Polperro, and dining windows

Mornington Peninsula – Sunday 5 January 2025 – Lunch

I’d like to tell you a story. Let me begin by an admission that the restaurant is in the right. As in most accidents there is contribution by all parties though. This is one of those stories. Dun-Dun.

Polperro is a beautiful winery in the heart of Mornington Peninsula’s Red Hill. Today it is approaching thirty-five degrees, there is some nice music playing on the lawn, and the restaurant is cool and welcoming as the first guests arrive for midday seatings.

Everything is calm and just so. Riccardo comes to Catherine and my table and greets us with a nice introduction, and we have time to peruse the menu and wine list while our guests make their way to the restaurant. The first admission is that they are just under twenty minutes late to the table, having made their way from Melbourne.

Knowing our dining window is only two hours, we look to simultaneously catch up with our guests, but also order our drinks hastily, and hope that our snacks start coming out. This is a five course tasting menu with numerous components, and some need to be amended for Catherine’s gluten intolerance. We speak to Riccardo before our guests arrive to make sure the kitchen saw our note on booking, but are not explained what menu changes will be necessary. I notice early on some confusion on this, with the oyster covered in a delicious dessert lime foam, which is initially sent back to the kitchen, before being cleared again for take off to our table unchanged.

There is an early pace about things, but certainly not a rush, and it feels like we will not be catching up with the first course snacks taking quite some time to deliver to the table. As I’ve mentioned, starting proceedings late is our fault, but it cannot be that rare. The concern sets in when there are lengthy gaps between the chicken chawanmushi course, and the Moreton Bay bug course, and yet again to the final savoury course of impressively handled duck.

Earlier we had been warned about our two hour window (which was clear on booking as well) so with one course to go, and getting towards 2.15pm we are very aware our time is coming to an end. Interestingly, as a sign of things to come, the doors to the terrace are opened covertly around 1.30pm and the warm air starts heating the dining room, as a nod to the need to finish up that seems to be a feature of the early service, but perhaps not a good feature on a thirty-five degree day.

We know we have outlasted our two hour window, and we were given fifteen minutes grace, so we certainly do not complain about being escorted outside, though carrying our own drinks (wine and water glasses) was starting to verge on impolite. This was the point where the reasonable levels of service turned to average. With the later service guests coming in at 2.30pm the doors quickly shut, which was fair enough as I wouldn’t want to come to a baking restaurant either.

What also shut was most signs of any further service, with the terrace often bereft. We asked for our sparkling and tap water to be refilled and were given a jug of outside temperature water with no ice, and forgotten about for most of our time outside until later when my sparkling was again refilled. Our superb, but melting dessert, of chocolate tart with raspberry sorbet, was delivered long after any opportunity of a two hour dining window, making us start to question whether having a five course meal was even possible.

We were not alone by any stretch on the terrace. There was at least half a dozen tables finishing their meals in the heat, and others attempting to beat the dining window inside. At no stage was there any apology for the longer waits between courses, or for the stretching of the service team. In fact, I had to ask for my wine to be refilled with our bottle at the waitperson station so many times that Riccardo joked I was “thirsty”. The issue was each refill was three sips, and I like to drink a little after each mouthful. It is a winery after all.

Right at the outset we had apologised for starting the meal late. These things do happen though and we were on time having been close by earlier in the day. We tried to find out where our friends were on the way from Melbourne, but there is no mobile reception in the restaurant. Ironically I went out to the terrace to check if I could get better reception through the very doors that were opened ninety minutes later to let the restaurant warm up, but on this early occasion I was asked by the floorstaff to not use that door again!

Having let Riccardo know that our friends were 15-20 minutes late, the best practice would have been to bring snacks to the table which is the first course, quickly after they arrived, but I know kitchens don’t work that way and there is an order to service. At a restaurant with a set menu it is easier though.

In closing, I have clearly admitted fault, though there is contribution from the restaurant too. My advice is not to dismiss Polperro as a dining option, but to perhaps be fashionably early, or choose the later sitting. I also would like to suggest to the restaurant that some outdoor fans or a mist on the terrace could be a nice touch, and not outside the budget given the $140 per head menu, and reasonably expensive wine list (for a winery restaurant). Case closed.

Polperro Winery
https://www.polperrowines.com.au
150 Red Hill Rd, Red Hill
Phone +61 3 5989 2471

Recommended Mornington Peninsula lunches with review links:
Tedesca Osteria
Paringa Estate
Laura at Pt Leo Estate
Rare Hare
Ten Minutes by Tractor
Yet to be written about: Montalto

Recommended Mornington Peninsula dinners with review links:
Doot Doot Doot
Audrey’s

Summary of our week in Rye visiting various cafes and restaurants, including T’Gallant
And keep in mind St Andrew’s Brewery for a casual lunch too

What do you expect of service?

A recent experience at a new restaurant was a reminder of some of the simple aspects of service. Like a lot of endeavours, there is not a clear set of rules. One size does not fit all, and often the temperament needs to meet the broader theme of the restaurant.

In this particular circumstance it was a busy Friday lunch service. The floorstaff were working together in an orderly fashion at first glance. Cracks started appearing as the pressure went on. Like waiting in security at the airport when you are running late for a flight, you could hear the floorstaff screaming on the inside.

December is a challenging time for service teams. The usual dynamics change, and larger groups become more prevalent for pre-Christmas catch ups. At a new restaurant the stakes are higher. All the preparation and planning cannot ensure a smooth service when push comes to shove.

I have high expectations for any service team, and its management. At its highest and best it is exceptional. Difficult to define or clearly explain, there is a flow and momentum to the best examples. Often you can find at least one element that is missing. At times it can be one missing element that breaks the momentum.

At this time of year, whilst there are great challenges, there is also a generally easy-to-please crowd. Catch ups busy with chatter, competing for speaking time, that build the noise in a busy restaurant, makes for customers that are lively and happy to a level that compensates for some failings.

Back to my experience. I am thirsty. I asked for the drinks list a while ago. Why has no one come back? I got here with Ralph; Natalie and Graham have already taken the banquette, so I have my back to the floorstaff. When I turn around several times there is no attention. A Mexican wave of similar turns on other tables probably takes the impact of my turns away.

This had happened earlier. A young waitperson with long eyelashes had been the one who I caught attention from. Even though she is not allocated to our table, after what would have been at least ten minutes of turning around from time to time, breaking my part of the conversation, guess who is the only person I can find looking out to serve?

In between, I noticed habits had already formed that are hard to break. I was about six metres from the water station. Somehow our own waitperson had gone from table to table to fill up other table’s tap water but decided to not look up once either prior to, or following, each return to the station. Other’s walked past with their head down, and in a noisy restaurant didn’t hear my “excuse me”, or worse they ignored it.

Ironically, because we had been drinking sparkling water, we were not having any water service, and in the end we asked for more sparkling water three times before we gave up, and were refilled with the tap water. The flow of great service appears to me as gliding around a dining room. Without losing sight of safety, simply moving faster and acting more alert are two ways to impact service. It makes complete sense from a business perspective too. Provide a paying customer with what they are asking for.

All of this had me thinking about how I assess the quality of service in restaurants. The way that having your glass refilled every three minutes is uncomfortable, but having a completely empty glass for five minutes is just the same. How natural your waitperson is? Are they treating you too familiarly as if you are reuniting with a long lost friend? Are they stiff and too formal? It is very hard to judge. There is no rule book.

One cliche is, “the best service is service that is unnoticed”. I disagree. I want competency in the role above all, but some friendly banter, and the ability to articulately answer questions and add some character makes the experience better. Everyone on the floor should know the menu thoroughly, hopefully they have tasted each dish (especially in higher end restaurants), and they should be aware of basic dietaries and allergens in each dish.

