I know the pak Choi I was wondering if that leaf was chard or spinach. First time I’ve seen the blow torch used to crisp leaf but it’s good to learn. I only ever used it for pastry or charing cured makeral skin
i appreciate videos like this im in a wheelchair and absolutely love cooking in a home setting but unfortunately couldnt work in a restaurant setting so i live vicariously through these vids i could binge for hours would love to be a chef
No you wouldn’t, it’s hot, greasy, extraordinarily low paid, long, late hours ( split shifts are the worst ), your workmates become your social life because you no longer have one. Cooking at home is very different to being screamed at for £7 an hour ( few chefs are on salaries ). I advise anyone considering catering work to think again, because unless you reach an extremely high standard you’ll never earn f*** all.
@@BennyTheChiller Reality is that there are great restaurants with the most clean, efficient and amazing kitchens like this one, where cooks are well paid. The reality is that after all the hours you still get to live some of the best moments of your life, yes I hated mine when I was a dishwasher but at the end of the day there are still the most amazing moments with the best crews and when your guests are making memories that feeling can't be beaten, it's just amazing! Just because your passion was killed doesn't meant that it's the same for everyone. I know a lot of line cooks who absolutely adore their jobs. I myself never been on the line as a cook but had similar levels of pressure behind the counter and on and off stages and all over the entertainment, hospitality and catering industry. This stuff is my passion, I've helped professional cooks on the line before and they all profusely thanked me. I have the level for cooking pro, I want to experience it and I know I got the right mindset. I also know which place is hiring right and paying right. Not everything is nightmarish. I'm really sorry you feel this way... and I'll admit my situation is different than needing any job I can find and knowing how to cook... you should watch some Anthony Bourdain... it'll get your passion right up! :)
With the internet you can become a pro chef if you really want to! Impossible does NOT exist. You can adapt a kitchen to a wheelchair, I don't see at all how that would be impossible... we don't use our feet!!! Don't listen to the heartbroken naysayers. Most people have a vague idea that they really like food and really need a job. Few has enough passion in their hearts to go on and thrive in the industry... so be careful whose advice you take!
Chef Moyo does an excellent job. He is on top of things and repeats what the head chef is asking for and gives good direction to his co-workers. He is very fast.
3 months ago I was watching these videos terrified of starting my first fine dining job. I may be in the cold station, but it's still intense. One thing has changed though. I don't get anxiety when I watch these anymore. Just pure admiration.
My dad was a chef and just retired after 35 some odd years, from a pastry chef, sue chef to head chef etc. He has worked every position, even a sever in the bringing of his career. Most nights he doesn't want to cook anything after getting off work, but on the rare occasion he wants to show his mastery it is delicious. It's mind boggling what he just knows, the intricate recipes for most dishes, preparation, skills so on. Since I've seen him cook in our kitchen, the pace, stress and urgency appearing as if he was at work, has shown me to respect any and every chef. Great perspective of how fast paced and stressful the kitchen is. "we are short staffed" I immediately understand they are not at optimal operation capacity.
Guys, can I just say I have the upmost respect for you guys and for the amount of work that goes into your food! I was a chef for 18 years and I can appreciate the amount of effort that goes into everything!! So well done to you and everyone on your team!
@@erlangga7642no not at all and a lot of chefs have left the industry now so there is a easier way in people are looking to train from scratch,which wasn’t heard of a few years ago you had to start as a pot wash at least
this dude is an animal man hes working so hard, hes inspiring me to work harder, people dont even know how stressful this job is this dude is cranking it nonstop
😀hellll ya after working a 8 hour shift on the line SOLO most nights i still come here and always watch these...........IYKYK just love the pace of it all and esp when I get in the zone the way it all becomes a chaotic yet beautiful ballerina dance of time and speed
Having worked as a cook when I was younger, I appreciate the effort that goes on behind the scenes. A meal out is still a big thing to many people and a good experience means a lot. This is really interesting to watch and actually quite theraputic. Good idea and great work by the chefs!! 👍👍
Always love when these kind of videos pop up! And I'm travelling from the US to London and Paris in April 2024, so I think this might be one of the spots I'll have to hit when I'm here!
