Diary: July 21, 2002
#1
Posted 21 July 2002 - 04:54 PM
Today’s menu was my favorite one so far: gougeres (pate a chou puffs with cheese), grilled salmon with bearnaise sauce, potatoes au gratin, buttered asparagus, and madeleines. I feel like this makes up for yesterday’s veal liver in a big way.
Today was somewhat insane in the kitchen, but I found it to be quite satisfying. I was not placed with George or Chin (too bad, I’d liked working with both of them); instead, I worked with two classmates I’d worked with separately last week. Melanie left immediately for the pastry kitchen, since today’s menu included an appetizer using pate a chou and both my other teammate and I had made it yesterday. This left two of us to assemble potatoes au gratin, buttered asparagus, and grilled salmon with a bearnaise sauce. Melanie asked if she could come back and make the bearnaise, since she had not yet assembled a hollandaise (of which bearnaise sauce is a derivative).
It didn’t seem like an overwhelming amount of work initially. I offered to grill the salmon since I haven’t yet worked grill or saute station, and I told my classmate I’d do Melanie’s mise en place for the bearnaise. He got cracking on the potatoes while I started some shallots, tarragon, cracked pepper, white wine, and white wine vinegar on reducing. Chef Peter came by just as my reduction was reaching the a sec stage and told me I had too much pepper in my reduction, so I had to go make it over. As I was doing this, my teammate realized there wasn’t any shredded parmesan left for the potatoes. Since he’d already sliced his potatoes, they started oxidizing while he was getting more cheese hunks off the wheel and through the Robot Coupe for shredding. So he had to start all over, and I’m afraid he had to spend his whole lunch service time trying to recover.
As a result, I ended up doing almost everything: Peeling, trimming, and blanching the asparagus. Melting butter and separating eggs and chopping herbs for the bearnaise. Seasoning and grilling the salmon. Wiping things up along the table. Retrieving stools for us to sit on. Rolling up flatware in napkins. And so on. I enjoyed managing so many different tasks at once, and I bolted across the kitchen confidently. I had just enough time to get it all done. Everything came out beautifully except for the potatoes, which simply hadn’t had enough time to bake through. (My classmate was pretty upset about this.) Chef Peter declared Melanie’s gougeres to be the best in the class, and he said my salmon was grilled perfectly. I even got the quadrillage (grill hash mark pattern) completely right. Plus everything tasted great.
During the post-lunch analysis, Chef Peter got a bee in his bonnet about dishes. He told us we weren’t helping enough with them, that we weren’t rinsing out or stacking our pre-service dishes like we should. He said we were overwhelming the potwasher Juan, and he said he was docking everybody in the class a point off the participation grade. I remembered ditching Juan with my bearnaise reduction pan, the bearnaise dishes, and other nasty hard-to-clean items. I try to be good about helping Juan, particularly since I work dish duty for now, and I felt pretty bad about how I’d treated him today. Still, we’d been snowed, and I don’t usually abandon my dishes like that. Too bad everybody else got snowed on the same day.
Chef Peter also handed out the scores from those “life skills” tests we took in the first week. I scored 100 on the reading comprehension and a 96 on the math skills. Most of my classmates were forthcoming with their scores, so when they asked what I got I showed my numbers. Lots of people scored in the 80s on the math skills.
After break, Chef Francois combined our class with the pastry class for a discussion about the foundations of taste and some taste comparisons. He’d prepared little condiment cups full of various substances on some trays for us. The cups were labeled “sweet,” “sour,” “bitter,” “salty,” and then four cups numbered one through four. There were also two empty condiment cups and two spoons on each tray. The trays were distributed for us to share with one other student. (I shared with the same pastry student I’d discussed ice cream makers with.) Chef Francois mentioned the umami (meaty) taste, but said that evidence on it is inconclusive and that he doesn’t formally teach it for this reason. We began by tasting the sweet, sour, bitter and salty formulas. (They were all watered down, and were composed of sugar solution, vinegar solution, water with Angostura bitters, and salt solution.) Then he had us switch between sour and sweet, to show how much sweeter sweet is after tasting sour. Then we used the empty cups to mix sweet and sour, and then to add bitter and salt. The resulting liquid had a far more interesting flavor than two or three tastes mixed had carried.
After that, he had everybody in the class hold our noses, and then he passed around a brown powder and told us to take a little on our finger and taste it without releasing our noses. I suspected it was cinnamon since it had a slightly barky/bitter/muddy flavor, and because it looked like cinnamon. When he had us release our noses, I inhaled and immediately got a strong aroma of cinnamon and nutmeg. It was a really cool sensation, how sharp and spicy the smell was versus how mild and bitter the taste had been. I highly recommend trying this one at home if you’re interested in understanding the differences between flavor and taste.
