Thursday, November 17, 2011

THIS IS INFO FOR DAYS 6+7 - BUT PLEASE READ UPDATE IN KOREN POST

I've made some minor changes n quantity of production for Day 5 - Please scroll back to the Korean Post from Day 4 to see updates on Stewed Hens, Cabbage Kimchi, and Braised Short Ribs.

OK, for Japan - I'm giving you this information ahead so that you can be better prepare for the Japanese Menu, which is typically one of the most difficult. If you read all of the information ahead of Day 5, you'll have the knowledge and opportunity to get face to face explanations for any questions you have before you start to plan for Day 6 + 7. Refer back to the last post if you need more information about the Korean Menu.

Sous Chefs:

The only things coming off of the steam table today will be the steamed white rice and the Braised beef, You only need to use 1 steam table.

Making Sushi Rice is key. Watch the video and be prepared to start the process as soon as you come in at 7:00 am.
- Rinse and drain rice until water is clear - the more clear the water, the better the rice. Anticipate spending 15 minutes or so washing rice.
- Soak rice for 1 hour in fresh, cool water
- Drain and Air Dry rice on lined sheet tray from 30 minutes
- prepare vinegar solution while rice dries
- Steam rice - while rice is steaming, fill hangiri with cool water, when rice is finished cooking and while it's resting, dump water from hangiri, towel excess water out and then put rested rice into hangiri and add vinegar solution while "cutting" and fanning. Ask me for additional demo on this - I want to bring everyone in on it to watch.

- When rice is cool to the point that it's no longer steaming, stop "cutting" and divide rice into 3 1/3 hotel pans - one pan for each type of sushi. Cover rice with damp towels to keep from forming a crust and hold at room temp - don't refrigerate it.

Once the sushi stations are set up, I'll demo each type of sushi to get you started - if you're set up for demos by 10:00 am you can make all of the sushi slightly ahead hold it. It works best to set up all 3 sushi stations on the same table so you can share ingredients. I usually use stations 1 and 2 (because they should be finished their other prep by 10). When the sushi is made and the garnishes (from station 6) are all together, you can plate on small plates and hold for service on the shelves under station 5.

Sushi Plate:

From Japanese Plate Presentations


Sushi Station Set ups

Maki Station:

From Japanese Plate Presentations


Nigiri Station:

From Japanese Plate Presentations


Inari Station:

From Japanese Plate Presentations


Make the Dashi for Miso soup in a stainless steel pot,not a wok, the wok makes it dark and muddy tasting. You should anticipate making about 3 gallons dashi all together so that other stations can draw from it, the exception will be for Station 6 - they need a Vegan dashi and will make their own. Save the solids when you strain the dashi, they can be used on Day 7 to make a "second dashi"

The sunomono salad is supposed to be placed on the sushi sampler plate as a garnish - small pile, about 1 TBSP. per plate. The sunomono can be made early and dressed close to service.

The steamed white rice should be made the same way as the rice for the Chinese menu.

Station 2:
The braise is pretty self explanatory. Choose a small rondo - you don't want too much surface area or your braise will burn. When finished, hold it hot in a deep 1/2 hotel pan in the steam table. See photo in recipe for plate presentation with Toasted sesame seeds, long, thin, bias cut scallions and Miso Pickles (you will share these with Station 4, so read their section as well and communicate with them on preparing these pickles for service)

Station 3:
Pork Cutlet is also self explanatory. You should anticipate plating directly from the fry station, so draw a detailed diagram of how the station will look. You can fry in the fryer, turn around to the table behind you and slice the pork, plate it with the salad and a ramekin of sauce and then pass to the steam table for rice. The sauce should be in 1 oz. ramekins, the cabbage salad should be dressed just before service, and the cutlets fried to order - if they are pounded thin enough they take less than 1 minute to fry. You'll need a cutting board and knife on your station to slice pork before plating - everything in Japanese service is cut to "bite size" before plating because there are typically no knives at the table.

