Ducati Monster Forum

Kitchen Sink => No Moto Content => Topic started by: RAT900 on June 30, 2010, 09:12:47 PM

Title: My Culinary Career
Post by: RAT900 on June 30, 2010, 09:12:47 PM
I realize fine food and dining is a popular topic on this board and I thought I would make a meaningful contribution to the subject by sharing my efforts to master the culinary arts......

I worked in a restaurant back in the early 1970's at night while I was in school....the Robinhood Inn in Upper Montclair....it was a nice looking venue that was set up for both casual diners and formal banquets. The kitchen was staffed with some of the finest examples of society's misfits, misanthropes, drug addicts, drunks and perverts...actually the staff could have easily represented a cross-section of any given urban area prison populace or a US Post Office. Needless to say I fit right in at the time.

Lou the head broiler chef was a huge man over 6 feet tall and 4 foot wide...he had been discharged from the Navy...we didn't know under what circumstances that discharge was conducted but we all had a few guesses.

Now Lou had 3 main passions in life...Jack Daniels, pornography and masturbating in his car in the parking lot..... a talent he had no doubt perfected or mastered while at sea in the Navy. We knew of his third guiding passion in life because he was witnessed by a young waitress coming into work one afternoon, she saw him at it fast and furious in his car and he saw her looking on in horror,,, in response he smiled at her...the waitress said he didn't even miss a stroke...discretion was not Lou's forte and evidently nor was embarrassment. Lou spent all his breaks in his car in the parking lot.

The reason I remember Lou so clearly is that he was at that point in time the most frightening example of sub-humanity I had the displeasure to witness....life has long since served up far more egregious examples for me to recall.... Lou spent hours carving slabs of beef off standing racks of prime rib roast. Throwing the slab in the broiler until done to order and slapping it on a plate for the waiter to take out.

The one thing that outraged Lou was a returned item...if any rib or strip steak came back as undercooked or insufficient in some way Lou, like any highstrung artist would become fully unhinged, well given the amount of Jack Daniels they metered out to him,,, I should say he became "further unhinged"  Lou the meat handling artiste' did not like his critics

I remember him taking a returned prime rib by the end of the bone and sliding it under the elastic waist band of his checkered chef's pants....moaning theatrically as he slid it around before slapping it back on the platter unchanged for re-issue...oddly enough it did not come back a second time...I watched all this transpire nightly from the end of the serving counter at my pot washing station

Then there was our dessert chef...an impeccably manicured gentleman of good manners, perfectly coiffed silver-gray hair, flawless skin and complexion at least in his mid-late 50's. Intelligent, mild and very soft spoken...

he made your flesh crawl when he smiled...I am not talking about someone "giving you the creeps" this guy really radiated some bad bad energy through a very mild packaging...you instinctively would step back...everyone in the kitchen felt the same way about him...everything looked fine on the exterior but there was something inherently, primally "wrong" about him...everyone has secrets but you just knew this guy had secrets with roots in some twisted hell that would probably defy your worst imaginings...I shiver just writing about him...despite his unoffensive overall presentation...he made you feel like you needed to take a shower after dealing with him

But I digress,,,,,,, one weekend when I was working, they were doing a wedding banquet of 250 folks in the main room. It was getting close to time for the soup serving....the trays of cups were stacked high, 8 cups to a tray,,the pitchers were ready to be dipped into the vats to pour out the trays for a stream of waiters that would swoop in pick up a tray and head out to serve them....quite a precision production....

I was sent downstairs to bring up several 30 gallon pots of chicken consommé off the warming stoves...I go down there and look at this array of full pots on the stove....all filled....they all looked to be filled with some kind of chicken-smelling juice and I couldn't figure out which ones were the consommé so I grabbed the ones that were overwhelmingly chicken flavored and brought them up....out they went in trays within minutes....folks were actually complimenting the waiters on how good and thick and rich the consommé was...

The head chef wanders up from the bowels of the basement and goes to the head waiter and says "why isn't the consommé out in the main room yet?"...

head waiter replies..."it went out and they all loved it"....

head chef says "its still on the stove downstairs what the hell did you serve them?"....

they both look at me...

I offer that I grabbed the really dark chicken-looking stuff....

It turns out that it was pure clarified chicken fat/grease that was poured off of the pans used to roast a few hundred chickens every morning...they left it warming on the stoves for the dog food companies to come by and pick up and use in their processes

The head chef turns back to the head waiter and says "so they liked it huh?"

head waiter replies "yup some wanted more".....

they both start roaring with laughter as the head chef peeks out at the crowd through the swinging door port hole...

within 20-30 minutes there are lines forming outside every rest room in the restaurant as 250 peoples' digestive systems reacted to the thorough greasing they received...

castor oil has nothing on chicken grease when it comes to "promoting regularity".....

I became a legend in the kitchen as the guy who made 250 people all want to take a crap at the same time ....lord knows I may have killed a few with clogged arteries as well...

I still consider the event to be one of the defining achievements of my life
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Kopfjager on June 30, 2010, 09:19:38 PM
So, Did the Chef serve that consommé again?  :D
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: RAT900 on June 30, 2010, 09:25:48 PM
No but he made a point to never send me downstairs to bring up soup vats again  ;D
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Kopfjager on June 30, 2010, 09:35:27 PM
Quote from: RAT900 on June 30, 2010, 09:25:48 PM
No but he made a point to never send me downstairs to bring up soup vats again  ;D

[laugh] [drink]
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: NoisyDante on June 30, 2010, 10:21:05 PM
 [beer]

Excellent tale.  Doesn't make me want to go to a restaurant in the super near future, but I will once the mental image of Lou goes away.
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: lethe on June 30, 2010, 10:43:34 PM
mmmm, now I hunger for chicken grease
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Howie on July 01, 2010, 01:23:37 AM
Uh oh!  Gotta check, but I have a cousin in law who, I think, managed that place.  Name rings a bell.  I ate there too, I do hope he made things better :P  Small world.
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: RAT900 on July 01, 2010, 01:55:32 AM
Quote from: howie on July 01, 2010, 01:23:37 AM
Uh oh!  Gotta check, but I have a cousin in law who, I think, managed that place.  Name rings a bell.  I ate there too, I do hope he made things better :P  Small world.

Well we're talking 37-38 years ago and he could only have made things better...I hope  ;)
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: ducpainter on July 01, 2010, 01:57:51 AM
I've never met a broiler chef that didn't get all pissed off when a steak came back.

For you well done meat eaters....enjoy your deep fried steak. ;)
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: The Architect on July 01, 2010, 02:37:01 AM
Kind of reminds me of this movie.

Waiting Trailer (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HJEsNjH3JT8#normal)
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: zooom on July 01, 2010, 03:33:56 AM
yes...I was reading about Lou and thought about "Waiting" also...excellent movie...a must see...

I was thinking though...when I opened the thread...there might be some amusing quip that went something like "I blew up a hotdog in the microwave and I gave up after that"....

Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: RAT900 on July 01, 2010, 03:39:52 AM
Quote from: zooom on July 01, 2010, 03:33:56 AM
yes...I was reading about Lou and thought about "Waiting" also...excellent movie...a must see...

I was thinking though...when I opened the thread...there might be some amusing quip that went something like "I blew up a hotdog in the microwave and I gave up after that"....



no hot dogs but I will offer that one should never microwave a Twinkie...

the filling turns into molten lava...the roof of your mouth will turn into an enormous blister in seconds

a hungry drunk can do some real damage to himself if given the chance
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Pip on July 01, 2010, 03:55:11 AM
Sugar is an amazing substance when superheated in its various forms.
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: cyrus buelton on July 01, 2010, 03:57:58 AM
Gerard,

You are never a disappointment.



That was one of the funniest reads ever.
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: zooom on July 01, 2010, 04:00:19 AM
Quote from: RAT900 on July 01, 2010, 03:39:52 AM
no hot dogs but I will offer that one should never microwave a Twinkie...

the filling turns into molten lava...the roof of your mouth will turn into an enormous blister in seconds

a hungry drunk can do some real damage to himself if given the chance


but a deep fried twinkie is pure awesomeness!...especially when paired with a lil drizzle of chocolate sauce and a scoop of vanilla ice cream!
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: rgramjet on July 01, 2010, 04:12:28 AM
Does this guy look anything like Lou?

