Saturday, May 9, 2026

D'oh, nuts!


    Fate has a way of upbraiding you.
    If you remember EGD's most recent guest post, a week ago Sunday, a friend related a terrible experience with Dunkin'' Donuts at Midway Airport — service so bad that at least one reader doubted it could be true. It was.
     In my little introductory paragraph, I really laid into Dunkin' Donuts. "Never eat at a Dunkin' Donuts for any reason whatsoever," I urged.
     Though I felt guilty about it. My condemnation was based purely on thinking their donuts are not worth putting in your mouth. I wouldn't do it, and I'd eat a Circus Peanut. Even as I applied the lash, I remembered those many long ago mornings in my early 20s when I'd look forward to breakfast consisting of a pair of Dunkin' muffins in a waxy paper bag and a cup of coffee as I made the drive from Oak Park to my job at the Wheaton Daily Journal.  A bran muffin for the main meal and a chocolate chip muffin for dessert. They were good company in my dead grandmother's dinky blue Chevy Citation. Peeling off chunks of the muffin top, the shiny, dense, best part, life seemed to hold promise.
     Maybe they were sweet and awful and I just didn't know any better. But I still liked them.
     The day that post ran — garnering twice the readership of anything I wrote the previous week (heck might as well say it — earning better stats than anything I wrote all month) — I found myself at O'Hare with my wife, heading out on the trip that we are now returning from (apologies to readers whose comments I didn't post. "AHA! You're on VACATION! You're OUT OF TOWN, not CURRENTLY RESIDING IN YOUR HOUSE IN NORTHBROOK. Which is now EMPTY..." My wife doesn't like me to post that on the blog. People are crazy. Things happen).
     My wife isn't crazy. She is sensible, and eats good food. Sitting there by the gate, she wanted something not in our store of foodstuffs. She wanted a banana. Knowing I was at an airport where prices are insane, I asked, before setting out in search, what the most I should spend on her banana. 
    "It could be five dollars," I warned.
     "Two dollars," she said, sensible. In a supermarket, a banana costs about 19 cents.
     I dutifully toddled over to a nearby market sort of place, with sandwiches and cheese sticks and such. Insane prices. $12 for a modest bag of candy. And no bananas. Nearby was a Dunkin' which had — and you see this coming, right? — a bowl of big, yellow, unblemished, perfectly ripe, bananas.  Price — $1.10 apiece.
    So Dunkin', which I had keelhauled that very day, was offering the cheapest, best foodstuff for sale at O'Hare, not that I did a survey. Having advised others to never patronize the place, I was patronizing it myself. Touché, fate.
     Walking back to the gate, I couldn't resist tucking the banana into my fleece pocket, so that one end poked out.
     I walked up to my wife.
     "Say it," I instructed.
     She smiled, instantly understanding.
     "Is that a banana in your pocket," she said "Or are you just happy to see me?"
     "Both," I said.
     She took the banana.
      "I was going to say it even before you asked," she said.
     My friend, by the way, said that Dunkin' Donuts did apologize to her for their abysmal service, without so much as offering her a gift certificate, not that shed' patronize them again. I would. But only for bananas.
     

22 comments:

  1. Dunkin's not so bad.

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  2. Your spouse is right about not advertising when gone.

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  3. ..."Or are you just happy to see me?" joke. It's a classic! Your wife is the best. Judy

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    Replies
    1. In 40 years in the same house, we've:
      never locked our house
      never locked our car.
      Sue me.

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    2. Yes, but have you advertised the fact on a blog getting tens of thousands of hits a day? That is the point here.

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    3. The miracles of jet travel. No long prop plane shleps. No days at sea on a floating art gallery like the Andrea Doria. From Portugal to porch gal in a day's time. Sorry, couldn't resist.

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  4. When my husband and I start on any road trip early in the morning, I take a travel mug filled with my daily home-brewed Dunkin' (strong, with half-and-half) and make sure we stop at a Dunkin' for a breakfast item to-go before we get to the highway. A coffee roll is my favorite, but if there are none left (so, others must like them, too) I get a muffin. Either one always meets my expectations for what they are and where they come from. Not gourmet and not expected to be. But very tasty and satisfying to me in the moment. I'm craving a coffee roll right now.

    I did roll my eyes at the Dunkin' slam last week, agreeing with a couple of the commenters that the issue really was the horrible customer service that could have happened, sadly, at many other places/times. The food - any food, anywhere - well, that's a different and subjective story.

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  5. Once upon a time, I emailed a fast food chain to complain about the meal I'd purchased. The make-good people *mailed a "We're sorry, please let us make it up to you" coupon for ... $5.

    Like, at least send enough for me to repeat the purchase! But no.

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  6. You are so right about the outrageous prices of food at O’Hare. Just experienced getting stunned at the cost. I will have to scope out Dunkin next time.

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  7. One of my best memories of my mother is when three friends and I accompanied her on a weekend girls night out. We convinced her to wear a t-shirt with a giant pickle that read "is that a pickle in your pocket or ..." She was 70 something. It was the early 1980s. Now I am 81 and the only one of the five still standing.

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  8. Great comment by your wife. I wonder if she's the kind of woman who'd also say with a sly grin at just the right time "That's what SHE said." If so, it's yet another of the undoubtedly countless reasons you rightfully adore her. -- Anthony C

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  9. They still have great coffee. The donuts which are not made on site anymore are trucked in from god knows where. Too bad. It was always junk food but it was tasty junk. I can't say that anymore.

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    Replies
    1. Agree on Dunkin coffee, including its iced coffee.

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    2. DD's has a bacon, egg, and cheese on a croissant sandwich that I eat pretty much daily.

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  10. But now we know that when you don't comment, you are out of town.

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  11. At work yesterday, one of my co- workers was kind enough to bring Dunkin in. Donuts for the office and a bunch of donut holes, or munchkins for the factory break room. They came in a pink, plastic beach bucket with a couple of small shovels attached to scoop up the donut holes. I guess it’s a Summer promotion.

    The bucket caused a big scene with multiple people wanting it. One lady marched in the office and basically guilted the woman who bought it into giving it to her. Another woman was ready to fight her for it, smh. The donuts and munchkins were delicious.

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  12. If any of you come to my beautiful home airport in Portland, OR you can enjoy the food, beverages and snacks at the exact same price as charged in the city. It's the law here.

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  13. It's one banana, Neil. What could it cost? Five dollars?

    (am I really the first one to post that?)

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    Replies
    1. I'm 3 days late for this party, but at least you posted the comment I was looking for, Jim!

      A legendary meme from the first season of "Arrested Development," featuring the out-of-touch matriarch of the family:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTswXAFA18Y

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