The other day I had someone ask me when did I know I wanted
to be a chef? Well it was a long time ago when I was 3 years old; I stood next
to my grandmother and watched her cook sausage gravy. She explained to me how
to cook the sausage properly in an iron skillet and why she followed the steps
to make it. She was not a professional cook but someone that had a love for
feeding here family great tasting food to nourish their minds and souls. I
watched as she browned the sausage and the little crumble bits came off in the
pan, all in that warm fat. She removed the cooked sausage patties, adds some
flour and then made a paste of goodness; to this she added some whole milk.
This is when I got the job of stirring the pan until the milk and flour paste
magically became gravy. She then crumbled up some of the sausage into the pan,
then she tasted it to make sure it was just right. I got to taste it too as she told me about
how it needed to be just right, not too thick or too thin, not too salty but
maybe a little peppery. She was teaching me that to cook food for anyone you
have to “feel” how it will taste to people. It is a lesson that I will never
forget – you could feel the love and care in the food she cooked every time,
she was breathing passion into her food. I always remember this as the earliest
memory of food, especially when I spent the rest of that summer playing “cook”
with my own little pots and pans at my grandmother’s house. You see passion for food extends to the
serving of food with warm hospitality and a desire to exceed the expectations
of your guest. Do you realize you have
the ability to be passionate about the food you serve your guest each and
everyday? Do you know they can taste the love in the food you are serving, but
how can you make sure that passion is coming through? It is easy; taste it,
make sure it is properly prepared, seasoned correctly and served at the right
temperature every single time, every single guest. Passion for food and creating a culture of
food starts with every single member in a restaurant delivering a consistently
high quality experience that is a craveable celebration of dining, not simply a plate of food. So take some time to really
taste and understand everything on the menu and make sure you make every single
item to spec, you will become passionate too.
Showing posts with label management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label management. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
BOH - Back of the house series - Walking the kitchen – an active observers guide to better operations
Over the next few blog entries I will share back of the house tips for improving kitchen operation performance. Each of these lessons can be used in part or whole to make an impact in your restaurant. I hope you enjoy them and use them to teach the next generation of managers that may have not benefited from these experiences.
Walking the kitchen – an active observers guide
Have you every really thought about how to walk your
kitchen. It seems silly but sometimes we get into a rut and have blinders on
when it comes to walking our kitchen and restaurant. With a few simple changes
to your daily routine you can re-teach yourself to see what is there and needs to be corrected. Remember when an internal inspector
or health department official drops by to tour your facility they have one
advantage you don’t, “fresh eyes”. So if you follow this simple exercise over a
few weeks it will start to help you change the way you see your kitchen and
restaurant.
First I like to start with the idea that there are three
distinct zones of view: floor level, eye level and ceiling level. You will find
different things to look for in each of these zones.
We will start with floor level first, probably should do this walk at least 2 times a day – it is your safety walk.
We will start with floor level first, probably should do this walk at least 2 times a day – it is your safety walk.
Floor level – what to look for from the floor to about 12
inches up.
·
Standing water on the floor, is something
leaking?
·
Cracked or broken tiles, is there a hazard on
the line, in prep, coolers, dry storage?
·
Spills – oil, food, seasoning, etc, is there
some reason something is on the floor and could be a hazard?
·
Splash up – is there soap, cleaning fluids or
water splashed up from hosing down the kitchen on lower shelves, plateware,
uncovered food items stored on the lowest shelf?
·
How do the floor drain/ sinks look, clean and
clear?
·
Un-wanted friends – do you see signs of pests in
your kitchen or restaurant?
·
Extend this walk to the front of the house –
what do you see that the guest or your team sees?
Eye Level – maybe the most telling walk and one you should
do about 4 to 6 times a day – it lets you know what is going on in the kitchen.
·
First and foremost – look at your kitchen team,
greet them, make sure everyone is healthy to work and handle food
·
Take a look around is there any snacking or
drinking going on in food production areas?
·
Are the hand washing sinks, stocked, functioning
and useable?
·
Is the dish machine running at proper
temperature, is the dirty dish table organized to facilitate easy clean as you
go.
·
Walk down the line – proper utensil storage and
handling being executed?
·
Right size portion devices in the right sauces,
ingredients, any visible product issues or concerns?
·
Look at the equipment on the line, is it clean,
working, and maintained? If not what can you correct immediately?
·
Temperatures on all refrigerated equipment look
right? Anything not function at a safe food holding level?
·
Round the corner and move through your prep production
area – what do you see – any cross contamination occurring during prep/
production?
·
Gloves being used properly? In prep, on line, no
bare hand contact with ready to eat foods.
·
Handling of proteins your most expensive
ingredient, is it being treated with care or compromised at prolonged room temperature?
·
Inbound produce or food order is arriving – how do the cases
look? What about temp, is everything with in your standard operating
guidelines?
·
Lets move into your storage areas – dry goods,
cooler and freezer – are the all organized?
·
Dry store – everything covered, labeled, dated –
rotated? Stored in proper hierarchy?
·
Cooler – are items organized by prepared and raw
goods, floor clear, -packages properly labeled? Pull thaw – everything in
proper containers, dated? Is the food hierarchy of raw on bottom with cooked on
top being followed? Covered, covered and covered - ?
·
What about the freezer? Organized? FIFO?
Ceiling level – do this at least once a day both in back of
house and the front of house as well.
·
How do the tiles look, clean or dirty?
·
What about the air vents – are the clean or need
a wipe down
·
And the number one thing – any burned out bulbs,
uncovered fluorescent tubes or bad ceiling fans? And so on………..you will see something
that may need attention.
So you get the idea of the impact and importance of really
being engaged when walking your kitchen – you should see everything at some
point in the day. Also focus on those things that have been your hot button
issues in the past. Remember teach and coach so everyone sees what you see and
you will elevate the level of care and performance of your restaurant.
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