I'm working on new items for the Tapas bar. One of the ingredients I'm messing with is bacalau or salt cod. It's got a wonderful firm texture and plays well with other ingredients. I have a cold salad in the works that has soaked salt cod (soaked for days and rinsed twice per shift), tomatoes, Italian parsley, garlic, and onion. It's delish and very refreshing. Especially now when the weather is in the 100's.
I'm thinking about making sausage this summer. The formula is simple, five parts meat, four parts fat, three parts water. The rest of it is style and ingredients.
Yippee skippy, I got my diploma today. It's official, I have an associate in applied science degree in culinary arts. Fan-freaking-tastic.
Stephan Pyles got a five star review from the local paper, the Dallas Morning News. It's the highest rating a restaurant can get. Now a restaurant that was very hot is now incendiary. I heard that there is a multi month waiting list for a table on a Saturday night.
Rachel Ray of Food Network fame taped a segment of Tasty Travels at the ceviche bar. It was a zoo that night and having a camera crew underfoot didn't help.
A few months ago, I submitted an application to Stephan Pyles' new restaurant, called Stephan Pyles. He's one of the few nationally (perhaps even internationally) recognized chefs in Dallas. He had a cooking show on PBS long before the Food Network, and is known by foodie and non-foodie alike.
To make a long story short, I took a job with Stephan at the beginning of February and couldn't be happier. I work at the Tapas and Ceviche bar. My cooking surface is a cranky wood burning oven, and I cook in front of people, interact with them even.
Last week, I even got a tip. Not a "wear galoshes in the rain" tip but a guy palmed me a bill. Very nice.
It's my last semester of school, only 7 weeks to go in the semester and I'm finished. Hooray! This semester I have American Regional cuisine, it's the quantity class in which we cook for the school restaurant, and principals of food and bev cost control. AKA culinary math/accounting. We're allowed to use an index card of formulas for tests. This is mine:
Food cost percentage cost/sales$=food cost %; cost/fc%=sales price; sales$*fc%=cost Mark up Raw food cost*1+%markup=menu price Rev-Exp=profit; P+E=R; R-P=E. Sales this year-sales last year/sales last year =%varianc Varianc$/sales last year=%variance. Sales last yr*1.0(%)=rev 4cast. Rev 4cast-sales last year=projected increase. Profit/Sales=profit % of sales. Exp/Rev=% of total Weighted avg Day1$+Day 2$/Day1guests+day2guests=2day avg. Pop Index=total#of item sold/total sold. Guests*PI=#of items to prep for. Purhase today/sales today=rough food cost % New yield/old yield=CF Wt of each ingred/total wt=%of each ingred; %*wt=new amt BI+P-TO+TI-EI=COFC COFC-emp meals=COFS Rooms sold/rooms available=occupancy %. Sales/#of guests=check average Waste%=prod loss/AP wt. Actual cost/attainable cost=operational efficiency ratio Labor/revenue=labor cost %. $amt in X category/total of all categories=Xcost proportion
Here is the school web site: El Centro College, Culinary Arts
Each week we serve the best $9, four-course lunch in the city. Use the "weekly menu" option to make reservations.
On Monday, I begin my last semester of school. In December, I'll be a Certified Culinarian (just as soon as I send some $$ to the chef governing body).
I'm taking the last quantity class, American Regional Cuisine as well as Principals of food and bev controls. I have no idea what controls will involve. I guess I could crack the book ... nah.