The British hate the unspeakable social awkwardness of the situation, but the impact of withholding those few extra dollars can cut deep
I was once chased out of a restaurant and some distance down the street by a waitress in Connecticut.
It wasn’t the irresistible scent of my cologne, sadly, and it wasn’t because I’d hurled a displeasing dish across the room (this time).
In fact, it was worse than that: I had forgotten to tip.
She wasn’t even angry, just anxious to know what she’d done to offend, keen to work out what shocking felony she’d committed that would lead me to withhold what was hers by right. And there’s the issue: tipping is so woven into the fabric of life in the US – as American as McDonald’s Apple Pie – that it almost feels like it’s been written into the Fifth Amendment or something, as if Abraham Lincoln and his Rushmore buddies fought the British for the twin principles of freedom and that extra 20 per cent on top of your bill.