Thailand
Sous Chefs-
Hot and sour soup for Day 10- watch demo on how to cook shrimp in broth, make soup in a wok, hot hold. Day 11 is Coconut Chicken soup - easy, just follow the recipe and taste for fish sauce and lime with me when it's done.
Salad - Green papaya, watch demo on papaya fabrication
Jasmine rice only on Tuesday, Sticky rice AND Steamed Jasmine rice on Wednesday.
Set up Street food station - similar to Vietnamese set-up, chaffing dish on Station 5 with 1/3 pans for hot food, cool food, plates, sweet chili sauce, etc. should all be set up near the chaffing dish. Draw a complete diagram of how the station will be set up with all components and items labeled in diagram. Sweet Thai Chili sauce comes from store room - bottles labeled "Mai Ploy". This goes in ramekins in center of plate. Peanut sauce for Satay DOES NOT go in a ramekin - hold it in a small plastic cup on the side and put a dab on top of each satay as it goes out.
The Steam table will need to be used to hold the Curries, the pad thai, the squid, and the jasmine rice. Put each curry in a 1/3 pan, the Pad Thai and Squid in 1/2 pans and the Jasmine rice in a full hotel pan. Draw a diagram- make it complete. Plates: Curry Sampler in a 12" shallow bowl, Pad Thai in a deep noodle bowl, Chicken Rice - chicken and sauce in a casserole dish sitting on an oval plate with rice and their own cucumber/tomato salad, Squid in an oval casserole on an oval plate, rice on the side of the oval plate.
Station #2 -
Chicken Rice is served room temp in summer, plated at room temp and reheated in a wok steamer across from Table #2 in the cooler months, so it's cold- set up the wok steamer. Entire plate is picked up from your station. You need to make your own rice, make it pilaf style and use rendered duck fat to parch the rice. Pandan leaf is usually available - order it on supplemental if you don't see it on the invoice in the morning. For Service you will need:
- Chaffing dish to hold rice
- Shallow "gratin" dishes to hold chicken and sauce, gratin dish sits on large oval plate with rice and cucumber/tomato/cilantro garnish (this is like and undressed salad tossed together).
- Service utensils to plate. Draw a complete diagram of how the station will be set up with all components and items labeled in diagram.
Yellow Shrimp Curry - use the curry paste to make the yellow curry sauce. Make the sauce completely except for the shrimp. Hold sauce for service and gently poach the shrimp in 1/3 batches in 1/3 of the sauce - this keeps the shrimp from over-cooking on the steam table.
Station 3-
The squid is stir fried, divide the MEP into 4 batches as usual, you can mix the Oyster Sauce, fish sauce, sugar, and chicken stock together before service. Watch the video, it's pretty easy. I want to do the first batch with you. Squid will be served from the steam table in a 1/2 hotel pan in an oval casserole on an oval plate with Jasmine rice on the side.
The satay - trim off external fat and collagen from Flank steak and let me show you how to cut it for satay. You will trim and cut the meat, then put it on skewers, THEN marinate it. Talk to me or one of the people from Station 5 Day 8+9 about how to set up the Satay grill, you'll need to fire up charcoal and keep feeding the grill with more charcoal as it burns down. When service is over, place hot charcoal in a hotel pan of water before putting in the compost. You need to gently re-heat 1/2 the peanut sauce that was made on Day 8. This sauce breaks easily when heated, if it breaks on you, fix it the same way that you would fix a broken mayonnaise. Watch the video on how to pound meat - I'll have a meat mallet for you to use. Make 2x the cucumber salad - this will go with satay and fish cake on every street food plate.
Station #4 -
Make 2x each curry recipe. It's important to start them early, so hustle. Use small rondos or large sauce pots with covers, remember to keep them covered until the meat is tender to avoid drying out and burning by evaporation. Also remember that you can braise in the oven - the range will get crowded later in the morning, if you don't have room on top of the stove, you can finish in the oven. The braises should go to the steam table in 1/3 hotel pans
Start the lamb broth by roasting the bones - that's all for Day 10 - just roast the lamb bones and the lamb shoulder, cool and store. On Day 11 you should start a stock with the roasted bones as soon as you arrive.
Station #5-
Duck Curry - recipe is pretty self explanatory. Ask for clarification on the blog if you need it. Served from a 1/3 pan on the steam table.
Fish cakes - important that you have a VERY sharp knife to hand mince the fish. Also very important that the long beans are sliced into PAPER thin rounds, if you slice them thicker, the cakes fall apart. Please ask for a demo on slicing the beans before you start. Cakes should be fired in a 325 fryer in small batches as needed for service and put on the street food station in 1/3 pans.
Station #6
Pad Thai- Stir fried dish, divide MEP into 4 batches, it's ok to combine ingredients for sauce ahead. Make sure to have lime and peanuts for garnish. Served from 1/2 hotel pan in steam table into deep noodle bowls. Be sure NOT TO OVER SOAK THE NOODLES - about 5 minutes in very hot tap water(NOT BOILING WATER). The idea is for them to be pliable, not ready to eat. In the wok you will add more liquid and heat and they will become done at that point. I believe that the embedded video may not be exactly the same recipe as the one you have, if it looks different, the technique is the same.
Seafood "yam" is the seafood salad. Easy to make, hold at room temp in a 1/3 or 1/6 pan for use on the street food station.
Pork Vindaloo - follow recipe for 1st stage of the paste - this is important, DON'T forget to do it.
Questions?
Dear Chef,
ReplyDeleteThis is the sous chef team. We ran into some confusion about the curry sampler and which curries are being served in 1/3 pans from the steam table. Also the blog post says that we are only making Jasmine rice on Tuesday however the tracking schedule says that we are making both Jasmine and sticky rice. Any clarification would be much appreciated. Thank you!
Pablo
Jeff
Sarah
hello chef its james brush from team 4 the curry team. chad laura and i had some questions pertaining to tommorow, The jungle curry recipe calls for us to cook in the wok but the blog says to use a rondeau which method should we use?
ReplyDeletesecondly, can we braise our curry in the oven to make room for teams who need the stove top? or is the oven a last resort? and lastly can we roast bones and braise in the oven at the same time if we continue to check and keep our braise hydrated?
Sous chefs - all curries in 1/3 pans on steam table. Ma,e sticky rice for street food plate and Jasmine for everything else. I'm thinking we'll be every busy tomorrow - plan on 20 cups jasmine rice
ReplyDeleteJosh, et al - jungle curry can be done at low heat in either ok or rondeu - I think wok to save range space. All other curries in rondue, and yes, in oven. If you start pans for bones in hot oven as soon as you arrive, by the time curries are ready ovens will be free.Keep braises covered in oven to avoid drying.