The numbered cups contained water and then three strengths of salt solution, which we tasted back and forth to see how salt plays on the tongue as it gets stronger and weaker. Plain water tastes almost sweet after tasting a strong salt solution, and salt makes other flavors taste stronger. It will be interesting to take this lesson to the next level, and I intend to analyze tastes in light of today’s lesson over the coming weeks.
Friday, July 19
Earlier in the week, Chef Peter warned us that on Friday he’d be running our asses off. “You’re gonna leave here wondering what the hell happened, and I intend that you will feel that way.” As promised, we entered the demo classroom this morning to see a complicated menu waiting on the white board:
Potato-leek soup (Le Potage Parisien)
Eggs Florentine (Les Oeufs Poches Florentine)
Sauteed Flounder Meuniere (La Sole Sautee Meuniere)
Potatoes Parmentier
Apple Cake (Le Gateau aux Pommes)
The soup might have seemed simple on the surface, but it required an annoying number of even knife cuts of potato and leek, essentially a slimmer version of the paysanne dice. The eggs themselves seemed simple on the surface, but a bechamel requires different skills and attention demands than the hollandaise-type sauces we’ve made to date. The flounder seemed easy enough, but we had to fabricate (butcher) the whole fish into fillets ourselves. The potatoes had to be perfectly cubed to cook properly. At least the apple cake seemed fairly straightforward.
I was on a team with Melanie again, along with Drew and Kristin. We were Team 1, so we had to break down Chef Peter’s demo…and it wasn’t a simple matter of a few pots and pans. The demo kitchen was smeared with fish scales, dabs of cake batter, Wondra flour, and so on. Most of my team vanished to the kitchen to get started, but I stuck around and made sure the demo kitchen was really clean before starting on lunch service. I even helped Juan process some of the demo dishes. I didn’t like how Chef Peter yelled at me last week about cleanliness, and furthermore I hadn’t enjoyed his dressing-down after lunch yesterday, so I made a point out of getting everything spic-and-span before getting to work. Chef Peter came by as I was spritzing the demo stove with cleaning solution and told me I was a doll, so hopefully I’ll make that lost point back up.
When I joined my team, Drew was already in the pastry kitchen working on our cake, and Melanie and Kristin were hurriedly assembling mise for lunch service. Melanie explained that they’d agreed to just assemble all the mise possible before deciding who would cook what for lunch, since there were so many knife cuts and mixtures and things to be set up in advance. I immediately offered to make all the cuts for the potato and leek soup, because I thought it was the most hateful task remaining, and because I need the knife practice. I ended up spending most of my prep time on making perfectly identical square pieces of leek and potato; by the time I finished most of the soup was done, the bechamel was already together, and Kristin was almost finished butchering our flounder. I went over to check on her with the flounder and she asked if I could help her by deskinning the fillets she’d already cut. Taking the skin of a fillet is much easier than it seems like it would be. Chef Peter had weighed one of our whole fish and wanted to weigh the cut, skinned, trimmed fillets we ended up with as a comparison, so I tried to do an extra-good job on those pieces.
Once the fish were ready and chilling in the fish refrigerator, it was time to start lunch service. After the soup, all four of us coordinated on assembling the eggs Florentine. And then it was time for the fish course. We all took turns coating the flounder fillets with seasoned flour and frying them. They’re very easy to fry; by the time they’re browned on both sides they’re cooked through. Drew took care of the lemon-nut brown butter sauce; he accidentally burned it and had to make it a second time. The sauce is done in about 45 seconds, so if you aren’t vigilant it burns and you have to start over. The second sauce was perfect, and we all sat down to eat with a sense of tiredness and satisfaction.
Drew’s apple cake came out beautifully. He put leftover coconut ice cream from last week’s ice cream bonanza on my plate, and decorated the plate with a raspberry coulis. Drew is one of my favorite classmates. I think he’s the youngest at 22, and he’s one of the least experienced among us. He told me early on that he’s going to culinary school because his friends are graduating from college and starting their adult lives, leaving him wondering what his place in the world should be. He hasn’t done anything he really cared about since high school, so he decided that since he liked to cook maybe he should get it together and pursue a culinary career. He knows very little about the field and very little about serious food, and he hasn’t worked much in restaurants, but he is so enthusiastic and he works so hard that I can’t help but love him. I loaned him my copy of Anthony Bourdain’s Kitchen Confidential when he said he hadn’t cracked a book since high school. I hope he likes it.
