Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

All-You-Can-Eat Restaurant Charges for 25-Month-Old Baby

inews24 Views  

A controversy has arisen after a family of four was denied service at an all-you-can-eat Korean army stew (budae jjigae) restaurant. The family had attempted to order two servings of the stew for the adults and two servings of another menu item for their 5-year-old and 25-month-old children but were rejected.

On September 1, a post titled “Are we the unreasonable customers at the army stew restaurant?” was shared on an online community. This image is unrelated to the article. [Photo=YouTube Channel ‘Baek Jong-won’]

On September 1, a post titled “Are we the unreasonable customers at the army stew restaurant?” was shared on an online community.

The post was written by Mr. A, who stated he visited the all-you-can-eat army stew restaurant with his wife and two nephews aged 5 years and 25 months.

Mr. A ordered two servings of army stew for himself and his wife and one serving of beef hot pot for the children. However, the owner refused the order stating, “We don’t accept such orders,” because they did not order army stew according to the number of people.

A man working with the owner commented, “They’re just kids, do we have to do this?” The owner retorted, “They’re clearly over 5 years old.”

Upon hearing this, Mr. A changed his order to two servings of army stew and two servings of beef hot pot. But the female owner once again refused and suggested they order army stew according to the number of people.

Mr. A explained that the children might not be able to eat army stew because it’s spicy, but the owner insisted on ordering army stew according to the number of people and said, “If you order like this, you can’t have unlimited refills.”

In the end, Mr. A and his group gave up on the unlimited refills and ordered army stew requesting, “We definitely won’t give the army stew to the kids so please prepare a separate dish for them.”

The owner then asked Mr. A to leave saying, “Customers like you are the unreasonable ones that appear on the news. We need to be selective about our customers. You’re unreasonable.”

A controversy has arisen after a family of four was denied service at an all-you-can-eat Korean stew (budae jjigae) restaurant. The family had attempted to order two servings of the stew for the adults and two servings of another menu item for their 5-year-old and 25-month-old children but were refused. [Photo=Online Community Capture]

Netizens who saw the post commented, “There’s no need to go to such a restaurant,” “I don’t see what the problem is with ordering two servings of a different menu item,” “The restaurant is at fault,” and “How much money are they trying to make by doing this,” criticizing the restaurant’s attitude.

By. Soo Jung Shin

inews24
content@www.kangnamtimes.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[SOCIETY] Latest Stories

  • 12-Year-Old Girl Goes Blind After Only Eating French Fries for 8 Years
  • Why These Twins Want to Share a Boyfriend—And They’re Totally OK With It
  • How 8 COVID Infections Changed Everything for This Young Woman—Including Her Hair
  • Thai Man Arrested After 20 Years of Illegal Penis Enlargement Procedures
  • 23-Year-Old Woman Ignored Symptoms for a Year, Later Diagnosed with Hodgkin Lymphoma
  • Wife’s Affair Exposed After Vasectomy: Husband Fights for Custody and Assets

You May Also Like

  • 1
    'My last chance': Eric Lu on overcoming pressure to win Chopin Competition on second try decade later

    LATEST 

  • 2
    Identity, unity and pride: Everything in a K-pop light stick

    LATEST 

  • 3
    Taekwondo as ninja training? Canadian sports channel faces backlash from Koreans

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Police suspect foul play in case of woman missing for over 40 days

    LATEST 

  • 5
    One woman killed by someone close every 10 minutes: UN

    LATEST 

Popular Now

  • 1
    Govt. delegation travels to Vietnam to seek urban rail cooperation, project opportunities

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 2
    Sungshin Women's University students face police probe over protest vandalism

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 3
    US demands 'balanced' EU digital rules before it cuts steel tariffs

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 4
    Trump to visit Beijing in April, host Xi next year

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 5
    Trump says he accepted Xi's invitation to visit Beijing in April, Xi will visit US later that year

    LATEST&nbsp

Must-Reads

  • 1
    'My last chance': Eric Lu on overcoming pressure to win Chopin Competition on second try decade later

    LATEST 

  • 2
    Identity, unity and pride: Everything in a K-pop light stick

    LATEST 

  • 3
    Taekwondo as ninja training? Canadian sports channel faces backlash from Koreans

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Police suspect foul play in case of woman missing for over 40 days

    LATEST 

  • 5
    One woman killed by someone close every 10 minutes: UN

    LATEST 

Popular Now

  • 1
    Govt. delegation travels to Vietnam to seek urban rail cooperation, project opportunities

    LATEST 

  • 2
    Sungshin Women's University students face police probe over protest vandalism

    LATEST 

  • 3
    US demands 'balanced' EU digital rules before it cuts steel tariffs

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Trump to visit Beijing in April, host Xi next year

    LATEST 

  • 5
    Trump says he accepted Xi's invitation to visit Beijing in April, Xi will visit US later that year

    LATEST