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J.Stevens

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Posts posted by J.Stevens

  1. who really cares ?? he has an opinion so do i, so does everyone else. I love his books. its nice reading a book or seeing a chef in the media admiting that shyt isnt perfect or that so and so pisses him off ...

    not many other chefs in the spotlight do it .... and come on guys hes just plain funny

  2. i looked in on getting a work visa for japan after doing a culinary exchange program there for awhile ... apparently its real difficult ... you can how ever stay for 90 days with out problem fly out and fly back in and be able to stay for another 90 day ... ive been told you can do this about 4 or 5 time with out being pulled up by the government

  3. I am sorry but min wage pay for kitchen work is sickening hell dishwashers here make like 12 bucks an hour and this is a low paying area to work load Maine as mentioned above.

    If you don't bother to pay employees a fair wage for the portion of business they are responsible for don't expect happy employees. I mean if you like the idea that your employees are at what a little over half way to reaching the poverty line in yearly income then more power to you. I mean really this guy is probably taking home like $8,000.00 a year after taxes, that barely covers a studio apt and nothing else for the year its questionable whether they could have utilities turned on with that pay in many areas on top of the rent.

    so you on one hand have a guy who is pocketing a couple bills a night probably most likely not getting claimed and another who is probably walking with 40 bucks for a full workday after taxes that's not disparity that's just laughable.

    i agree ... just pay the guy more ... i remember when i was a first year apprentice i was getting paid $4.90 an hour it was horrible

  4. tips in my work place are pooled and then divided to all the staff according how many hours/hard they work eg causal staff will not get as much as full time staff and a full time staff members who do overtime or come in early to 'get the job done' will get more than those who dont .... i think the system is very fair. i dont see why in australia in a lot of other restaurants causal waitstaff who get paid more than qualifided chefs (who are working harder long days) are getting all the tips.

  5. I don't hear a lot of mention about steels with the thin bladed Japanese knives. Is this step unnecessary for these knives or simply unmentioned? Also, since I'm asking about maintenance, do the aforementioned knives require more or less maintenance on sharpening stones than the average (using the term loosely) knife?

    That's a great question, and one that you'll get more than one answer to. There's an orthodoxy that says "never steel a japanese style knife." And there are many cooks who do it with impunity.

    In my experience, you can maintain some japanese knives on a steel. If the the steel isn't too brittle and / or the edge angles aren't too accute, it will work, although you should use really light pressure, and very smooth steel in general.

    I can't give any guidelines on where the line is, as far as how thin / how hard. My old hiromoto as gyuto handled a steel fine, until i thinned the edge past a certain point. then i just used a strop or stones for maintenance. my current gyuoto I wouldn't let near a steel.

    most japanese made knives westerners use are western style knifes and can be sharpened with a steel. but japanese style knives (only sharpened on one side) should never be sharpened with a steel.

    Photo on 2010-04-28 at 01.26.jpg

    these are my japanese style knives

  6. you seem to like the japanese knifes ... if your looking to upgrade to the best japanese knifes check out korin.com ... these knifes quite literately double your knife skill (if you have already established some form of okay knife skills) and an added bonus .. they look bad ass

  7. I hate to be the one to say it, but what you are looking for doesn't exist. At least, conceptually, not in the natural world.

    lol i feel like i just got told off :(

    anyway if you are looking to carbonate fruit the method i said earlier WILL work ... and im pretty sure (not that ive tried) you can carbonate jelly, purees ect. ive been thinking of carbonating orange flavoured yoghurt ...

  8. One place I worked when the guy on expo needed a lamb chop plate setup he just went "baaaa" like a sheep. The cook on sautee would baaa back at him to acknowledge. Somewhat surreal.

    lol reading this makes me laugh cause i do the same thing ... if my head chef want a peice of meat for the plate say duck he will ask me 'what noise does a duck make' ... 'quak'

  9. Charge your pastry cream when it is hot in an iSi Siphon with n2o. That might 'whip' the custard, changing the texture/aeration without adding anything else to it.

    i have done this sort of i suggest putting 2 sheets of gelatin into 500mls of creme anglasie ... then putting it in to a isi creamwhipper cool but not set and charge it twice. you should get a custard taste with a light smooth mouth feel.

  10. if your product is wet all you need to do is put your product in to a cream siphon close the lid and charge with a couple of Co2 bulbs (not to be confused with the normal No2 cream bulbs) and leave over night .... co2 is water soluble and will carbonate it .... were is no2 is fat soluble and will aerate fat

  11. Most equipment in every kitchen i have worked in has a name, for example the grill is called Will smith cause he is hot and black. The stand up reach in is called Gordon cause hes big and white like Ramsey.

    Jafa - just another f*&king apprentice.

    class 5 celery sucker - vegan

    bodgy - any thing half done or of lesser quality.

    a 'cowboy' - someone who is dodgy, dirty or all round suspicious in their cooking

    wing it - as in 'do you know how to make such and such?' ... 'just wing it'

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