Lunch service left everybody feeling fairly wrung-out. We had a shorter break than usual, and then we sat through a demo on gravlax and fish stock. We finished the afternoon with another round of chicken back cleaning. I think chicken backs are the culinary school equivalent of a sewing circle: an unpleasant task made less annoying through the enjoyment of fellow students and amusing chatter. I chatted with Melanie and Chin and some other students while we worked over the backs, which made the job easier. Chef Peter came by to chat while we worked, and he made a comment about our lunch menu today: “Three weeks ago, when you guys started, you never would have believed that you’d be putting out a four-course meal like you did today.”
Edit disclosure: corrected spelling via Jinmyo
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#2
Posted 21 July 2002 - 05:12 PM
Give a man a fish, he eats for a Day.
Teach a man to fish, he eats for Life.
Teach a man to sell fish, he eats Steak
#3
Posted 21 July 2002 - 05:42 PM
I read somewhere that "fatty" should be considered a flavor too! LOLChef Francois mentioned the unami (meaty) taste, but said that evidence on it is inconclusive and that he doesn’t formally teach it for this reason.
#4
Posted 21 July 2002 - 06:24 PM
I'm not sure I have a sense of the number of covers the class works on.
"Behold, I teach you the ubermunch. The ubermunch is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the ubermunch shall be the meaning of the earth!" -Fritzy N.
"It's okay to like celery more than yogurt, but it's not okay to think that batter is yogurt."
Serving fine and fresh gratuitous comments since Oct 5 2001, 09:53 PM
#5
Posted 21 July 2002 - 08:13 PM
I continue to enjoy your reports very, very much.
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
#6
Posted 21 July 2002 - 08:21 PM
#7
Posted 22 July 2002 - 12:02 AM
#8
Posted 22 July 2002 - 03:45 AM
Lunch service covers: depends on how large the teams are. When we're divided into teams of three, we typically feed five people each: the three on the team plus two faculty/staff/guests. If we're teams of four we usually feed six or seven. We had four guests one day last week (two prospective students and two parents) so everybody had to feed a lot of people. There was the one day in Week 2 when seven people fed everybody (17 students + 10 or so faculty/staff) which was a disaster. We might be better equipped to handle that by now, though. We do not feed the pastry students, nor do we feed second session students when they are in the classroom on Tuesdays.
Yes, each day Team 1 cleans up the chef-instructor's demo. That team also gets any leftover mise, which in some cases is quite the benefit. Unfortunately, the one thing that really would have helped me Friday (leftover leek and potato cuts) were totally used up in the demo. I see little point in bemoaning the unfairness of this, since it's a reality and it has to be done. But you can bemoan all you like.
Oh, and markstevens: it hasn't come up yet.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#9
Posted 22 July 2002 - 05:09 AM
Thinking as a student--who is paying good money for that instructor's time, expertise and greater awareness of the whole--I don't want my instructor wasting my time by washing his own dishes and breaking down from his demo. He has more important things to do--and has to move the class forward as a whole.
There is an hierarchy of effort in the real kitchen and the classroom--and it is hard to comment meaningfully on that when you aren't there. It's not as if all executive chefs and instructors agree how to run things smoothly, how to build their team, etc.
That said--schools do deal with this in different ways and I'm interested in following how Malawry thinks her school and instructor have chosen to handle this, and how her opinion may change over time. Some instructors have non-student assistant help, volunteering in return for a tuition break. Some instructors burden their best students with this extra work so they can spend a few extra minutes one-on-one with other students who need the attention. If an instructor personally had to do all his mise en place for every demo and then clean up after himself, then students would be affected as well: A) If instructors spend their time cleaning they will not be able to cover the same amount of material and B) If they have to pay people to do the cleaning students will ultimately pay the price through higher tuition.
Focusing in on specifics, like whether the instructor cleans up after his own demo, can distract from the larger, most important issue as far as I'm concerned--how good a communicator is the instructor, how passionate, how attentive and how effective is he as a teacher?
You do have to "learn" how to teach in a kitchen classroom--and it is very different from teaching on the job.
Pastry chef-Restaurant Consultant
Oyamel : Zaytinya : Cafe Atlantico : Jaleo
chef@pastryarts.com
#10
Posted 22 July 2002 - 05:16 AM
Scott Turow wrote a book called "One-L" detailing his experiences as a first year law student. He was a writer before he attended school and it is my understanding that he kept a diary, much as you are doing, through-out the first year. Later, he turned it into a best selling novel.
With the increase in attention given to culinary matters by the public, coupled with your gifted writing style and attention to detail, I think your diary has the makings of such a novel as well. I hope that is something you are considering.