Station 4:
Be ready to produce both the steamed Fish AND the Udon Noodles- these are separate entrees, so you'll need two station diagrams. Watch the video for making the cabbage/spinach rolls and check out the plate presentation for the fish. You may be able to get the fish early - try picking it up around 7:30. I can show you how to fabricate it and set up the plates, you will cook them as needed in a wok steamer and serve them in shallow casserole dishes set on oval plates with white rice and miso pickles - the miso pickles are VERY salty right out of the container, so soak them in cool water for at least 3 hours before service, then drain. Then concentrate on setting up the Udon noodle station. Set up the station using the 4 burners on the right side of the range. The 2 left burners will be for station 5 to saute their vegetables. Have one large pot of boiling water with a china cap in it to refresh your noodles ala minute and then have 3 small pots with lids that you can use to make small 1-2 portion batches as needed throughout service. There should be a video for making the "spinach/cabbage" rolls, that's what you want to use. I prefer to cook this dish a few at a time during service so that everything is fresh. It's best to make a demo portion starting at 10:30 , just for practice. Just prior to service start 2 portions for the first order. When they are done, hold for the first orders and then start another one. It takes about 7-10 minutes for each batch, so if you fire the portions about 5 minutes apart, no one has to wait more than a few minutes. If you get hit with a lot of orders all at once you can fire 2-3 in the same pot and have the expediter explain that there's a short wait.


Station 5:
Beef Teriyaki - Make sure you watch the demo on cleaning skirt steak. Cut and portion into 5 oz. portions. Marinate steaks and prep vegetables. You will cook and plate from your station, so Draw a detailed diagram of how the grill station will be set up - Grill cloth, oil, grill brush, resting pan with rack, cutting board to slice meat, slicing knife, tongs. Also, you will be sauteing the veg (snow peas, bean sprouts, mushrooms) in small batches on the range. Set your station up so that you are "self contained". Grill set up - saute/veg set up- plates on shelf above saute line- cutting board on end of table closest to grill- chaffing dish set up with two 1/2 hotel pans in it , one for rice and one to hold your veg batches as they cook. Again - if you draw a detailed diagram of your entire station and label all of the items you'll need, setting up will be much easier and you'll look like a rock star. Hint - Beef teriyaki is very popular. You're going to get hit hard as soon as the doors open. Have 5 steaks grilled and resting(not cold,just resting) at 11:00 and have 1/3 of your vegetables already sauteed and in the chaffing dish ready to go. As you get an order for one steak, fire another. Skirt steak should be cooked to medium doneness. Medium rare is too chewy. Attention Team 5 - the Pork Butts for the Vietnamese Menu should have been brined on Day 5. You need to marinate them overnight on Day 6 and roast and cool on Day 7.

Station 6:
Your big job is getting all of the sushi garnishes prepped and collected. Each sushi plate will need, see the photo at the top of this page.
- 1 oz ramekin soy sauce
- 1 shiso leaf
- small amount of drained pickled ginger - house made yesterday.
- wasabi for the plate and wasabi for the sushi production - see below
- sunomono salad - get from sous chefs
- blanched soy beans (make sure you get the ones IN the pods - the store room usually messes up the order and sends the ones out of the pods)

Get all of this stuff together early. The soy sauce in ramekins - about 80 ramekins - and all of the other stuff together on a sheet tray so you can bring it to the sushi production area when they need it (hopefully by 10:00 am). Communication with the other teams and sous is important. You can see a picture of the finished plate with all of the garnishes in the Maki recipe on the Web Page.

When you make the wasabi paste, follow the recipe, but add the water slowly while stirring. When it gets to the consistency of play dough, good for shaping into balls or cubes for garnish, take half out of the bowl and set it aside. Continue adding cool water and stirring until it reaches a smooth, spreadable consistency - like toothpaste. This should go into a brown plastic cup for the sushi production stations. There's a good chance we may get in FRESH wasabi - so double check with me before you open a can of the powdered stuff.

