When you work as a cook in a restaurant, getting food from raw ingredients to finished dishes can, in some ways, be more straightforward than cooking at home, or less, depending on your point of view. Very rarely in a restaurant setting is something cooked from raw, and then immediately plated up and served to a guest. The main exception to this would be proteins, but even then most restaurants will get your steak or chicken or what-have-you at least part of the way toward finished before it's even ordered.
In this post I want to take a different, almost opposite approach. Rather than go in depth on a single prep task, I want to give you a sense of what its like to go through an entire AM prep shift getting ready for dinner service. I'll show you (more or less) all the tasks I completed in one shift, but will largely leave out the details of the individual tasks themselves. Also, in this context AM really just means ‘pre-service’ as my day ends at 5:00 PM.
Similarly to the last post, I'll mostly let the photos do the talking with just brief interjections explaining what's going on in the images.
Not pictured is the routine I go through when I get in before even starting to cook. This includes reading through the prep list to prioritize my day, lighting the pilots on the equipment (I typically only need to do this at the start of the week), feeding the sourdough starter, moving the cleaning equipment from the previous service outside of the kitchen, setting up the dish area, and setting up my station for the day.
My first task of the day was to prepare the filling for the leek and gruyere tart. This involves trimming, cleaning, slicing, and sweating leeks in butter, then chilling them while I grate gruyere cheese, and prepare the custard. Here is the filling (sans custard) all finished.
While the endives are braising, I move on to cleaning and cutting radishes. These are served raw so they need to be meticulously cleaned to get ready for service. This job is a bit tedious and can take a while to get the amount we need, so I have to multitask.
After I got the radishes squared away, it was time to divide and shape the potato rolls and get them proofing before their bake.
Then I cleaned, steamed, and picked a couple bags of mussels, stored them in brine, then divided them up among about 40 kits for service.
From here, I diced butter for service, then trimmed, chopped, blanched, and pureed some zucchini to finish out the gnocchi mise en place.