Soup and Bread

An old retired man goes to a diner every day for lunch. He always orders the soup du jour. One day the manager asks him how he liked his meal. The  old man replies, in a thick accent, "Wass very goot, but you could give a  little more bread."

So the next day the manager tells the waitress to give him four slices  of bread.

"How was your meal, sir?" the manager asks. 

"Wass goot, but you could  give a little more bread," comes the reply.

So the next day the manager tells the waitress to give him eight slices  of bread.

"How was your meal today, sir?" the manager asks. 

"Wass goot, but you  could give a little more bread," comes the reply.

So ... the next day the manager tells the waitress to give him a whole  loaf of bread with his soup. 

"How was your meal, sir?" the manager asks, when he comes to pay. 

"Wass  goot, but you could give just a little more bread," comes the reply once  again.

The manager is now obsessed with seeing this customer say that he is  satisfied with his meal, so he goes to the bakery, and orders a  six-foot- long loaf of bread. When the man comes in as usual the next  day, the waitress and the manager cut the loaf in half, butter the  entire length of each half, and lay it out along the counter, right next  to his bowl of soup. The old man sits down, and devours both his bowl of  soup, and both halves of the six-foot-long loaf of bread.

The manager now thinks he will get the answer he is looking for, and  when the old man comes up to pay for his meal, the manager asks in the  usual way:

"How was your meal TODAY, sir?"

The old man replies: "It wass goot as usual, but I see you are back to  giving only two slices of bread."