Friday, October 10, 2014

Thursday at Tazzaria

So today is Thursday and my shift at Tazzaria starts at 4 pm so today I grabbed my pig tails that I smoked over the weekend and blasted to work early and as soon as lunch was done being served I set up a small work area.

I tossed the pig tails in cornstarch and dropped them in the fryer basket. I let them cook for a few minutes and they got just a little crisp on them. I tossed them in sweet chili sauce. Before heading to work I was trying to find some pickeled daicon to finish the tails off.

So I grabbed a bowl and LJ and I took them down stairs to my boss. We talked about what I should do differently but he had never had pigs tail. The awesome thing is that he liked them!! The truth is everyone who ate any of them liked how they came out.

This was an awesome feeling to do something cool and different and people liked it. I look forward to doing it again!

So it is almost 4 pm which means it is time to officially clock on and I already had my prep list for the night and on todays list....Gnocchi.

This is something I have only done one other times with the owner showing me how to do it. So today I made a batch x4 to make sure we have enough to get through the weekend. So I get on all my "mise en place" (look I used a fancy word).


Get the dough made and rolled out and Ryan takes enough for an order and then comes back into the kitchen with a bowl of gnocchi in a sage cream sauce and "here is your finished product". I will be honest......It was good, not dense and a nice texture.

Ryan even had LJ taste it....Even he said I did a good job. It even got back to James that I did a really good job on the gnocchi.

I think the rest of this work week I need to pay attention to Mike & Ryans  line so I can start breaking it down for them and learn where it all belongs......It was a good day at work.

Friday, September 12, 2014

Whole Hog Butchery

So I have been taking a class at the local community college and the class is called Animal Evaluation and Processing. This is a class a bunch of students have to take as part of different ag sci courses.

I knew that we had a slaughter and breakdown coming soon and today I was really excited to find out that we were doing a pig slaughter today.

I was hoping to to hang up my GoPro and shoot the whole process from beginning to end but the teacher said "No". So out of respect for my teacher I pulled it down. I do hope to video as we start breaking down the primal cuts over the next two weeks.

So before the teacher stunned the 350 lb pig all I could think was the Lords Prayer making sure I gave a sense of gratitude for what was about to happen. With a whole class of students the process started at 10:02 pm and ended at 11:32 am.

I was asked by a friend about the kill method.The instructor used a gun that had a captive bolt that was backed by the charge of a .22. This rendered the pig OUT! The next step was to quickly cut the animals throat. This was something that had to be done quickly before  rigor mortis starts to set in.

There are may procedures used to slaughter and animal and due to what we had at the school it was a bit crude and not like a million dollar plant The truth is the way we did it at the school is the way people have been doing it for hundreds of years. Truth is first thing I did was call my dad and tell him about what I just done. He began to tell me about his grandparents and how they would raise pigs and use everything. He told me his grandma would render all the fat, put it in jars and put it in the basement of there home and use it during the years.

Our instructor started  and showed us how to pull the skin off and so I finally get my hand dirty and start helping pull the skin off by cutting against the skin and the fat. As I am watching the process and we are half way through pulling the skin off I look at the teacher and say "I want the head" and that is what I got.

I was talking to the instructor and I made the comment that there is something surreal about this whole process. Watching an animal go from death to what becomes a usable product for consumption.

We as consumers do not think about where are food comes from and how we get it. Today I have a better understanding of where it comes from.

This weekend I am going to be making a batch of my Irish sausage and my goal is to make sure I do not waste a single ounce of meat. Did this change my life....I am not sure. Did it change my point of view on a few thing....DEFINITELY!!!!

Recommended reading: The Ethical Butcher by Berlin Reed



Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Kitchen To The Shop And Back To The Kitchen

So I have been working as a full time barber since November of 2011. Over the last year I have had a rough time providing for my family doing what I love.

About a month ago I was offered a job working in two local restaurants  (owned by the same family).

I took this job knowing I would have to cut my time in the barbershop way back but I would also be seeing a steady weekly paycheck.

What started as a job at there pizza joint working as a  front of house shift lead has turned into me working as a prep cook in the kitchen of there restaurant.

Before becoming a barber I  worked as a line cook at Mizuna in Spokane,wa. But the truth is that it has been a few years. Close to 8 years to be exact.

I do not feel like I am starting from scratch but I am definitely able to say man I am out of  practice!

I am not sure what's to come but I am enjoying my time in the kitchen. I am working with and for some good people and I am grateful.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Sausage making

The Big Tip....Death To Kind Gestures

So I am sitting here in the hospital with  the wife and I put the tv on Food Network.

First commercial they show features Food Network demigod Rachel Ray and her new show called "The Big Tip".

The show has Rachel traveling the country and leaving giant tips (10 large) for deserving servers.

I think that this show is a crappy idea. I think it pisses on all the good news reports we heard over the last year of random people who left killer tips for hard working servers out of the kindness of there hearts.

Rachel Ray giving money should help Food Network ratings..

Thursday, May 1, 2014

EAT INK-Recpes, Stories, Tattoos

Here are some of my favorite profiles found in favorite Eat Ink

EAT INK- Recipes, Stories, Tattoos

I have been meaning to get around and writing a review about"Eat Ink" but the job has been keeping me busy. So here we go!!

I am a cookbook nerd and collector of tattoos so this book was going to be an obvious purchase. Having a history in the kitchen where all my friends who are cook, dishwashers and back of house staff all being tattooed this book was a no brainer.....This book was a great idea.

"Eat Ink" is broken up into 5 chapters...Hoofed, finned, winged, rooted and sugar. So you guessed it each chapter is going to feature a chef that is a top in his field.

"EAT INK" features chefs from all over the country and from different backgrounds. There book features former Top Chef contestants, Contestants from Hell's Kitchen, James Beard Foundation nominees and more.

There is a common thread between many of the chefs in this book and that is they did not start in the kitchen. There are plenty of them (chefs) that knew this (career as a chef) was what they wanted.

The more I read the book the more I actually like it.My first glance through it had chefs with one or two tattoos and I was like "Really, this is what your going to cover in a tattoo cookbook?"

As I read the recipes the great thing is that most of them are really approachable. That is important because so many cookbooks come out and are not easy for the daily at home cook.

I will be honest I was hoping to see more guys like rhe Voltaggios, Aaron Sanchez, Jamie Bissonnette and a few other bigger named and heavily tattoo chefs.