Then it would be bad value for you, just like the bottle of Mouton Rothschild would be. That doesn't make it bad value for everyone.
The problem here is that people are talking about things that they don't understand. If the ingredients cost €40 and the chef buys everything fresh every morning and throws out everything that is not used every evening then €180 would be required to tern a profit. If people buy the meal because they are into that sort of food and it's their passion then good for them. If they buy it because it's expensive and they think it's the place to be seen then they are idiots but it's unfair to make sweeping statements as if their was some one size fits all measure of value for restaurants.
I agree.
I suppose it depends on whether or not you are a 'foodie'.
I would be prepared to spend a lot on a very good meal. Some may see this as frivolous but then again, I wouldn't dream of spending more than 10K on a car, or I would never buy a plasma/LCD - you put your own value on your personal tastes and comforts.
However, if an expensive or even moderately expensive restaurant served up a mediocre or worse, poor meal, I would be upset.
The worst offenders IMO tend to be the 'mid-range' places - you know, restaurants that have a few Bridgestone/Egon Ronay plaques etc and higher than average prices - you know they're not going to be amazing but you would still rightly expect a decent meal.
Consider the ubiquitous pasta/salmon dish. What you'll get is a suspiciously shallow dish, filled with
packet/dried pasta, a few flakes of smoked salmon, in cream, with a few leaves of basil. And that's literally it.
No other ingredients or seasoning, and no thought or time invested.
The ingredient costs are minimal and a
child could make it.
It's perfectly edible but it's something I'd knock together after coming home from a night on the beer. If it cost under €10 I wouldn't mind (because it's not worth any more than that) but I will not pay €20 odd for a joke of a 'meal' like that. At the very least I would expect fresh pasta. You'll probably be given that awful powdered Parmesan as well.
It's this kind of thing that gets me.
And don't even get me started on these places failing in the remedial task of cooking a steak as requested - it's almost always overcooked...
(If I'm starting to sound like Michael Winner - shoot me)