Thursday, February 7, 2013

Day 1 Information for February 11, 2013

In coming Group - Hi, This is where you should look each day for information about the course in general and instructions specific to your class and station. It's VERY important that you read and analyze your recipes, watch all videos AND read the daily information posted here. A significant part of your grade hinges on being prepared for class and these are the tools to prepare with.Day 1 begins at 7:00 AM , Please be prepared as instructed in advance. Read the entire Blog post Every day, you are expected to be familiar with not only your station, but where you fit into the bigger picture. There will be information under other station's heading which may pertain to you - you will be responsible for knowing that.


Heads up -
Some basic rules in my kitchen:
- If you don't know, look it up
- If you still don't know - ask
- Know your product before coming to class
- Look before you order...10 point deduction applies to ordering items already in stock
- Don't prep more than you need
- Don't save cut or cooked foods for service the following day without permission from Chef
- Don't serve "left-overs" to customers
- Keep a clean, moist towel on you station at all times
- Step back from your station every 10 minutes, inspect, straighten, wipe down
- "Yes chef" means that you understand, agree and will comply
- "Yes Chef" does not mean "Go away, you make me nervous"
- The Chef's desk is not your work station - NO FOOD or SUPPLIES may be placed there without Chef's prior approval
- Metal containers are used for holding hot food, don't store food overnight in them unless instructed by Chef


The most common mistakes made on Day 1, class wide, are:
Not observing the Basic Rules
Not having a complete and detailed time line in the correct format
Not analyzing recipes fully
Not researching terms, ingredients, technique that you are unfamiliar with
Not knowing how to set up a basic work station
Not knowing basic cooking fundamentals covered in Skills such as - how much starch do you need in a slurry to thicken a set amount of liquid "How much corn starch thickens one cup of soup?"
Not knowing basic measurements - how many pints in a gallon?, etc...

The MOST COMMON MISTAKE OF ALL is not not following directions - this especially includes the direction to read all material and be prepared for class. If you read and listen and then ask questions if you need further clarification, you'll almost certainly have a successful and enjoyable class.

The Daily  Schedule will run as follows:

Day 1 AM
7:00AM -  Arrive, meet with Chef, discuss class objectives, introduction to kitchen and ingredients
7:30 - 10:00 - Prep and Demos
10:00-10:45 - Set up for Service/finish ala minute preparations with Chef
10:45-11:15 - Plate Demos/Family meal
11:15-12:15 - Clean kitchen/inventory
12:15- 1:30 - Lecture - Course Protocol + Grading

Day 1 PM
2:00PM -  Arrive, meet with Chef, discuss class objectives, introduction to kitchen and ingredients
2:30 - 5:00 - Prep and Demos
5:00-5:45 - Set up for Service/finish ala minute preparations with Chef
5:45-6:15 - Plate Demos/Family meal
6:15-7:15 - Clean kitchen/inventory
7:15- 8:30 - Lecture - Course Protocol + Grading

ALL OTHER DAYS  2-14

 AM
7:00 - 10:00 - Prep and Demos
10:00-10:45 - Set up for Service/finish ala minute preparations with Chef
10:45-11:15 - Plate Demos/Family meal
11:15-11:30 - Final Prep for Service
11:30- 12:00 - Service
12:00 - 12:45 - Kitchen Cleaning + Inventory
12:45-  1:30    - Lecture - Course Protocol + Grading

 PM

2:00 - 5:00 - Prep and Demos
5:00-5:45 - Set up for Service/finish ala minute preparations with Chef
5:45-6:15 - Family Meal
6:15-6:30 - Final Prep Before Service
6:30-7:00 - Service
7:00- 7:45 - Kitchen Cleaning and Inventory Lecture
7:45-8:30 - Lecture


On a station by station basis, here is more in depth info for you:
Sous Chefs:
All China and dish ware must be stored (hot or cold) as soon as you come in and the carts taken back to the dish room. This is standard every day, you must be aware of what plates, bowls, cups, etc. we need for service each day and alert me before 8:00 AM if anything is missing. A supplemental sheet should be started on a clean sheet of paper. The supplemental will list Item, Quantity, and Station ordering the item. Usually the supplemental is due to me no later than 7:30 AM, but on Day One 8:00 AM is acceptable.


Rice watch the video demo but be ready to use an electric Rice Cooker - I haven't sot a demo for that yet, but the rinsing of the rice is the same - talk to me before you start anything. Your team is preparing rice for the entire class, the only other station preparing rice today should be Team 4 in preparation for Fried rice on Days 2 + 3.

The soup Mise en place should be assembled on a sheet tray and set near a large wok so that I can help you start it no later than 9:00.

The Bean Starch Sheets for the salad should be rehydrated early, cut, and the salad assembled by 9:30 as well.

Sous Chef's Paper Work, each day you receive a clip board with these papers. It's your responsibility to know how to use them and do so. If not sure - ask in advance. On the Day before you are assigned to be a sous chef, it is important for you to review this.



Early Morning Supplemental. Note "Item-Quantity-Station Requesting"















Sanitation Supply Ordering Sheet, based on par-stock system. Amount we SHOULD have on hand is listed, order what we need to get UP to that amount. If we have enough already, fill in blank with an "X"











Flip Side of the Sanitation Sheet. This is the end-of-the-day cleaning check list to make sure everything is left clean and orderly











Daily inventory sheet. While the rest of the group cleans, the sous chefs inventory what we have for the following day's menu.This allows me to order more if we are short, or back something out of the next morning's order if we are over stocked. Important to do this accurately - it shortens early morning supplementals and keeps our cooler from getting over crowded. Sous Chefs should fill in ONLY the "On Hand" column. Chef will fill in the "Order Column" as he needs to.
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Station #2:

You should plan to start the lamb braise no later than 8:30 and the cabbage no later than 9:30, they need to be finished, hot held, and the woks clean before other teams can step in to stir fry at 10:15. Analyze your recipes and let me know if you have questions. Common mistakes are : Not knowing how much cornstarch is used to thicken a set amount of liquid, cutting ALL MEP and garnish for the lamb BEFORE braising begins(you should start the lamb cooking and THEN start working on the vegetables and garnish) and not asking for help with unfamiliar ingredients or appliances.

Station #3:
Dough is made ahead for you for Day 1 - but you'll have to make it for Days 2+3.You will need to roll and cook the pancakes for Day1, so write that into your time line. You should plan to prep the vegetables and other MEP for the Moo Shu as quickly as possible - watch the Vegetable prep video and work in a clean, organized fashion. On day 1 you only need one batch to cook for family meal. On service days  break the MEP for the stir fry into 4 batches so that we can fire them as needed during service. The sauce should be made and pre-portioned into 1 oz. white china ramekins, these will be held on the side to accompany each plate. The Pancakes need to be rolled out as soon as the dough has rested -The prep table under the spice rack near the prep sink is a good place to work on that. Ask me to help you get started, but see if you can walk yourself through the procedure and get all of the necessary equipment in place before you ask me for a demo. Remember to pre heat the cast-iron skillets while you prep the pancakes so that the skillets are hot when the pancakes are ready to cook. Common mistakes - not cleaning bean sprouts properly or cutting vegetables properly, pre heating the cast iron skillets too hot and burning the first batch of pancakes, not watching videos closely enough to understand the procedures.

Station 4:
Set up the wok steamer and stake out the large wok next to it as "yours" for Bok Choy. The fish is fairly simple, I can demo how to cut it. Make sure to know all of your ingredients and how the steaming process works. All of the Bok Choy we receive is for you to prep, so use it all- cut as directed, cleaned, blanched in heavily salted water, shocked, gently squeezed dry, divided into 4 batches for service. Garlic should be sliced into thin "chips". Please ask me to help you with the first batch of Bok Choy - the garlic can burn very easily if you don't control the wok heat. The prep for Fried Rice must be done early, Fried rice is best when made with cold rice, so speak with me about steaming off rice early enough for it to be chilled before 10:00AM.  Be completely ready to start the fried rice by 10:00 AM in the same large wok you will later use for Bok Choy - you'll need to be finished with the fried rice by 10:30. Common mistakes are - not understanding how the fish is cut or garnished, not cutting garnishes properly, not knowing what type of ham to use, burning the garlic for the bok choy.


Station #5:
There are Pork Butts in Brine and Pork Butts in Marinade, you will also be receiving 2 butts to complete the entire process yourself over 3 days. For day 1, put 2 marinated pork butts in the Chinese roasting oven at 325F as early as possible. Make sure you know how to use the oven, if you do not - ASK.The Butts which are in Brine need to be put into  marinade - you'll need to make this - and the fresh ones will need to be fabricated and put into Brine. Once that's started, begin prepping the chicken. Cut and clean the chicken thighs and get them into the marinade, preheat the fryer,make the sauce in a small wok, and cut all of the vegetables, fry the chicken pieces ahead of service - Make sure you understand what type of frying you are doing and how to best accomplish it. All of the MEP for the chicken should be divided into 4 batches for firing as needed during service except the sauce. Sauce can be held in a bain marie with a ladle on your wok station. You are also responsible for setting up a pork carving station for service on the end of Station #5 near the oven. The pork should be held in the conventional oven at 200F on a sheet tray with a rack. When you get an order, the steam table line will pass you a plate with rice and cabbage on it - you will take a pork butt from the oven, slice a portion, plate it, and put the pork butt back in the oven to keep it warm. Common mistakes are - not having a complete recipe and understanding of how to fabricate, brine, marinate and roast pork;  not knowing how to fry battered items properly or how to set up a fry station efficiently, not knowing how to use cornstarch to thicken the sauce, not following directions and getting flustered as service approaches.

