Domino's Pizza, My Learned Colleague & Myself
The week finished today. So, I decided to do something meaningful. My learned colleague Mr. Arunava Das & I wanted to go for a quality check at Domino's (Millennium Tower – IBM). After all, Domino’s can’t do business without having a quality certificate from us.
We had reached at 7.30 sharp. The shop was almost pour out as the night shift of IBM-Daksh had already started. We ordered for calzone. I was much astonished when I first heard about this word from my learned colleague. I enquired about the meaning of the word to him. But, it was not within the purview of his vast knowledge database. So, he referred to wikipedia. Wiki says,
“A calzone (Italian "stocking" or "trouser" or "drooping sack" or "hanging fold"), sometimes referred to as a Italian sac, is an Italian turnover made from pizza dough and stuffed with cheese. It is typically served with marinara sauce on the side for dipping, or topped with garlic and parsley infused olive oil.”
My learned colleague also ordered for one Pizza, one plate garlic bread and liquid cheese. We were discussing about how to use this weekend meaningfully. To my utter surprise, I discovered some amazing similarities between us:
· Both of us have no plan about how to spend this weekend.
· Both of us have only one important work during this weekend.
Additionally, both of us agreed that it was one of our greatest mistakes to order for so much food. In fact, the Pizza firmly denied entering into any of our stomach. We first decided to gift it to our highly knowledgeable colleague Mr. Debraj, who works in night shift. But, who will play the role of delivery boy? So, both of us decided that I should take it to my home as my learned colleague hates to carry something big while returning home. Quality-wise, food was very good. The ambience was nice. Though little small, the shop is well maintained.
One big question: If domino’s are so conscious about cost that they ask customer to drop all those salt packs into a separate box, why they have put two big televisions on the two opposite corners of the shop? I will definitely ask this to my learned colleague on coming Monday.
We had reached at 7.30 sharp. The shop was almost pour out as the night shift of IBM-Daksh had already started. We ordered for calzone. I was much astonished when I first heard about this word from my learned colleague. I enquired about the meaning of the word to him. But, it was not within the purview of his vast knowledge database. So, he referred to wikipedia. Wiki says,
“A calzone (Italian "stocking" or "trouser" or "drooping sack" or "hanging fold"), sometimes referred to as a Italian sac, is an Italian turnover made from pizza dough and stuffed with cheese. It is typically served with marinara sauce on the side for dipping, or topped with garlic and parsley infused olive oil.”
My learned colleague also ordered for one Pizza, one plate garlic bread and liquid cheese. We were discussing about how to use this weekend meaningfully. To my utter surprise, I discovered some amazing similarities between us:
· Both of us have no plan about how to spend this weekend.
· Both of us have only one important work during this weekend.
Additionally, both of us agreed that it was one of our greatest mistakes to order for so much food. In fact, the Pizza firmly denied entering into any of our stomach. We first decided to gift it to our highly knowledgeable colleague Mr. Debraj, who works in night shift. But, who will play the role of delivery boy? So, both of us decided that I should take it to my home as my learned colleague hates to carry something big while returning home. Quality-wise, food was very good. The ambience was nice. Though little small, the shop is well maintained.
One big question: If domino’s are so conscious about cost that they ask customer to drop all those salt packs into a separate box, why they have put two big televisions on the two opposite corners of the shop? I will definitely ask this to my learned colleague on coming Monday.
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