Restaurant owner Jawdat Ibrahim said the charges were fair, listing bottles of expensive alcohol and an entire lamb among the items ordered.
He also said that the group asked for a private room, which meant closing down part of the famous establishment on a busy Friday night.
Yossi Fattal, chief executive of the Incoming Tour Operators Association, however, accused Ibrahim of putting one over on the visitors. He said he publicised the bill as a way of shaming those who try to cheat unsuspecting tourists.
Now, Israel's Foreign Ministry and the Israeli Embassy in China are attempting to track down the eight tourists to find out what happened. Were they unhappy with the cost? Did they feel they were ripped off?
According to Ibrahim, he was asked to close off a room at the restaurant, order Beluga vodka at about US$400 a bottle and serve 30kg of lamb, in addition to other items.
The Israeli financial newspaper Globes published a copy of the bill last week:
- 4000 shekels for a private room (US$1064)
- 650 shekels for hors d'oeuvres and salads (US$173)
- 5900 shekels for alcohol (US$1569)
- 3150 shekels for main courses (US$838)
- 1350 shekels for desserts (US$359)
- 1500 shekels for service charge (US$400)
- Total: 16,500 shekels, or about US$4390
"They knew the prices in advance. If they thought that they had been cheated, why did they add a 10 per cent tip to the bill?" said Ibrahim, according to the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth today.
Ibrahim, who is well known in Israel for winning US$17.5 million in the Illinois state lottery in the early 1990s and for breaking the Guinness world record for the largest plate of hummus in 2010 (since beaten), said he has been the victim of "public shaming before people learned what the facts were".
According to Fattal, the tourists were clearly exploited. He said that the restaurant was asked to host only eight tourists, not a large group that required closing down a whole section and that no prices had been agreed upon in advance. He told Globes that the restaurant was not closed specially for the group and that specific alcohol had not been preordered.
"The association decided to make this incident public in order to illustrate the importance of fair and polite treatment of tourists who come to Israel and are an important sector of the country's economy," Globes quoted Fattal as saying.
About 47,000 Chinese visit Israel each year, and one of the goals of the Tourism Ministry is to further promote the image of Israel in China. Earlier this year, China's Hainan Airlines started direct flights three times a week between Beijing and Tel Aviv.
Amid the furore over the food bill, it's up to the Israeli Foreign Ministry to do some damage control: to track down in China the eight people who visited Israel and find out what really happened at the restaurant that night.