Road Trip : French Toast Scene (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4ZXRlcoEW8#normal)
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: RAT900 on July 01, 2010, 04:14:04 AM
Quote from: zooom on July 01, 2010, 04:00:19 AM

but a deep fried twinkie is pure awesomeness!...especially when paired with a lil drizzle of chocolate sauce and a scoop of vanilla ice cream!

Wow...that would definitely work after a main course of Fried Pork Rinds or Cracklin's...are you from the South?
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: RAT900 on July 01, 2010, 04:22:58 AM
Quote from: rgramjet on July 01, 2010, 04:12:28 AM
Does this guy look anything like Lou?

Road Trip : French Toast Scene (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4ZXRlcoEW8#normal)

From a behavioral perspective Lou was much angrier...always growling and muttering like Popeye or maybe Bluto.... and he was not allowed out into the dining areas....

he was a african-american guy as big as a door and he was constantly sweating from the Jack and the open furnace he worked in front of
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: zooom on July 01, 2010, 04:27:53 AM
Quote from: RAT900 on July 01, 2010, 04:14:04 AM
Wow...that would definitely work after a main course of Fried Pork Rinds or Cracklin's...are you from the South?

MD outside of DC all my life!...but I have been exposed to many kinds and types during my time thus far...
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Grampa on July 01, 2010, 06:10:16 AM
somebody needs to take all this down and write a book

A Rat
A Sac
and a Duc


forward by Piller.
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: zooom on July 01, 2010, 06:18:01 AM
Quote from: bobspapa on July 01, 2010, 06:10:16 AM
somebody needs to take all this down and write a book

A Rat
A Sac
and a Duc


forward by Piller.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA....

Amazon.com's #1 best seller...but restricted from Kindle...J/K
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: SacDuc on July 01, 2010, 06:27:52 AM
Quote from: bobspapa on July 01, 2010, 06:10:16 AM
somebody needs to take all this down and write a book

A Rat
A Sac
and a Duc


forward by Piller.


Photography by IZ.
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Pip on July 01, 2010, 06:33:58 AM
Quote from: bobspapa on July 01, 2010, 06:10:16 AM
somebody needs to take all this down and write a book

A Rat
A Sac
and a Duc


forward by Piller.

I get the disturbing feeling that Travis would be somewhere towards the rear (of the book).  :-X  ;)
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: SacDuc on July 01, 2010, 06:52:20 AM
Quote from: The Happy Pip on July 01, 2010, 06:33:58 AM
I get the disturbing feeling that Travis would be somewhere towards the rear (of the book).  :-X  ;)

I think he was involved with this cookbook:


(http://www.vegetariantimes.com/ecommerce/images/large_moosewoodL.jpg)



Heh heh heh . . . moose . . . wood . . . heh
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: KnightofNi on July 01, 2010, 07:40:06 AM
Quote from: The Happy Pip on July 01, 2010, 06:33:58 AM
I get the disturbing feeling that Travis would be somewhere towards the rear (of the book).  :-X  ;)

Well I have only known Rat for a few years so natrually I wouldn't come into the picture until later.


:)
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Pip on July 01, 2010, 08:38:52 AM
Quote from: KnightofNi on July 01, 2010, 07:40:06 AM
Well I have only known Rat for a few years so natrually I wouldn't come into the picture  until later.

Your choice of words only confirms the validity of my disturbance.  ;)

Quote from: SacDuc on July 01, 2010, 06:52:20 AM
Heh heh heh . . . moose . . . wood . . . heh

[laugh]  [thumbsup]
Title: Re: My Culinary Career
Post by: Howie on July 01, 2010, 09:50:36 AM
Quote from: SacDuc on July 01, 2010, 06:52:20 AM
I think he was involved with this cookbook:


(http://www.vegetariantimes.com/ecommerce/images/large_moosewoodL.jpg)



Heh heh heh . . . moose . . . wood . . . heh

[laugh] [laugh] [laugh] [laugh] [laugh] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap]