Imagine you are restaurant owner, you employ a Wine Waiter/Sommelier and commit substantial sums of money to your beverage budget. You train your staff on how to pour, decant, describe and appreciate the wine that has been judiciously selected for your wine list. Then people arrive at your restaurant with Queen Adelaide Chardonnay, Hardy's RR or even Cleanskins!!.
jpengelly,
I think I covered this in my original post on this thread. I suggested that a reasonable corkage of $20-25 would deter a wynns shiraz BYO, and would certainly deter Queen Adelaide, cleanskins, etc. In an establishment that had employed a sommelier, and trained their staff in the service of wine, I honestly believe a reasonable corkage fee is warranted. Again, I think I suggested this in my initial post...
Here's a thought for restaurateurs, why not set the corkage at the price that would deter bottles you wouldn't want clientele to BYO?
I don't think anyone out there would BYO a bottle of wine less than the cost of BYO. Thus, if a restaurant wants to allow the calibre of wines through to special occassion wines only, and discourage BYO of quaffers, then set it at $30-50 per bottle! Give the diners a chance to decide on: quaffer with dinner (then wine list D'arry's original for $45 lets say) or something special (say, 96 Moss Wood Cabernet and bear the $40 corkage)...
Anyways,
Monghead.