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Patron charged Rs 850 for a boiled egg in Mumbai hotel

A Twitter user, named Kartik Dhar recently posted a picture of his bill, in which he was charged Rs 1,700 for two-boiled eggs in Four Seasons hotel in Mumbai. Additionally, the user was charged Rs 850 for an omelette.

Patron charged Rs 850 for a boiled egg in Mumbai hotel
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Published : Aug 12, 2019, 8:21 AM IST

Mumbai: A patron's revelation of being charged Rs 850 per boiled egg, excluding taxes, at a luxury hotel in the financial capital led to a social media furore on Sunday.

It comes days after actor Rahul Bose had complained about paying Rs 442 for two bananas in a Chandigarh hotel.

After paying Rs 1,700 for two boiled eggs and a goods and services tax at 18 per cent at Central Mumbai's Four Seasons Hotel, author-photographer Karik Dhar tweeted out a picture of his bill, further fuelling chatter on how star hotels charge for common items.

Tagging Bose in his tweet first posted on Saturday, Dhar asked if they should launch a protest on the subject.

Dhar's message on the micro-blogging site was retweeted or shared by 1,200 users and there were hundreds of comments on the same.

The bill copy shared by Dhar showed omelettes are also priced at the same Rs 850, while a Diet Coke goes for Rs 260 in the hotel.

Not all the users were amused by the sum charged by the hotel, and a few also advised Dhar to be careful in the future and order only after reading the menu wherein the price will be listed.

A hotel spokesperson could not be reached for comments immediately.

It can be recalled that following the controversy over the price of bananas involving Bose, the Federation of Hotel and Restaurant Associations of India (FHRAI) had justified the high price.

"A hotel offers service, quality, plate, cutlery, accompaniment, sanitised fruit, ambience and luxury and not the commodity alone," FHRAI vice president Gurbaxish Singh Kohli had said.

He had added that while coffee is available at Rs 10 on a roadside stall, the same could be served at Rs 250 in a luxury hotel.

It can be noted that eggs are a favourite snack in the financial capital, and hawkers dot every neighbourhood and business district, selling the protein source for a small fraction of the price charged by the hotel.

Also read: BJP MP Diya Kumari claims to be a descendant of Lord Ram

Mumbai: A patron's revelation of being charged Rs 850 per boiled egg, excluding taxes, at a luxury hotel in the financial capital led to a social media furore on Sunday.

It comes days after actor Rahul Bose had complained about paying Rs 442 for two bananas in a Chandigarh hotel.

After paying Rs 1,700 for two boiled eggs and a goods and services tax at 18 per cent at Central Mumbai's Four Seasons Hotel, author-photographer Karik Dhar tweeted out a picture of his bill, further fuelling chatter on how star hotels charge for common items.

Tagging Bose in his tweet first posted on Saturday, Dhar asked if they should launch a protest on the subject.

Dhar's message on the micro-blogging site was retweeted or shared by 1,200 users and there were hundreds of comments on the same.

The bill copy shared by Dhar showed omelettes are also priced at the same Rs 850, while a Diet Coke goes for Rs 260 in the hotel.

Not all the users were amused by the sum charged by the hotel, and a few also advised Dhar to be careful in the future and order only after reading the menu wherein the price will be listed.

A hotel spokesperson could not be reached for comments immediately.

It can be recalled that following the controversy over the price of bananas involving Bose, the Federation of Hotel and Restaurant Associations of India (FHRAI) had justified the high price.

"A hotel offers service, quality, plate, cutlery, accompaniment, sanitised fruit, ambience and luxury and not the commodity alone," FHRAI vice president Gurbaxish Singh Kohli had said.

He had added that while coffee is available at Rs 10 on a roadside stall, the same could be served at Rs 250 in a luxury hotel.

It can be noted that eggs are a favourite snack in the financial capital, and hawkers dot every neighbourhood and business district, selling the protein source for a small fraction of the price charged by the hotel.

Also read: BJP MP Diya Kumari claims to be a descendant of Lord Ram

Intro:Body:

Mumbai, Aug 11 (PTI) A patron's revelation of being

charged Rs 850 per boiled egg, excluding taxes, at a luxury

hotel in the financial capital led to a social media furore on

Sunday.

         It comes days after actor Rahul Bose had complained

about paying Rs 442 for two bananas in a Chandigarh hotel.

         After paying Rs 1,700 for two boiled eggs and a goods

and services tax at 18 per cent at Central Mumbai's Four

Seasons Hotel, author-photographer Karik Dhar tweeted out a

picture of his bill, further fuelling chatter on how star

hotels charge for common items.

         Tagging Bose in his tweet first posted on Saturday,

Dhar asked if they should launch a protest on the subject.

         Dhar's message on the micro-blogging site was

retweeted or shared by 1,200 users and there were hundreds of

comments on the same.

         The bill copy shared by Dhar showed omelets are also

priced at the same Rs 850, while a Diet Coke goes for Rs 260

in the hotel.

         Not all the users were amused by the sum charged by

the hotel, and a few also advised Dhar to be careful in the

future and order only after reading the menu wherein the price

will be listed.

         A hotel spokesperson could not be reached for comments

immediately.

         It can be recalled that following the controversy over

price of bananas involving Bose, the Federation of Hotel and

Restaurant Associations of India (FHRAI) had justified the

high price.

         "a hotel offers service, quality, plate, cutlery,

accompaniment, sanitised fruit, ambiance and luxury and not

the commodity alone," FHRAI vice president Gurbaxish Singh

Kohli had said.

         He had added that while a coffee is available at Rs 10

on a roadside stall, the same could be served at Rs 250 in a

luxury hotel.

         It can be noted that eggs are a favourite snack in the

financial capital, and hawkers dot every neighbourhood and

business district, selling the protein source for a small

fraction of the price charged by the hotel. 


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