Vegetable harvest is simple. Once all the vegetables are prepped, you can arrange everything EXCEPT the tofu and cucumbers in deep bowls. Talk to me about steaming all of the different vegetables, they all cook differently and it's better for us to do it right early then fix it just before service. Keep a perforated hotel pan in the steamer. When you get an order, ladle dashi over vegetables, place the whole bowl in the steamer to reheat everything for 2 minutes, remove bowl from steamer and finish with Tofu cubes, cucumber slices, miso sauce and scallions. When you make your vegetarian dashi, you can save the kombu seaweed, chiffonade it, and use some of that as garnish as well.

7 comments:

  1. Chef Pardus,
    I am on team 6 with James Brush. I know there is fresh wasabi in the fridge, a piece about 3 inches in length. Should we count on using this tomorrow or stick with the powder?
    Also, should 1 cup of wasabi be enough for sushi and garnish or should we prepare an additional amount?

    Thank you,
    Laura

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  2. Laura, we're going to have to play that by ear. I have 1/2# of fresh on order, but it sometimes doesn't come in. If it does, I'll show you how to use it. If not, we'll have some canned as a back up. If we don't get a new bag of fresh, I want to save the piece we do have for the class. 1 can of powdered wasabi, combined with water to make paste, will be sufficient for everything. If we use fresh, I'll have to see it to determine how much to grate. You might look on youtube to see the proper way to grate it - I'll show you anyway, but you might find something to give an idea.

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  3. Chef, I can't say I have powdered lemongrass before. The Cinnamon pate recipe mentions that the lemongrass is to be minced and powdered. My assumption is to mince the herb, dry it in the oven and then further process it in a spice grinder. If that is wrong, can you explain the process to me? Thanks, Shaza

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  4. IN the left side bar of the Vietnamese Section on the website should be a video about how to use lemon grass, most of it will be explained there.Simply put, you trim off the really course external parts, cut the stalk into manageable lengths - about 4-6 inches, cut it lengthwise into halves or quarters and then, using your best "fine mince" technique, mice across the grain as thinly as possible. The next step is to put those pieces in a spice grinder and pulverize them. The lemon grass should be minced very fine before putting in to the grinder, because it's fibrous enough to bog it down otherwise.

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  5. Chef, by my calculations we need 2.25 gallons of the "second" dashi for tomorrow's soup and noodles. However, it has been brought to my attention that regular dashi was used on Saturday for the noodle pot. We will also need 6 ounces of regular dashi for the steamed fish. Since we made 3 gallons of dashi on Saturday, and the solids from that can only be used for 1 gallon of "second" dashi according to the recipe, is there a way to follow the "second" dashi method and increase the volume with fresh solids? Or, should we be making more dashi tomorrow? If so, are we going to use it to supplement the "second dashi" or actually make more out of the dashi? It is my under standing that Aey had about 1 gallon of leftover dashi on Saturday. I want to make sure that I don't waste any ingredients and that every station has the proper amount and kind of dashi. Also, the blog only refers to the wakame salad being put on the sushi plate. Is this the same case for the romaine salad, or do we need to have separate plates and, thus, covers for the entrees?Any suggestions are much appreciated. Thank you, Chad

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  6. Chef, This is Josh Miller. For tomorrow soaking the sweet rice for Day 8...is there a recipe on the website I'm not seeing? Is there more than just soaking it in water. Thanks Chef.

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  7. Josh - measur 6 cups - make sure it's the correct rice, cover it well with water - 2" or so. And refriderate over night. Look it up on line as "Thai Sweet rice" or "Long Grained Sticky rice". We can talk about cooking it in the morning.
    Chad - You can replace all of the Ichi Ban Dashi with Ni Ban Dashi in all applications. No worries.

    For the Romaine Salad, we need separate plates and plate covers - thanks for thinking ahead - remind check in the morning - first thing - and let me know if we need to order them. They should be delivered, but...

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