Station #6:
Follow the recipes, on service days divide the MEP into 4 batches to be fired as needed during service, assist the sous chefs through out the day - Early in the morning you should assist/delegate the putting away of plates, etc and return the carts to the dish room/store room, complete sanitation supplemental supply order, be involved and aware of the Sous Chef duties - you will be sous chefs later in the cycle, so it's good to look ahead. On the Second Day of Each Menu, Team 6 will be responsible for setting up the class tasting for the unit. On Day 2  you will be responsible for setting up the class tasting, so please talk to me about this before the end of class on Day 1 so you understand what you need to do, you'll need a copy of the tasting sheet from the Chinese section of the course guide.

11 comments:

  1. Chef,
    I am on station 6 tomorrow. I have a few questions about the timeline of events for day 1. First i want to verify that the sous chefs prep the rice for the whole class, with the exception of the stir fry team. Also it says on your blog page that team 4 is to prep all of the bok choy that comes in. My team needs bok choy and I was wondering if team 4 would be blanching and shocking are bok choy as well. Also in the recipe for grandmothers bean curd it mentions that we will be using fresh shitake mushroom caps and aslo that we will be using liquid from re-hydrated dry shitakes. I was hoping you could further explain if we will be using both fresh and dried shitakes in the recipe. I was wondering if the stuffed peppers will be served tomorrow, it says that we need to prep the stuffing on day 2 but does that mean that everything is prepped for those already for day 1 and we just need to assemble them? If you have already said this I apologize for asking again but I would also like to verify that ten portions are to be made for day 1. In the service diagram for the China menu the bok choy is on the opposite side of the steam table as where the grandmothers bean curd is held, for plating is that where are bok choy will be coming from? I apologize if any of these questions are repetitive or common sense, just want to be prepared.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, Sous prep all rice except for that used for fried rice. Team 4 preps all bok choy for the group. Use fresh and dried shitake as indicated. For peppers, read menu. Bean Curd - 1x recipe.

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  2. Chef,
    The Hot and Sour soup for day one has the recipe scaled for two gallons, will the be the desired amount since day one is a non service day?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a typo, make only 1 gallon for Day 1. Thank you.

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    2. Scale to 1 gallon, thanks for the correction.

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  3. Chef,
    I am on station 5 and I wanted to clarify the portion size you wanted for the crispy tangerine chicken, I was also wondering what size recipe you wanted for the pork marinade, if possibly you wanted us to make a full size recipe for it to hold for the next day. Finally is there any prep that needs to be done for day three for the ribs on day one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Scale Chicken to 4# chicken, no need to alter marinade. Rib Prep may be done on Day 1 or Day 2 but it must be done.

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  4. Hi Chef, I am on station Four.
    - How many portions of Steamed Fish, Bok Choy (for station four, and also for entire class,) and Fried Rice with Chinese Sausage do we prepare for day 1?
    - I see where the rice is held on the classroom diagram. However, where is the Fried Rice with Chinese Sausage held? Or is this an a la minute preparation?
    - Also with the Bok Choy, is it held with all of the bok choy and made as an a la minute preparation?
    - There is also a recipe for Chinese Spice Powder, I am unsure if that is something that needs to be made, because it does not require it in any of station 4's recipes, nor is it on our prep list.
    - In the Steamed Fish with Ginger recipe, what dry-cured ham, specifically do you want us to use?
    - Out of curiosity, what makes "Chinese Sausage" different from other sausages?
    - Will the fish come in filleted? Or do we have to filet the fish?
    Thanks

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 2x fish, 4# bok choy, fired rice, cook 5 cups raw rice and scale from there - it must be cooked and chilled well before proceeding. Fried rice is held in steam table - it's not listed on day 1 diagram because we don't run full service. Find the dry cured ham in the kitchen and I will show you how to prep it. Chinese Sausage is called "Lap Chang"...look it up. Fish is filleted but not cleaned or trimmed.

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  5. Chef,

    I'm on station 5. I understand that the tangerine chicken is to be deep fried, but my question is what temperature should the fryer be at?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Chicken - cut into large bite sized pieces will be fried at 350F.

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