, better known locally as “soon hock”, but was told there was no stock for the fish.
A waiter then recommended the white sultan fish instead. The group agreed, without enquiring about the cost of the dish. But when the bill arrived, the five diners were shocked to find that the single sultan fish, weighing 1.8kg, set them back by a staggering S$1,224.
“(The waiter) didn’t mention the price (of the fish), and we also didn’t think too much about it and just said okay,” Mr Liu told Lianhe Wanbao.
He complained about the price of the fish during payment and the restaurant responded by giving him a 15% discount on the bill as a gesture of goodwill.
“The customer has the right to know and the restaurant should have made clear its price so we could decide whether it was worth it,” Mr Liu said.
In response to the incident, an RWS spokesman claims that the practice of not disclosing menu prices is common in upscale restaurants. “It is not always appropriate to state menu prices to high-end customers who have come to expect a certain discretion when they entertain high-level guests, ” he explains.
RWS conceded that the incident could have been a “lapse of judgement” but it was smoothed over quickly with an on-the-spot discount.
But is S$68 per 100g for a sultan fish a reasonable amount?
A quick comparison with Capital Restaurant, which has been selling sultan fish for 36 years, reveals that the dish can go for as low as S$6 per 100g. This is less than a tenth of Fengshui Inn’s price tag on the fish.
Chef Pung Lu Tin, 50, of Seafood International Market and Restaurant, explained the sultan fish is sought-after because it was not easy to catch. He added that its meat was “very smooth”.
“The flesh is tender and snow white. It’s a wild river fish, so it eats fruits that drops from trees and bears the fragrance of fruit,” Chef Huang Ching Biao, 58, kitchen operations director at Jin Shan restaurant at MBS told The New Paper.
But despite its draw, both chefs added that they have not come across any commanding such a high price. One seafood distributor known only as Mr Lee even described the price of the fish at Fengshui Inn as “outrageous”.
This seafood shocker is reminiscent of an incident that occurred in March last year, where six American tourists were charged S$239 for a mere eight tiger prawns at Newton hawker centre.
The stall involved had its licence suspended for three months by the National Environment Agency (NEA) for breaching licencing conditions.
Incidents like these throw the spotlight on questionable charging practices in Singapore. For a country positioning itself as a tourism hub, these bad dining experiences are sure to leave a bitter after-taste.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Gendang Kasturi (Green Bean Goreng)
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'Gendang Kasturi' is a Malay cake made of Green Beans and deep fried like Fritters. You may have heard of Green Bean Soup, but this is Green Bean Fried or Green Bean Goreng... where 'goreng' means 'fried' in Malay.
By-the-way, the word 'Kasturi' has a nice sound to it.
Here are some pictures of what it looks like.
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'Gendang Kasturi' is a Malay cake made of Green Beans and deep fried like Fritters. You may have heard of Green Bean Soup, but this is Green Bean Fried or Green Bean Goreng... where 'goreng' means 'fried' in Malay.
By-the-way, the word 'Kasturi' has a nice sound to it.
Here are some pictures of what it looks like.
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Video Size for Gmail & YouTube
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It’s good for me to keep my Videos to less than
25MB & 10minutes
to meet both Gmail & YouTube criteria…
Here’s why…
Gmail Video Attachment: = Max 25MB
YouTube Videos: = Max 2GB & 10minutes
My Favourite YouTube Privacy Options:
Unlisted (anyone with link can view)
.
Go to this link for details:
Video Size for Gmail & YouTube
It’s good for me to keep my Videos to less than
25MB & 10minutes
to meet both Gmail & YouTube criteria…
Here’s why…
Gmail Video Attachment: = Max 25MB
YouTube Videos: = Max 2GB & 10minutes
My Favourite YouTube Privacy Options:
Unlisted (anyone with link can view)
.
Go to this link for details:
Video Size for Gmail & YouTube
Google Groups Help
Official ~ http://groups.google.com/support/
UN-Official ~ http://groups.google.com/group/google-groups-guide
How To Upload Your Photo:
► Go to MEMBERS
► Double-Click on YOUR NAME
► Click ‘My profile – edit’
How To Change The Name Of Your Google Group:
How To Change The Email Name Of Your Google Group:
http://groups.google.com/group/is-something-broken/browse_thread/thread/93656629d0cbec7c/84770edcfa0035fd?lnk=gst&q=rename+google+group#84770edcfa0035fd
Point Format:
► sign in as the owner of the group
► go to the main page of your group
► click the "Group settings" link on the right
► click on the "General" tab press the "Edit" button
► Change the Name of your Google Group... OR
► Change the Email Name of your Google Group
Essay Format: To change the name of your group, sign in as the owner of the group, go to the main page of your group, click the "Group settings" link on the right hand side of the page, and on the "General" tab press the "Edit" button. Now you can not only change the name of your group that appears on top of the group web pages, but you can also change the email address of your group. If you change the email address of your group, the URL (web address) of your group will change appropriately.
How To Delete Your Google Group:
► sign in as the owner of the group
► go to the main page of your group
► click the "Group settings" link on the right
► click on the "Advanced" tab
► Delete your Group (WARNING! This is permanent. You will be asked to confirm deletion.)
.
UN-Official ~ http://groups.google.com/group/google-groups-guide
How To Upload Your Photo:
► Go to MEMBERS
► Double-Click on YOUR NAME
► Click ‘My profile – edit’
How To Change The Name Of Your Google Group:
How To Change The Email Name Of Your Google Group:
http://groups.google.com/group/is-something-broken/browse_thread/thread/93656629d0cbec7c/84770edcfa0035fd?lnk=gst&q=rename+google+group#84770edcfa0035fd
Point Format:
► sign in as the owner of the group
► go to the main page of your group
► click the "Group settings" link on the right
► click on the "General" tab press the "Edit" button
► Change the Name of your Google Group... OR
► Change the Email Name of your Google Group
Essay Format: To change the name of your group, sign in as the owner of the group, go to the main page of your group, click the "Group settings" link on the right hand side of the page, and on the "General" tab press the "Edit" button. Now you can not only change the name of your group that appears on top of the group web pages, but you can also change the email address of your group. If you change the email address of your group, the URL (web address) of your group will change appropriately.
How To Delete Your Google Group:
► sign in as the owner of the group
► go to the main page of your group
► click the "Group settings" link on the right
► click on the "Advanced" tab
► Delete your Group (WARNING! This is permanent. You will be asked to confirm deletion.)
.
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