CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD LINE COOK: 1.Most good line cooks are - TopicsExpress



          

CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD LINE COOK: 1.Most good line cooks are rebels at heart, but individuals who still need structure to be able to play in the sandbox with others. They tend to actually crave the structure of the kitchen, even though it might not reflect their persona outside of work. 2.Good line cooks are somewhat insecure but are able to mask this with a false sense of confidence. 3.Good line cooks exhibit a bit of swagger because it is essential for survival in an environment that takes no prisoners. This swagger is only detrimental if the cook doesn’t have the chops to back it up. 4.Good cooks are excellent multitaskers. Don’t even think about cooking professionally unless you can manage a half dozen projects, or more, at the same time. 5.Good line cooks are quick thinkers and great problem solvers. This comes with time, but efficient lines depend on this ability. 6.Good cooks may have some swagger, but they are dedicated team players at the same time. The rest of the line will eat a cook up if he or she doesn’t think about the team first. Good line cooks have an innate need to be part of something bigger than themselves. From my experience, many line cooks were not likely to be first chosen on pick-up baseball, football, or basketball games when they were younger. The kitchen gives them a real chance to belong and contribute. 7.Good line cooks are frustrated artists with a need to express their creativity. 8.Good line cooks are usually on edge. This edginess allows them to respond quickly to bumps in the road. The double espressos throughout their shift might help a bit. 9.Good line cooks are resilient. They take disappointment hard and feel the weight of any failure on the job, but can rise to the occasion and move forward (with a bit of encouragement from the chef – sometimes loud encouragement). 10.Good line cooks are very sensitive and work hard to hide their emotions while the POS continues to click off another handful of orders. These cooks have a real need to please (probably something that a psychiatrist would have a field day with). 11.Good line cooks have a mentor that they would follow into the fire, or they are still searching for that person. They crave direction, advice and support and thus will often attach this need to the chef they work for. 12.Good line cooks are inquisitive and anxious to learn new skills, given the opportunity. They may not seek out these opportunities, but the need still exists. Chefs need to pay attention to this and feed their desire to learn. 13.Good line cooks are dependable soldiers. They would not think of “no show-no call”. If your line cooks are constantly late or call out sick on a regular basis then, rest assured, they don’t have the right stuff. 14.Good line cooks tend to be extroverts at work, but introverts outside. They can continue with the extrovert persona as long as they are around their kitchen teammates. In the presence of others, they tend to fade into a corner and lack the desire or ability to interact. 15.Good cooks love food, the heat of the kitchen, the sounds of clanging pots and pans, the razor edge on their knives, the uniform and its history, the smell of onions and garlic and a slowly agitating stock, the fond in the bottom of a roasting pan, and the sweet aroma of bread coming from the oven. They love the kitchen, period. 16.Good cooks understand the importance of food and good nutrition, but fail miserably at taking care of themselves in this regard. They need someone else to keep their health in order. 17.Most importantly, good cooks are proud. Proud of their profession, proud of the restaurant they work for, proud of their teammates, proud of the work that they do and very proud of their position in the kitchen. Now, not every cook is a cookie cutter version of this profile, however, if chefs were to analyze their team, I am confident that most would fit the majority of these characteristics
Posted on: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 02:32:01 +0000

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