Tuesday, 22 December 2015

DEFYING GRAVITY

This time of the year means absolute hell for cooks in the kitchen. Unfortunately there isn’t much time for holiday cheer when you are cooking up a storm for end of the year Christmas parties, weddings and daily à la carte breakfast, lunch and dinners.

Starting my placement during the holiday season meant that my title as trainee along with all of its ‘benefits’ quickly came and gone. One is expected to run like a well-oiled machine by week two. No more hiding in the walk-in fridge every time you have a meltdown of Chernobyl proportions.  

Every week presents its own unique challenges. The stress and pressure of a kitchen is one thing, but the politics is a whole different ballgame. One would imagine that there would be no time or energy for politics, but believe me when I say that politics will find a way to creep into the kitchen.

When the majority of the chefs are young politics will thrive. It is up to you to learn how to distance yourself from it. Believe me it’s not easy but it is possible. I still haven’t mastered this but I have found that if you don’t react and just focus on your work you will make life allot easier for yourself.

As a greenhorn the sooner you except that shit falls downward the sooner you will learn how to cope with it even when you are not at fault. You don’t have to embrace it but you definitely have to make peace with it. The key to most issues is to stay calm, ignore the irrelevant fodder and carry on working.


Being a chef is a hard life. There is no sugar-coating it nor denying it. The truth is you will have to deal with allot for very little. If food and cooking is what you love and not the ‘celebrity master chef’ image of it then you might just have a chance of making it in the culinary world.  







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Monday, 14 December 2015

CRASS COURSE

I survived my first week working in a professional kitchen. Unfortunately not the same can be said for my fingers or my medical aid, but I am getting ahead of myself.

My first day was like starting any other job, I got taken around the kitchen, placed into a section and got asked the typical rhetorical question: “Anything else you would like to know?” This generally means that the newbie’s tour is concluded, a false sense of security has been created and you are now the problem of the section you have been placed in. I was fortunate enough to get placed into the pastry section along with a familiar face from university.

I surprisingly discovered that the pastry section not only covers delicious desserts, breads and pastries but also cheese platters, cold breakfasts, kiddies meals and all of the deli meats. Rescuing a Leaning Tower of Pisa wedding cake isn’t out of the question either.

Low and behold my first task was to slice Pastrami on an electric meat slicer. This according to them was a good way to ease into things. Admittedly I open-eye prayed like a parent at the doctor’s office waiting nervously to hear if their princess  got knocked up after doing the dirty with the boy next door.   Slicing that deli meat reminded me of the hundred year old spinning blade decapitating ‘unworthy’ limbs in The Last Crusade.   

The irony here is that the meat slicer is the only piece of equipment that we have at the university kitchen that students are not allowed to use. The university’s insurance doesn’t cover any accident that can’t be fixed with a plaster and a finger condom found in the vintage first aid box. Fortunately I was ‘worthy’ and my precious fingers were spared. For now…

As Karma would have it in for me things went from good too bad. The next day I somehow managed to tear off two finger nails as I was overzealous in my attempt to scrape bread dough from the cracked mixer bowl. I currently have ten fingers and eight fingernails. It hurt like hell.  

Once again, if it can’t be fixed with a plaster and two latex gloves there is no reason to stop working.
I however did manage to save the bread by not bleeding onto the dough and contaminating it with two finger nails. Win for me!

 For the next couple of days I had two fingers completely out of commission and a hand that couldn’t even open a five litre ice cream tub. With a ridiculous amount of pain killers in my system my head was as fuzzy as a drunken geriatric on a senior sunset Champaign cruise. This did not help matters. Understandably so cursing at the greenhorn quickly became part of the shift. “Bread for two” became “bread for f!#king two”.  It was like my first day on set all over again.  

A restaurant kitchen is like a gladiator arena. It is filled with crass language, blood, sweat and lots of flying tempers along with projectile loaves of bread. The head chef is Caesar giving the thumbs up or thumbs down. The mains team are the lions and the pastry chefs the female gladiators in chariots.  A clash between Caesar and the lions is a daily occurrence and the female gladiators always have to fight for their right in the arena. One cannot work without the other, yet the one always tries to make the other one his or her b!tch.

In a daily battle like this the greenhorn can only get a crass crash course. The rest you have to figure out yourself in a timely manner. For the first couple of days you pray that you can find what you are looking for in the walk-in or in dry storage under one minute. If the pastry chef has to come looking for you then you will be lanced quickly and mercilessly.

Finding your feet and having a good memory is a given. Understanding and executing orders thoroughly and timelessly is expected and repeating all of the above without question is advisable. Avoid going to the bathroom during service and do not get injured. This will halt service and the pyramid will slowly collapse. You will be the most hated person in the kitchen. Working in a cramped 25 square meter kitchen, one tries not to cause any unnecessary problems for oneself.  

My first week was hell’s kitchen at its best. Nineteen and a half hours in a double and eleven hours in a single shift. This is what a restaurant kitchen during peak tourist season looks like. I stand by what I said about chefs being masochists. You do it for the love of food, you endure the pain and you ignore the rest. Money should not be your aim and holidays not your time to rest. If you have these five things down then you might have a chance of surviving in hell’s kitchen.







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