The hardest worker in the kitchen might be the order printing Machine that’s constantly going “brr..brr..brrt…bee…brr” doesn’t take any breaks god bless 😂
I work at a 1 star in London on meat garnish and have to say this looks awesome, rep to Garnish bois but also this looks like very active cooking, more than us. Cant be not fun. As always awesome POV, thank you guys 🙏
😂😂 you clearly never work in a restaurant to say that to me he look not 100% sure in his movement, lose a lot of time by using tool instead of flipping with the pan and is not multi task enough but , hes cleaning whenever he can , the only good point here
Everything you do is something I’ve learned. And I’m so sxcited to see all of these techniques used in an everyday service, honestly it’d be an honour to have you prepare a meal for meal let alone have some of your culinary expertise 😅😮
This is the true reality of being a chef and not that crap on masterchef that kids watch and then think that's it And actually it is a team sport with a lot of work and commitment Well done
That "crap" on Masterchef is individual dishes, not multiple courses and orders at once. You can compliment this video without downplaying something else for no reason.
I'm confused by the bucket full of spoon in the back. What type of liquid they're use to clean those spoons? Does it safe to use it without wiping the spoon first?
They are supposed to either drip the sauce onto the spoon, so the spoon never contaminates the meal, or dispose of the spoon after every use. Some chefs rinse them off in warm water, although that's less for sanitation and more to prevent sauces from one dish from getting mixed into other another. From what I've seen there are a lot of cooks who just don't care all that much about sanitation.
Love the hussle my dood. Watching this brings back memories of working at a few kitchen resort restaurants. It was fun and stressful all at once. Thx for the vid.
I love the povs but I’m curious what your dinner service looks like, if you could post some of those from different line positions I feel like that would be the best as it’s nice to see how busy other restaurants can get and how their line cooks handle the pressure
God damn I need to get back in a kitchen had a year away to reset now I’m ready… need to find a kitchen like this again. This is my favourite section aswell ❤
Love it when the kitchen is clearly visible. Once I was just making these burgers for 3 guys that were sitting on the bar which faces directly towards our kitchen window. And the 2 were straight up looking on and like acting all amused by it. Was a good little ego/confidence boost😂
@@dehjosh kitchens like these don't tend to have training like you have in mind, its usually jump on a section and learn as you go (except for apprentices). I imagine they don't hire chefs with 0 experience unless they're apprentices.
cook is never a problem in the restaurant, the real problem is to prepare everything into those tiny boxes and make sure they are not run out. And also need a lot of skills to master the cooking order and efficient communication.
Great insight into the amazing work you guys do!! Quick question how do you manage allergies if the spoons always go in the same water? or is the water running? something I'm missing? just curious hehe.
I think, and thats what im doing so dont get mad if im wrong, that the bucket is indeed constantly getting rinsed with fresh water. Answering your allergies question here, i have celiac disease and i work in a kitchen as a cook, i personally always grab a fresh spoon and clean it one more time if im dealing with allergies
I have zero experience working in kitchens, this seems so hard. The amount of things you have to be paying attention to and remembering. So much respect! I have a question, when he licks the spoon, he puts it in a metal bucket near the top left of his station, and then picks it up and uses it to stir the food in the small pot again. Is this typical? Is there some sort of cleaning solution in the bucket? Just curious! Amazing videos guys :)
You always do this in this kind of kitchens, and this is WITH a camera ;), I've seen multiple people do it in the same bucket. More high class places, specially after covid, give you free mini wooden spoons for tasting.
Really? These guys do an excellent job and pay great attention to detail, and are absolutely professional... all of things I would place above many of my 20 years of chef experience, but as far as being a busy service I wouldn't agree. my reasoning is the dining room in this restaurant must be smaller, where I am used to working in very large places.
Sometimes when I'm hating my desk job I watch these videos and am immediately filled will dread and PTSD from my 15 years as a line cook. Suddenly doing spreadsheets all day and working 9-5 doesn't seem so bad.
I left cheffing to become a nurse and don't regret a thing... However I do see your videos and kind of get the itch to be back on the line. Busting your ass off with a great team around you to make great food is a feeling you just dont get anywhere else
Nursing is not underpaid. At least not in the US. You can make 80-100k. But cooking? Only exec chefs at high end places make th at kinda money. Cooks make garbage.
Can the Fallow chefs follow me around my job for a day and tell me everything I am doing is beautiful? I’m am also going to need them to shout “ wuuueeeeee” when I tell them to do something. ❤️ My fellow funeral directors will love this.
that is bok choy, a type of chinese cabbage. they can be boiled or steamed cooked within 1 minute, which makes them slightly softer and more palatable, which is what the hot plate is doing. he's just blasting them with the blowtorch here for colour. for those of us who don't have a blowtorch, just throw them on a hot pan until brown.
I was a sauté line cook at Portobello’s Restaurant at Walt Disney World when I was in college in the late 1980’s. We were deep in the weeds every night. This brings back memories.
I don't really know much about this sort of stuff but imma just say a couple of things (please tell me these things): 1. Is it ok that he's using his hands to touch all the food?? 2. I don't really like how he puts the spoons in a container full of water and then takes it out and uses it again. He also tastes it
If he used gloves he'd have to change it after every single bit of food touched and thats not very practical. Also if he doesn't change it then it's no different to him just using his hands, which are cleaner because he can wash them. Barely any restaurants use gloves
2 the spoon thing is normal, the bucket if full of steaming water which kills bacteria. if you don't like it think that in othere restaurants they just reuse it without the bucket part
The water is extremely hot and will kill pathogens. He'd get sick himself if he was communally sharing spoons and such without killing bacteria! And it is okay that his hands are bare - clean hands are safer than potentially cross contamination with different surfaces, sweaty gloves, etc. He can always wash!
I respect the hustle. Bare hand isn’t terrible as long as the food is cooked to temp (unless a virus is introduced). I just see a lot of inconsistency which bothers me otherwise.
Miss working with cooks and chefs like this 😢 keep bring these videos like these they need to make a show out of this, had enough of this fake superstar cooking shows alway competing with one another, that never the case in real kitchens like this here
I cooked in kitchens for 10 years. Never made it a goal of mine to create a true career out of it... Ive since been an engineer and ran my own business for a while now. Kitchen work was non stop and difficult.. I honestly miss it every day now that im older. But starting at a low level again in my 40s just doesnt feel like an option. My wife is a chef so I cook for us at home and get what I can out of that. Still miss the kitchen though.
These are my second favourite type of POV videos.
underrated comment
What's first? The Taco Bell Ones?
@@horseplop9 oh yeah, taco is involved for sure
😂
@@horseplop9 woosh
When I heard “well done burger chef” I thought the burger chef was being congratulated for a second
A great addition to these might be time stamps and identification of specific dishes or ingredients. Love this stuff!!!
I know the pak Choi I was wondering if that leaf was chard or spinach. First time I’ve seen the blow torch used to crisp leaf but it’s good to learn. I only ever used it for pastry or charing cured makeral skin
Ya I suspect that would be quite a bit difficult to do though. Super long video like this would take a while to go through that many dishes.
@@dehjosh They could identify each one once, since there is a lot of repetition for each section I don't think it would take too long..
Yeah let's go
It's all kale I think.
Did I just watch a man fry leaves for 30 minutes
I'm 4 mins in but it's starting to look that way.
These big places are heavily compartmentalised. Man does zero plating.
@@jaketaylor5754 says line chef, why would he plate
@@jaketaylor5754 I'm guessing this guy is working in a kitchen using the French brigade... plating would be done by someone solely focused on plating
@@jaketaylor5754 I thought you and OP were exaggerating. He opened a drawer full of leaves. An entire drawer...
@@jaketaylor5754 it's a line chef. It's usually the head chef who plates everything in this kind of restaurants.
i appreciate videos like this im in a wheelchair and absolutely love cooking in a home setting but unfortunately couldnt work in a restaurant setting so i live vicariously through these vids i could binge for hours would love to be a chef
No you wouldn’t, it’s hot, greasy, extraordinarily low paid, long, late hours ( split shifts are the worst ), your workmates become your social life because you no longer have one.
Cooking at home is very different to being screamed at for £7 an hour ( few chefs are on salaries ). I advise anyone considering catering work to think again, because unless you reach an extremely high standard you’ll never earn f*** all.
@@louisebidgood2591why can’t people just have dreams 😭
@@hkljf sure they can, but you also have to see the reality.
@@BennyTheChiller Reality is that there are great restaurants with the most clean, efficient and amazing kitchens like this one, where cooks are well paid. The reality is that after all the hours you still get to live some of the best moments of your life, yes I hated mine when I was a dishwasher but at the end of the day there are still the most amazing moments with the best crews and when your guests are making memories that feeling can't be beaten, it's just amazing! Just because your passion was killed doesn't meant that it's the same for everyone. I know a lot of line cooks who absolutely adore their jobs. I myself never been on the line as a cook but had similar levels of pressure behind the counter and on and off stages and all over the entertainment, hospitality and catering industry. This stuff is my passion, I've helped professional cooks on the line before and they all profusely thanked me. I have the level for cooking pro, I want to experience it and I know I got the right mindset. I also know which place is hiring right and paying right. Not everything is nightmarish. I'm really sorry you feel this way... and I'll admit my situation is different than needing any job I can find and knowing how to cook... you should watch some Anthony Bourdain... it'll get your passion right up! :)
With the internet you can become a pro chef if you really want to! Impossible does NOT exist. You can adapt a kitchen to a wheelchair, I don't see at all how that would be impossible... we don't use our feet!!! Don't listen to the heartbroken naysayers. Most people have a vague idea that they really like food and really need a job. Few has enough passion in their hearts to go on and thrive in the industry... so be careful whose advice you take!
Chef Moyo does an excellent job. He is on top of things and repeats what the head chef is asking for and gives good direction to his co-workers. He is very fast.
3 months ago I was watching these videos terrified of starting my first fine dining job. I may be in the cold station, but it's still intense. One thing has changed though. I don't get anxiety when I watch these anymore. Just pure admiration.
Yeah let's go
the printer chatter still stresses me out
@@gengarth5470 Its like a poke in the ribs lol
I want to start in the kitchen because I love to cook but my anxiety is too high. Any tips in how to get over it?
@@paulr.1961 start as a dish washer, or talk to someone who is already working in the industry. Talk to them in person.
My dad was a chef and just retired after 35 some odd years, from a pastry chef, sue chef to head chef etc. He has worked every position, even a sever in the bringing of his career. Most nights he doesn't want to cook anything after getting off work, but on the rare occasion he wants to show his mastery it is delicious. It's mind boggling what he just knows, the intricate recipes for most dishes, preparation, skills so on. Since I've seen him cook in our kitchen, the pace, stress and urgency appearing as if he was at work, has shown me to respect any and every chef.
Great perspective of how fast paced and stressful the kitchen is. "we are short staffed" I immediately understand they are not at optimal operation capacity.
You have no proof
@@user-pq7to3te1t Oh 🥫it.
@@user-pq7to3te1t and you have no proof, that he doesn't have any proof. Proof me wrong!
*Sous chef. Sous is French for "below" or "under", thus the under-chef is the second in command after the chef.
@@user-pq7to3te1tchill lawyer, trust him or not, no one cares.
A small detail but a sign of a really good chef is someone who knows when to wipe down their station in between when you have down time.
I really enjoy watching true professionals work. I think what amazes me is the teamwork.
Guys, can I just say I have the upmost respect for you guys and for the amount of work that goes into your food! I was a chef for 18 years and I can appreciate the amount of effort that goes into everything!! So well done to you and everyone on your team!
pog
ty
Did you need to take culinary school to be a chef?
@@erlangga7642no not at all and a lot of chefs have left the industry now so there is a easier way in people are looking to train from scratch,which wasn’t heard of a few years ago you had to start as a pot wash at least
Bootlicker
Line Chef is under pressure but still puts so much love in each garnish!
its insane what chefs have to do compared to other jobs that pays the same wage
And it's litteral hell working in the kitchen because of that, the only way i would ever return is if the pay gets wayyyy better.
Yeah I have a lot of respect for chefs and head chefs
they should go to school and get a better job then. Is it too hard to go to school?
@@algroulx1774... how do you think they learned how to cook? Magic?
@@algroulx1774 Most fine dining chefs go to cooking schools lol
this dude is an animal man hes working so hard, hes inspiring me to work harder, people dont even know how stressful this job is this dude is cranking it nonstop
Just WOW! Thank you. Can't find videos on the Brigade System - but will look again! Love the specialisation & communication. Thanks again.
😀hellll ya after working a 8 hour shift on the line SOLO most nights i still come here and always watch these...........IYKYK just love the pace of it all and esp when I get in the zone the way it all becomes a chaotic yet beautiful ballerina dance of time and speed
Having worked as a cook when I was younger, I appreciate the effort that goes on behind the scenes. A meal out is still a big thing to many people and a good experience means a lot. This is really interesting to watch and actually quite theraputic. Good idea and great work by the chefs!! 👍👍
Always love when these kind of videos pop up! And I'm travelling from the US to London and Paris in April 2024, so I think this might be one of the spots I'll have to hit when I'm here!
you guys always make we wanna cook after watching these videos!
Unbelievable teamwork, patience and reflexes; hats off to you!
4:43 “wtf am i doing” i say that to myself about 20 times a day 😂
they didn't? is this timestamp wrong?
@@Dr_Pickle 3:43 i think lol
8:43
This type of content is so precious and this specific content is so good
We just started season 2 of The Bear. This tells me the show doesn't exaggerate and gives me a new appreciation for chefs everywhere. Awesome stuff!
Love these videos! They encourage me to work and get stuff done!
Chef Moyo is a machine 💪🏽 This was great to watch
The hardest worker in the kitchen might be the order printing Machine that’s constantly going “brr..brr..brrt…bee…brr” doesn’t take any breaks god bless 😂
As someone who has worked on the line for like 4 years in college and now I work in an office that sound just give me nightmares 😭
That's the sound of revenue. You never want it to stop.
@@jasonfs9913 haha I bet !
what /\ he said lololol
@@MarijuanaMikeits ^
This makes me really wanna go back into the restaurant kitchen! Feeling so pumped up from watching you perform!
Looks like a well oiled team. You guys are awesome
This looks like a dream! I wish where I worked was that efficient and organized
I work at a 1 star in London on meat garnish and have to say this looks awesome, rep to Garnish bois but also this looks like very active cooking, more than us. Cant be not fun. As always awesome POV, thank you guys 🙏
Beautiful!! I serve at a small Thai place, and I do garnishes too. Just easy stuff like carrot flowers. This is incredible stuff!!
This guy is probably the fastest most intense guy I've seen on this channel. His multi tasking skills at such a fast pace is absolutely insane!!
😂😂 you clearly never work in a restaurant to say that to me he look not 100% sure in his movement, lose a lot of time by using tool instead of flipping with the pan and is not multi task enough but , hes cleaning whenever he can , the only good point here
@@yannlaforest9993 He's a learning chef
Everything you do is something I’ve learned. And I’m so sxcited to see all of these techniques used in an everyday service, honestly it’d be an honour to have you prepare a meal for meal let alone have some of your culinary expertise 😅😮
Let me expand on something I’ve learned but have not had to capability of preforming or reconstructing the properties of the origins dish
The real unsung heroes here as in every restaurant are dishwashers...
Always show Respect to your dishys
So orderly, clean, and fast. Much respect to the chef.
This is the true reality of being a chef
and not that crap on masterchef that kids watch and then think that's it
And actually it is a team sport with a lot of work and commitment
Well done
😂 You think that cooking in a restaurant is a one man operation?
@@firstlast9500 are you a moron? he clearly said the opposite
@@firstlast9500can you not read?
Obviously a cooking competition would be different from a restaurant, how dumb do you think ppl are💀
That "crap" on Masterchef is individual dishes, not multiple courses and orders at once. You can compliment this video without downplaying something else for no reason.
I'm confused by the bucket full of spoon in the back. What type of liquid they're use to clean those spoons? Does it safe to use it without wiping the spoon first?
same
It’s just hot/steaming water
They are supposed to either drip the sauce onto the spoon, so the spoon never contaminates the meal, or dispose of the spoon after every use. Some chefs rinse them off in warm water, although that's less for sanitation and more to prevent sauces from one dish from getting mixed into other another.
From what I've seen there are a lot of cooks who just don't care all that much about sanitation.
was looking for this comment...
I was off put by this as well.
Love the hussle my dood. Watching this brings back memories of working at a few kitchen resort restaurants. It was fun and stressful all at once. Thx for the vid.
I have a tremendous amount of respect for people who master their craft. The first person perspective almost made ME feel a sense of accomplishment ;)
I love the povs but I’m curious what your dinner service looks like, if you could post some of those from different line positions I feel like that would be the best as it’s nice to see how busy other restaurants can get and how their line cooks handle the pressure
God damn I need to get back in a kitchen had a year away to reset now I’m ready… need to find a kitchen like this again. This is my favourite section aswell ❤
I love that he kept the station clean and wiped down in between cooking sets
Hats off to the dishwasher, keeping up with the ongoing flow of cleaning those stainless steel pots/pans/trays...
Would love to see the mise en place labelled so I can follow along and learn the garnishes as he does them
Love it when the kitchen is clearly visible.
Once I was just making these burgers for 3 guys that were sitting on the bar which faces directly towards our kitchen window.
And the 2 were straight up looking on and like acting all amused by it.
Was a good little ego/confidence boost😂
I love getting to see chef being pulled up and corrected. The respect and manners are rare
I would love a prep time POV and a Tear down POV.
Also a training would be awesome.
@@dehjosh kitchens like these don't tend to have training like you have in mind, its usually jump on a section and learn as you go (except for apprentices). I imagine they don't hire chefs with 0 experience unless they're apprentices.
Finally a new Fallow POV video!
These are my favourite type of POV videos.
Truly some of the best videos on CZcams. Absolute professional
cook is never a problem in the restaurant, the real problem is to prepare everything into those tiny boxes and make sure they are not run out. And also need a lot of skills to master the cooking order and efficient communication.
In my younger days I’d go into a shift like this on 2-3 hrs of sleep. I honestly can’t imagine that now.
Amazing video and what a respect for these artist. Chefs are the conductors guiding ingredients to a food as ochestra.
I just keep seeing him re-using spoons and it makes me shiver lol. Outside of that, super cool video.
Good video guys! Will there be a live shift video in real time sometime? Would be interesting to see
Compare to kitchen work in normal French caffe, this kitchen - TOTALLY MADNESS! ;)
this is so relaxing and entertaining to watch, it also makes you hungry
These videos are like nothing i have ever seen,truly fantastic and entertaining....
Come home from working in a kitchen to watch someone work in a kitchen... 😂😂
So I’m not a psychopath?
@@grizz158isn’t everyone in the kitchen a psycho 😭
Great insight into the amazing work you guys do!! Quick question how do you manage allergies if the spoons always go in the same water? or is the water running? something I'm missing? just curious hehe.
I think, and thats what im doing so dont get mad if im wrong, that the bucket is indeed constantly getting rinsed with fresh water. Answering your allergies question here, i have celiac disease and i work in a kitchen as a cook, i personally always grab a fresh spoon and clean it one more time if im dealing with allergies
Kove this young mans hunger and commitment. You can really see his drive for the art.
Love the POV vids. Thanks!🙏
Bro just got the infinite mini skillets upgrade to his build.
What kind of oil is in the bottle?
This is a perfectly cut cog in one very well-oiled machine. Just beautiful to watch.
Great videos looking to see more what goes on in the back of house keep up the amazing work
I have zero experience working in kitchens, this seems so hard. The amount of things you have to be paying attention to and remembering. So much respect! I have a question, when he licks the spoon, he puts it in a metal bucket near the top left of his station, and then picks it up and uses it to stir the food in the small pot again. Is this typical? Is there some sort of cleaning solution in the bucket? Just curious!
Amazing videos guys :)
Evyrone is asking this question. I googled this and apparently putting utensils in hot water above 77 C kill germs ...?
@@DerekHundikheat does kill germs. But.....still, the psychology behind a spoon being reused like this doesn't sit well with me mentally. Lols
You always do this in this kind of kitchens, and this is WITH a camera ;), I've seen multiple people do it in the same bucket. More high class places, specially after covid, give you free mini wooden spoons for tasting.
The boiling water pretty much cleans it
No gloves, reusing tasting spoons, sketchy sanitation situation. That's a no from me dawg.
Chef Moyo what a terrific lad 😅😅
you can see this man loves his job! awesome video!!!!
I always worked front of the house but this makes me want to switch to the back. Amazing. Dishes look delicious
He's the God of Garnish
As someone who has years of experience working in a kitchen, this I have to say Is the most busiest service I’ve ever seen.
Really? These guys do an excellent job and pay great attention to detail, and are absolutely professional... all of things I would place above many of my 20 years of chef experience, but as far as being a busy service I wouldn't agree. my reasoning is the dining room in this restaurant must be smaller, where I am used to working in very large places.
Great communication great coordination. This is relaxing to watch
Sometimes when I'm hating my desk job I watch these videos and am immediately filled will dread and PTSD from my 15 years as a line cook. Suddenly doing spreadsheets all day and working 9-5 doesn't seem so bad.
Amen brother. I do not miss kitchens at all
I left cheffing to become a nurse and don't regret a thing... However I do see your videos and kind of get the itch to be back on the line. Busting your ass off with a great team around you to make great food is a feeling you just dont get anywhere else
So you left a career that’s stressful, physically demanding and underpaid for a new career that’s….. stressful, physically demanding and underpaid
Nursing is not underpaid. At least not in the US. You can make 80-100k. But cooking? Only exec chefs at high end places make th at kinda money. Cooks make garbage.
Can the Fallow chefs follow me around my job for a day and tell me everything I am doing is beautiful? I’m am also going to need them to shout “ wuuueeeeee” when I tell them to do something. ❤️
My fellow funeral directors will love this.
Like clockwork, beautiful. - I don't know why I watch hectic cooking povs, but I guess they're soothing for some reason. xD
This is actually focken amazing, mate. Thank you for the video.
Are the green leaves could be cooked by a fire blower? I saw the leaves were burned. Sorry, I never seen it before.
that is bok choy, a type of chinese cabbage. they can be boiled or steamed cooked within 1 minute, which makes them slightly softer and more palatable, which is what the hot plate is doing. he's just blasting them with the blowtorch here for colour. for those of us who don't have a blowtorch, just throw them on a hot pan until brown.
As an asian, it's the first time in my life seeing someone cooking green buk choi with a flame torch
Never mind, you appropriate European culture every minute of the day.
@@louisebidgood2591That's not how that works, colonizer.
After a few days binge watching Kitchen Nightmares, it’s really nice to see how it looks with people who know what they’re doing!
I was a sauté line cook at Portobello’s Restaurant at Walt Disney World when I was in college in the late 1980’s.
We were deep in the weeds every night. This brings back memories.
I don't really know much about this sort of stuff but imma just say a couple of things (please tell me these things):
1. Is it ok that he's using his hands to touch all the food??
2. I don't really like how he puts the spoons in a container full of water and then takes it out and uses it again. He also tastes it
If he used gloves he'd have to change it after every single bit of food touched and thats not very practical. Also if he doesn't change it then it's no different to him just using his hands, which are cleaner because he can wash them. Barely any restaurants use gloves
2 the spoon thing is normal, the bucket if full of steaming water which kills bacteria. if you don't like it think that in othere restaurants they just reuse it without the bucket part
The water is extremely hot and will kill pathogens. He'd get sick himself if he was communally sharing spoons and such without killing bacteria! And it is okay that his hands are bare - clean hands are safer than potentially cross contamination with different surfaces, sweaty gloves, etc. He can always wash!
This is great. Does the propane torch impart any propane smell to the food? What’s the benefit? Thanks.{{
no propane taste, chars the food for nice texture and flavor
I love watching these!
Fascinating! Love this channel.
I respect the hustle. Bare hand isn’t terrible as long as the food is cooked to temp (unless a virus is introduced). I just see a lot of inconsistency which bothers me otherwise.
Miss working with cooks and chefs like this 😢 keep bring these videos like these they need to make a show out of this, had enough of this fake superstar cooking shows alway competing with one another, that never the case in real kitchens like this here
like the bear on disney+
This is quite therapeutic. Keep them coming. What would be nice would be a description or on-screen text explaining the dishes and ingredients.
Whenever I need to hype myself up, my internal monologue is just this guy saying ‘let’s go’ 😅
Chef said make it look sexy in a side bowl. Heard that chef !!!
We want a dish pit POV
every move has meaning. this is a thing of beauty.
Man you went crazy! Nice shift man! Hopefully I can crank it up this much once I find my own restaraunt.
I cooked in kitchens for 10 years. Never made it a goal of mine to create a true career out of it... Ive since been an engineer and ran my own business for a while now. Kitchen work was non stop and difficult..
I honestly miss it every day now that im older. But starting at a low level again in my 40s just doesnt feel like an option.
My wife is a chef so I cook for us at home and get what I can out of that. Still miss the kitchen though.
be the cook at your own business maybe?
Just how hygienic is that spoon? Just asking.
The water’s temperature is high enough to kill all germs but I see how off putting it can look
He's putting it in a disinfectant bucket after every use
@@grizz1580.53 he tastes it
@@sircalvin4533and puts it in the water to clean it
@@sircalvin4533if a chef doesn’t taste, your in a mediocre or even bad restaurant.
I think one of the greatest ways to increase the laymans appreciation of what goes into jobs like this is streaming the process.
Why do so many restaurants use blowtorches nowadays? It ruins everything it touches and you can definitely taste the gas when you eat it.
Same here ! I had japanese roasted pork ramen the other day and they use blowtorch on those pork is well that make the ramen taste too busy
I ate a steak that was slightly ˝burned˝ and I could feel the gas in the meat
It’s used for the char, it’s not supposed to be used for cooking the meal, sorry u had go through that :/
They can't afford a grill
Whats the clear looking liquid in the small squirty bottle?
At a guess I'd say either a vinegar or a water (orange blossom etc) but could be a myriad of things really
Water
My guess is water- to create steam.
Curious question what temp is the grill plate for vegies run ?