Consistency is the key. The best managed service teams know their roles and execute on them, assisting other team members at certain points through the service, but not continuously. There should be no weak links. You should experience the same level of service wherever you are seated. Attentiveness to the diner is what often differentiates the best service teams. Attentiveness means understanding when old friends are catching up and need some time before ordering. It is understanding the dynamic of the table and who are the captains, or who is the organiser. It is asking appropriate questions at appropriate times. It is gauging the experience of the diner.

Service is not one-sided. When Catherine and I go out we take our manners with us. The same way we would thank friends or family around the kitchen table, or retail staff at the shops, is the way we treat the waitstaff. We offer comment on the food and drink we have been served, and try to make sure we provide constructive criticism if we notice something that the chefs, or the management should be aware of. We say goodbye as we leave, and it is often a key area of service in how we feel leaving a restaurant. The greeting should be warm and inviting.

It’s time to write a list. Here’s some expectations I have when going to a restaurant that has a hat / star (or more). In other words, a serious restaurant. There is a bit of an order, but not necessarily of importance. Naturally there is too much here to be front of mind on each visit, but incredibly, many of the restaurants we have been to around the world exhibit all of these characteristics and qualities, making them some of the best experiences you can have.

  • Communication prior – a great deal of the niceties of booking a table are gone, but there is better practice in the online booking experience, the credit card deposit / hold, and the confirmation / modification experience. I’d suggest it is never perfect and needs constant attention, and that all staff should have used the booking system at some stage to understand it.
  • Website and search engine updating – I once turned up to a restaurant and explained that although I knew it was open on Wednesday nights, the search on google told potential customers otherwise. They debated it until they checked and realised it was indeed showing as closed. Regular checking and updating in this online world is now very important.
  • Minimum standards – knowing the traditions of service such as table settings, where to serve from, how to pour, how to take orders most effectively, carry plates, remember table numbers, and which guest is having what. These basics are learned, but by the time a waitperson is employed in a top class restaurant they should be second nature.
  • Attentiveness – hard to define, but I like a meal to flow, with floorstaff who have an intuition for what the diner is looking for next, when to hang around for a chat while resetting the napkin for a guest using the toilet, when to check if the diner has tried a particular ingredient before. There’s too much to it, but when it is there you have a far better restaurant experience. Sometimes without noticing.
  • Care – genuine interest in serving is an attribute that makes more impact than any other. Missing a customer’s order of a side dish, or a drink, is far more forgivable if there is a genuine apology and a quick rectification. Not knowing the ingredients in a dish is fine if the promise of asking the kitchen is promptly kept. Checking on whether the table is enjoying the food can come off as caring, or can be seen as going through the motions, so only check if you have the right intentions.
  • Intolerances, allergens, and dislikes – I have none of these, but Catherine does, and plenty of my good friends and family do as well. Dietaries are super important to those who have them, and is probably the first area of critique in their dining experiences. Getting it right is not only caring, but makes repeat business much more likely.
  • Balance – stiff and formal service is a thing of the past, but you are not best friends with the floor staff either (or are you?) Finding balance in the character of the customer, and trying to meet their expectations, while being authentic is a talent, and one of the reasons hospitality is so difficult.
  • Flexibility – please don’t say you will check with the kitchen if you already know something is not possible; please don’t promise something you are not sure can be provided. Within reason the dining experience should be flexible without opening the floodgates.
  • Mannerism – working effectively and efficiently and looking calm is best. If all else fails work faster and harder. The worst look during a busy service is of a clearly uninterested, slow, and inefficient waitperson.
  • Wine service – the best time to offer me another wine is immediately as I finish my last one! Coming to the table and offering another is better if you have the wine list or a fluent knowledge of the wines by the glass. A tip to those who like to try a few is to take a photo of the wines by the glass, which means you can always consult your phone while waiting for the next one. All other aspects of wine service are nice traditions including the presentation of the bottle, and the offer to taste. Another note is that the offer to taste isn’t to make sure you like it, but to check if it is oxidised, so screw caps have made most of the consultation merely ceremonial.