#11
Posted 22 July 2002 - 05:54 AM
Did your classmate have to completely start over, recutting all the potatoes? Is there a reason why he couldn't have A) put the potato slices in water to prevent oxidation, or B) begin simmering the potatoes in milk while getting the cheese together? Or, did he just not realize that the potatoes would oxidize if he left them sitting on the counter?As I was doing this, my teammate realized there wasn’t any shredded parmesan left for the potatoes. Since he’d already sliced his potatoes, they started oxidizing while he was getting more cheese hunks off the wheel and through the Robot Coupe for shredding. So he had to start all over, and I’m afraid he had to spend his whole lunch service time trying to recover.... Everything came out beautifully except for the potatoes, which simply hadn’t had enough time to bake through. (My classmate was pretty upset about this.)
If this is the case, did your instructor go over the options your classmate had other than allowing the potatoes to go to waste? I'm sure you are following recipes, but in a real restaurant you would have to adapt if problems come up and you wouldn't want to waste your resources either.
#12
Posted 22 July 2002 - 06:41 AM
TioPacho.com
"I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members." -- Groucho Marx
#13
Posted 22 July 2002 - 08:08 AM
johnjohn
#14
Posted 22 July 2002 - 12:51 PM
#15
Posted 22 July 2002 - 01:21 PM
Malawry, I'd be happy to bemoan this and any other realities you may come across for you, absolutely free of charge.
#16
Posted 22 July 2002 - 01:54 PM
#17
Posted 22 July 2002 - 02:48 PM
Most of all, I consider it very important that people clean up after themselves in the kitchen, as their mothers have an irritating habit of not stopping by and doing it for them.
P.S. How long before you start?
#18
Posted 22 July 2002 - 04:00 PM
Rachel, the potatoes were cut extremely thinly on a mandoline. They had been peeled several days before and sitting in water in the walk-in the whole time, so they'd already leached a lot of starch. The paper-thin slices would have lost their remaining starch immediately had they been soaked in water, and the finished dish would not have held together. My classmate stuck them in water anyway, and Chef Peter came by and told him to pitch them and start over. Cooking them in milk may have worked in a real-life situation, but he'd already killed the starch by putting them in water, so it was a moot point.
Cabrales, excellent questions about grading. I think the total of written work amounts to 25% of the grade (12.5% recipes, 12.5% papers). Classroom participation is 25 percent, as are the practical exams and written exams. Some things seem to be weighted; for example, nobody earned over an 80 on the first grades we got, for classroom participation. There is no such thing as honors to my knowledge, and I don't know yet whether or not grading makes any difference to externship placement or other future career factors.
I can't respond to questions about what the "real world" of restaurants is like with reference to cleaning and dishwashing, since I'm only a student.
Thanks for the additional info on umami, Johnjohn.
As for what happens to my diary in the future, who knows? It's still a young project, but it's a lot of fun to write.
I'm really glad to see so much discussion on this thread, btw.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#19
Posted 22 July 2002 - 05:15 PM
Me too, but I'd like to make clear that I don't see follow-up discussion as a measure of how much people are enjoying your reports. You can be sure that many are reading, enjoying tremendously, and simply don't feel the need to post anything -- especially since your reports are so complete and self-sufficient and answer the basic questions in advance.I'm really glad to see so much discussion on this thread, btw.
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
#20
Posted 22 July 2002 - 05:30 PM
#21
Posted 22 July 2002 - 09:14 PM
#22
Posted 22 July 2002 - 09:23 PM
I see what you mean now about cleaning up after the chef. I'll be interested to see how it's done at JWU RI.
#23
Posted 23 July 2002 - 01:44 AM
#24
Posted 23 July 2002 - 02:44 AM
But if you want to know how much these are anticipated, just look at this thread. The first two responses came in within an hour of your posting. I know I read your entries as soon as I notice a new one.
#25
Posted 23 July 2002 - 07:50 AM
#26
Posted 23 July 2002 - 08:17 AM
#27
Posted 23 July 2002 - 09:45 AM
Continued good luck in school and I'm looking forward to continuing to live vicariously through your diary!
#28
Posted 23 July 2002 - 11:00 AM
FG is right on target with his assessment. I always look first to see if there's a new diary entry--these are great, Malawry! Thanks for sharing this experience w/us.Me too, but I'd like to make clear that I don't see follow-up discussion as a measure of how much people are enjoying your reports. You can be sure that many are reading, enjoying tremendously, and simply don't feel the need to post anything -- especially since your reports are so complete and self-sufficient and answer the basic questions in advance.
#29
Posted 23 July 2002 - 12:13 PM
#30
Posted 23 July 2002 - 03:49 PM
Welcome to eGullet, WednesdayGirl. (She's the friend who sent me the e-mail asking how I'm enjoying school, around which I based an entry.) Also, welcome, Teva.
KateW, I hope you have time to share how your experience is similar and different once school starts. The same goes for Chefchelle and any other culinary students around eGullet.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything









