Levi Dalton
Levi Dalton
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
$15 a glass on a $15 bottle???!!!
Claude: it is pretty typical at a fine dining level to charge the wholesale price of a bottle of wine for a glass of said wine as long as said glass is equal to roughly 1/4 the bottle in size.
The resulting "over" margin (usually one is expected to bring in a more favorable to the customer margin overall) is usually balanced out by the bottles that are opened for weekly staff trainings, the bottles that break in some sort of mishap during the course of a month, the bottles that chip at the rim when being opened (resulting in a wine that is unsafe to serve), the free glasses given away by staff either by mistake or on purpose, the bottles sent back by customers who don't understand them, the bottles that have to be replaced because of some sort of mishap involving spills or such, the corked bottles that the distributor won't give credit for (anything bought at auction, anything bought on closeout, anything the distributor sold you 2+ months ago, etc.), and then the other miscellaneous bottles that I as the sommelier decide are flawed in some way that I won't serve to guests, but that also I won't ever get credit for.
Then there is the matter of glassware breakage (always a large expense), my salary, the cellarman's salary, etc.
But then people who are not in the restaurant industry never seem to understand any of this, and it is also a subject that people love to go on at length about without really understanding, so I maybe I just should have left well enough alone.
Goods and services cost money, and everyone is, you know, desirous of making some sort of return on investment and time. I myself am aware of how it is to pay a "cut" to someone who is not the winemaker, as I myself now pay more for a wine through a distributor than I used to pay for the exact same wine direct through the importer as a result of my introducing that wine to said distributor during their meal at my restaurant. Not only do I have to pay more as a result, I can no longer get the wine at a price point or in a quantity that would allow me to pour it, as I used to do. Sucks, don't it?