  • Experience on the floor – you cannot master anything without having significant experience. Have patience with new floorstaff, but do not have patience with restaurants who hire new floorstaff and do not provide them with adequate training and familiarisation to the restaurant.
  • Experience as a diner – any waitperson who genuinely loves their job, also loves being served on their days off. They know what to do because they have been on the other side many times and will continue to do so. What do they like when they are on a date or dining as a couple? What about for a family celebration; or in a large festive group; or for business? These aspects set the scene and good waitstaff understand the best way to serve different dynamics.
  • Communication / relationship with the kitchen – if you keep an eye on it your intuition will tell you if the floor is working with the kitchen as a team, or whether they are combatants. I’ve seen some huge arguments in the kitchen resulting from the high pressure of a busy service and the restaurants who have good teams across the board can work through those pressure cookers, and others will explode.
  • Good management – well managed restaurants are happy places, and great to work at. The right number of staff are on each shift and where other circumstances are encountered, the managers step in to help and direct. No one in the restaurant says “that is not my job”. The restaurant is profitable, and the staff are paid well, and receive incentives to continue their loyalty. I’ve worked in toxic kitchens and it is normally rotten from the head. When this happens it is only a matter of time before the restaurant shuts its doors and no one wins.
  • Greeting – firstly make it easy to locate the restaurant (normally through the website and attention to google and apple maps). Next say welcome and already know the names of the people coming in around the time during service. Then quickly seat the diners and perhaps for early bookings check if the table is fine. Get a feel for the dynamic of the table and pass it on to the dedicated waitperson if there is one, or to those on the section.
  • Receiving payment – if someone has asked for the bill, make a note to follow up with the payment machine soon after it has been put back down and is no longer being assessed. The number of times I’ve had to ask for both the bill, and then to pay the bill is astounding. When taking payment do not say “you can leave a tip” as this is now generally known.
  • Goodbye – it can be an empty feeling leaving a restaurant where you have realised the staff just want you to leave and have disappeared from the dining room. Even if you are frustrated that the last table have stayed chatting well past what is polite, still thank them for their custom and bid them farewell. It is not difficult and can be the difference between a feeling of comfort leading to a repeat visit, or the alternative.
  • Research – somewhat controversially, some restaurants will check the social media of the organiser and see if they have any particular likes (or dislikes). I first heard of this at Eleven Madison Park. This is a difficult endeavour but having a quick system of checking if someone is a repeat visitor is not difficult with technology, and I’m sure large language models are getting better at providing an understanding of dining habits. Utilise this unless it feels on the verge of creepy!
  • Restaurant layout – smart layouts in restaurants can really help. I love space between tables but this is not always possible, or business sensible. However, no table should be out of sight from regular service (and if it is, it is not an excuse), and the layout should be efficient with lots of waitperson stations that are well equipped, but a little hidden.
  • Children – I have a five year old. I feel nervous every time we take him to lunch or dinner at a nice place. More often than not we pre-ask if it is okay to gain some comfort. More often than not other diners say they cannot believe he has behaved so well (thank you iPad and headphones, and finding seats that face away from the other diners so they don’t see his latest favourite YouTube family!) Sometimes small gestures and service niceties make all the difference to us, and I tip accordingly, understanding a seat is sometimes being taken away from a better paying diner. I am not saying children should be brought to restaurants and specially accommodated. But I am saying that it can be the difference in their parents returning, sometimes with that same child year after year, or in other groups.

Gelling this all together is the reason why the upper echelons of restaurants and service teams are so rare. The results when it all works is beautiful. Happy customers, waitstaff gliding effortlessly through their shift, and usually an atmosphere best described as convivial, are the signs of greatness.

If you would like to find out some examples of the points above, or where they all come together, please comment or send me an email (bleekong@gmail.com). I’d equally like to hear from anyone who reads this post of their thoughts, and their good (and bad) experiences.