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Consider the Egg - Food by Stephanie March

Cho-Down pt.2

Submitted by Stephanie March on Wednesday, February 28, 2007

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Just a quick and dirty update on the Chodorow vs. Bruni saga ...

Apparently, Jeffrey has banned Bruni from all of his restaurants. Not only that, but he's going to post a picture of Bruni on his website and offer a free vacation for anyone who spots Bruni in a Chodorow joint.

What did I say yesterday about believing your own press?

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Buca Big House

Submitted by Stephanie March on Tuesday, February 27, 2007

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the pope's table

Joe Micatrotto was sentenced yesterday to 13 months in prison for his illegal actions as head honcho at Buca di Beppo.

I have such odd feelings about this.

As a young something, I believed in the crazy fun and cool world of Buca. I was the first Training Coordinator and running around the country opening restaurants and learning how to grow a national concept.

It was the hardest work I'd ever done and the most fun I'd ever had. We were Una Famiglia and it was great to spread the Buca love to a bunch of fresh and wide-eyed innocents. I talked about humility and having fun and working together as a team, and I believed in every word I spoke. For a while.

The restaurant world is a counter culture, normal rules of "office etiquette" usually don't apply. So you don't bat an eye when the dirty jokes flow from all levels, it's really not that big of a deal. But sometimes, when you're the only female traveling with an all-male executive team, it wears a little thin.

And when you grow a company, things change, that's a given. Systems are refined and streamlined to be more efficient. Shorten training to save money? ok. Stick the trainers in the cheapest, rattiest furnished apartments to save money? Uh, ok. Cut a day of learning and add a training party so the Big Cheese can feed all his friends for free? Huh?

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The day I truly lost my religion, the day I realized that every word from my mouth was fluff was a sweet day in Pasadena. For over a week I had spent countless hours in front of the trainees talking about how we were there to support them, giving them everything they would need to be successful and confident in their jobs. That night the training party was meant to be a training exercise: we invite people in and buy their food in exchange for their patience and understanding as we practice on them. The number of people invited is held to a manageable amount, so that each server is well paced but never slammed. That way they have the chance to focus on the smaller things that improve service.

But Micatrotto lived near Pasadena, and the invite list grew to an absurd amount. By prime time, the entire restaurant was full and there was a two hour wait. The service staff and trainers were overwhelmed and just trying to survive. I knew that Micatrotto's son Justin was holding court at a booth in the bar (the tables were supposed to be no more than 4 people, his held 8 or more) and that the server happened to be one of the weaker ones. But instead of having the chance to learn from her mistakes and become a stronger server, she was crushed by the pressure and the disdainful glare of the King of the Company.

Of course she screwed up, that's what they are supposed to do at training parties. Isn't it better to mess up on someone who isn't paying anyway? I went into the kitchen to plead her case with Joe, when I saw him in a fury at the front line. He was checking up on her ticket and realized she had forgotten to order something for Justin's table. He then started kicking the kitchen equipment and shouting "that f**king c*nt!". Over meatballs or pasta. Una Famiglia.

I wanted to walk right out the door, but I didn't. In fact it took me a few more years to realize that I couldn't save the crazy cool and fun culture I'd loved. The company I'd believed in and helped grow was rotting from the head down.

But I feel sorry for the guy. Prison is a high price to pay for a big ego. And yet ... choices were made.

I still crave the lemon chicken and could eat many wheels of the aromatic garlic bread. Under the new management Buca is again a happy place, I am told. In a way I have to appreciate my time under the Micatrotto regime, if only for the lesson I learned: Don't believe your own press.

Cinnalove

Submitted by Stephanie March on Friday, February 23, 2007

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It's my Megan's day to bring breakfast treats for her 1st hour English class. Is there something wrong with me that I can't settle for the donuts at SuperAmerica? Krispy Kremes are too predictable, and over-rated besides, and bringing cereal and milk would feel like a sad surrender.

Of course we hauled our keesters to Isles Bun & Coffee this morning for what is arguably the greatest breakfast treat in the known universe: the Isles cinnamon bun. Roughly the size of a dodge ball, the warm buns are all doughy-love on the inside and flaky buttery cinna-swirl on the outside. Slathered with gooey white icing, it is the perfect sweet bomb for a class of high-school juniors.

It might have been cheaper to buy 30 pastries from Lunds, and it definitely would have been easier not driving all the way to Uptown and back by 7:30am. But how many of those stuck-in-the-suburbs kids have ever seen an Isles bun? How many even understand the wonders that exist beyond Toaster Struedel? When I moved 20+ minutes out of the city, I adopted a mantra: good food is always worth the drive.

I think of it as community service, expanding young minds and palates through artful cinnamon.

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Jeffrey vs. Frank

Submitted by Stephanie March on Wednesday, February 21, 2007

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rocco and jeffrey forever!


Just for fun, from Gawker ...

Jeffrey Chodorow is unhappy with NYT food critic Frank Bruni's review of Kobe Club, Chodorow's new steakhouse.

THROWDOWN! Jeffrey, of the Rocco's-media-fabulocity-failure and head of China Grill restaurant group, has taken out a full-page ad in the Dining section giving Frank the what-for.

Salient points may have been made, but when you start a blog that stalks Bruni with the intention of delivering e-razzberries, you're just some kind of nutty.

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Year of the Boar

Submitted by Stephanie March on Monday, February 19, 2007

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Yesterday kicked off the 15-day Chinese New Year celebration. This is the Year of the Boar, and anyone born this year will have excellent manners, easily make and keep friends, work very hard and appreciate luxury. They are very loving people and make loyal partners. I am proud to say that I was born under the boar, as was Mozart, Hemmingway, Lucille Ball, and Alfred Hitchcock. Oh, and Hillary Clinton and Arnold Schwarzenegger.

The two week celebration is marked with superstitions and traditions including visiting friends, honoring ancestors and, of course, feasting. Love that.

For the sake of a little luck, and who doesn't need some, you should plan to cook a Chinese feast at least one time during the next two weeks. Invite as many people over as can fit in your domicile and eat together.

What an opportunity to get to the local Asian markets and just spend some time exploring, picking through the produce and oddly intriguing frozen goods.

Try cooking a whole fish, which represents togetherness and abundance. Noodles should be uncut to symbolize prosperity through a long life. An overflowing table of dumplings bodes well for coming wealth. But stay away from fresh tofu as the whiteness is unlucky and signifies death and misfortune.

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I'm off to JunBo for lunch today to start things off right. But tonight I'm making jiaozi, aka chicken dumplings/potstickers, as my first humble offering to the gods.

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