Categories
Culinary Arts Project

Restaurant Kitchen Lingo, and Some Incredible Tastes.

TODAY’S TIDBITS

  • “Order” – you can start preparing the food, but don’t cook it.
  • “Fire” – ok, cook the food and plate it.
  • “All day” – how many orders+fires do we have of a particular dish.

It was my fourth day at JoJo today. I was helping Matt prep for, and then, help execute the Garde Manger station. This week is a slow week (until Valentines Day) so there weren’t that many “covers”. Covers are customers. Culinary school prepped me well for the lingo about utensils in the kitchen, as well as technical terms of preparation (e.g. concasser these tomatoes), but it doesn’t really teach you about the “execution lingo”. The main three terms I’m coming across so far are “order”, “fire”, and “all day”. For instance when I was working the meat station, an order would come in for “two veals”, this meant that a table had ordered them, but the expediter is saying “don’t start cooking them yet” because they are probably having a salad or soup. So I would take two veal cutlets out of the fridge, flour-egg-panko them getting them ready for cooking, start heating all the garnitures, but not actually cook the veal. Then when I hear “fire two veals”, I would start cooking the veal and plate them right away. It seems straight forward, but then when 3 more veals come in and two them are “fire”, it opens up the possibility for a mis-understanding (is that a new order that is “fire”, or is that firing up the old orders?). The term “all day” helps with this. “How many veals have we got all day” – this means the combined total of the two – i.e. how many veals outstanding are there in total? Because so much is new to me, I lose track pretty quickly, so I need a quick reset to make sure I’m on top of things and have the right number of dishes going.

The highlights of the day are definitely when I get to taste the food. Every so often Remi will bring over a sauce or a small dish of something and it’s always heaven. The lobster risotto, the champagne vinaigrette, the ginger coriander saffron chicken sauce, and the truffle creamed potatoes to mention just a few.

Because it was slow today, we had the unusual task of doing prep for tonight/tomorrow at the same time as manning the stations, so yes, I was cutting and peeling mushrooms, peeling potatoes, popping out endamame beans (see main pic for where those end up), peeling garlic. I had to remember to change my gloves when preparing a dessert dish (can’t have garlic smelling almond cakes!). One cool prep I did on the weekend was making ravioli courtesy of Remi’s instruction. This is an example of where simplicity makes a great dish. The raviolis are stuffed with just a small leaf of mint, a small leaf of basil, and ricotta. This tastes amazing when plated over a tomato sauce. The magic comes just before putting the ravioli on the plate. They are swirled in a high end olive oil and salt. Makes it all taste amazing. I’m definitely buying a pasta machine!

I have to admit that I liked the slower pace today, certainly after the craziness of the weekend. The learning curve is probably a tad slower, but the heart attacks are less frequent.

Categories
Culinary Arts Project

Pasta Day: Gnocchi, Ravioli and Lasagna – Day 37

TODAY’S TIDBITS

  • Don’t put oil in your pasta boiling water – it really has no effect, and can prevent the sauce from sticking to the pasta.
  • Taste your pasta boiling water – most people don’t taste the water, but the saltiness is important.
  • Make sure to press all the air out of your ravioli’s before sealing, or they’ll explode during boiling.
  • Roll the pasta through the pasta ‘squisher machine’ twice at each setting, because the gluten springs back after the first pressing.
  • Don’t bother using the “well method” for making pasta dough, use a bowl – you won’t loose any ingredients, it’s faster and the cleanup is quicker.
Kneading green pasta dough
Kneading green pasta dough

Today we made our own pasta – the dish of the day was definitely the ravioli. We made the pasta with just flour, egg, and a hint of olive oil (one white pasta, and one ‘enriched’ with a spinach puree to make it nice and green). I had forgotten that pasta requires 10min of kneading, which got a bit ‘carpal-syndroming’.

The pasta (dough) was then rolled through the pasta maker at increasingly thin settings until we had nice thin planks for ravioli. We then took yesterday’s ricotta, added chives, parsley, thyme, nutmeg, egg yolk, and used this as the stuffing. So, EVERY element of this was from SCRATCH including the cheese!!!!! No more Chef Boyardee! The ravioli was delicious standalone, but then Chef Jeff showed us how to use a bit of the boiling water and melted butter to make a real nice sauce for them. Stupefacente!!!!!!

Ravioli before......
Ravioli before……
.....and after
…..and after

We also made gnocchi. I’m not a huge gnocchi fan, but this tasted quite good. We started by baking potatoes, over salt and aluminum foil. Apparently the salt is to lift the potatoes off the pan, and the aluminum is to protect the pan. We then took the baked potatoes, peeled them (ouch, hot), food-milled them, added flour, s&p, nutmeg, parmesan, and created a dough, rolled the gnocchi out, boiled them and served over the tomato sauce we made yesterday. It was pretty good. We forgot to add a little butter just before getting assessed so they looked a little matte. Rob Punzo, I’m gunnin’ for you at our next cookoff!!!!!

Tonight is a bit hectic. Most of us went to an after-hours butchery lesson (we have our practical on Tuesday where we have to quarter a chicken and fillet a fish, as well as make crème anglaise and do some pipeing)… and I am AWFUL at butchery, so I need the practice. The chicken quartering seems to be coming along, but both the chicken and the fish continue to look like I took an axe to them.

Butchery class - flounder before......
Butchery class – flounder before……
.....and after
…..and after

Tonight we also have to put together a menu (thank you Ray for the graphic design on that), and put together a recipe for a chicken dinner, as well as make a picture of the final product, and recipe cards. Hopefully I’ll be done before tomorrow starts, ugh!

PS from Cheff Jeff: “Don’t be a clown riding a mini-bicycle – use the right sized bowl for the task.”

The menu had to have 4 items in each categories, from dishes we've cooked in class
The menu had to have 4 items in each category, taken from dishes we’ve cooked in class