no gatekeeping on this channel which i really admire. you don't often get tips from a source like this, the advice is valuable n has been helping me a lot
POV vids, tutorials and now a guide like this rly shows the love of cooking and food. only three months time till i can debut the fallow roasties at xmas
I'm currently living in student accommodation with a shared kitchen floor, and I noticed that the overwhelming majority of people don't know how to cook ie. basic knife skills, let alone cook properly and efficiently. Its such a neglected skill that doesnt get taught in childhood. And as adults most people don't have enough time or passion for food to go out of their way learn how to cook. I now feel extremely blessed that my mom encouraged me to learn to cook as a teen before sending me overseas
@@HeavenlyPhantomStar Right. If I have a choice between making a pot of chili or eating it out of a can, I am most definitely taking the time to make that pot of chili.
Well said Chef! I admire what you and your team are doing at fallow. I have been the head Chef at a winery for the last year. This has been my first role as Head Chef after many Sous roles, it has been filled with Joy, sorrow, Pain, pride and of course hard work. I think I can tick every box that you mentioned in this clip and I encourage every cook to find, identify and work towards your shared goals as a team wherever that may be. Noho Pai, ka kita ano au I a Katoa from New Zealand!! Chur BRO!
I completely concur with everything you spoke about in this video. I lost my passion for food/cooking at one point and it showed, especially when my kids were younger and would normally hoover down the meal and ask for more and they suddenly started returning plates half eaten. I took it rather personally but stepped back for a bit let them do it and when I felt ready went right back into it with gusto and confidence and haven't looked back since. Thanks for the great advice and keep up the amazing work. Can't wait until the day we get the chance to get to the UK and visit one of your restaurants.
this is the best advice you can get. START ON THE LINE. Go to culinary school AFTER you already have experience really working on a LINE so you know its what you want to do for the next 20 years.
That's definitely a good way to go if you're interested working in the food industry. But that's not a reasonable method for home chefs who simply want to elevate their skills
Good advice, I spent a little time on the line making pizza and pasta - changed plans and went to business school. I cook as a hobby now and love it, probably would have lost my mind if I stayed in the industry.
love this. and love the point about more advanced techniques and sauces complimenting your foundations - it's spot on. The small/fine details a woodworker uses on a chair won't matter if their basic joinery skills aren't on point - the chair would still fall apart .
Watching this was kinda funny, since around 14 I was encouraged to cook for dinners and parties at home, often groups of 8-16 people. This definitely had two benefits, first I couldn't screw up, so I had to meticulously learn recipes and if I did screw up I'd have to figure out how to fix it or recreate it from scratch in a limited time (Initially I liked finding 3 or 4 recipes from different books then combing what I thought were the best bits from each). Two, the reactions, seeing people enjoy the food I cooked, just how their faces would light up, it makes me so happy. Thankfully, from quite a young age I was taken to restaurants, ranging from hole-in-the-wall to quite nice establishments, so I had a fairly good idea of the flavours I was looking for. I'm currently in uni, doing a master's degree and about to turn 22, and the reason I said it was kinda funny watching this video was that I've naturally ended up doing most things you talked about, learning how to keep my knife sharp, preparing veg (need to get faster while keeping accuracy), buying seasonally and more recently buying larger pieces of meat to break apart myself, to make a noodle dish toppings with the meat and broth with the bones. I love trying new cuisines and combining new flavours (I'm a lot better with my spices these days, used to just chuck things in to see what would happen, within a reason, but I guess it was just part of the learning process). More recently, I recreated the grilled abalone mushrooms with black truffle from Noma Kyoto for a dinner party (after watching Babish's trip there), but instead using local British ingredients, so large portobello mushrooms, egg yolks cured in salt and rosemary, truffle oil and around a teaspoon of sherry vinegar with some smoked paprika sprinkled on the egg yolk to finish. It was a really fun challenge, especially as it was quite a delicate dish both in flavour and having to deal with egg yolks (a couple burst so they were mine and Dad's), it went down a treat though, so I'm sure I'll give it a go again but may experiment with the curing process. To cut to the chase, Chef, I love cooking and would love some advice on what books I should read, any resources I can look at, and, most importantly, how I can make it my profession.
I love your videos! I am learning more every video ❤ I just made Italian sausage (not your recipe, but your technique), from scratch and used it to make many meals after working a whole day, normally I would save this for the weekend when I have time.
Aw thanks, Jack. I always love Fallow videos. I still yet to dine there and I’m only 30 minutes away. Life hasn’t been great for me recently so kinda taking everything slowly at the moment. These videos always raise my spirits though, when things have been bringing me down over the past few months.
iny personal chef career, if id change anything, id take out culinary school. i wish id just started working in a restaurant straight out of high school. I'd do it for nothing until i get promoted to commis chef, atter about 2 years. yes school taught me alot of the theoretical work behind why certain things happen, but being in the restaurant, learning solutions, was learning about theoretical and practical problems. so yeah much love for this channel, it's helped me alot on my chef career ❤
I think it certainly depends on what culinary school you go to. I do think if you know NOTHING, where do you start to learn how to cook? I have had great teachers in culinary school and also met great farms, producers and makers. Which are all paid for by my workplace for me to go to culinary school (of course, I get a reduced wage) If you go to a shit culinary school, I can understand (VISA problematic culinary schools). I was predominantly in a seafood based restaurant so getting to touch and cook with game meat, cattle, poultry of all kinds was also a treat. Then also the boring health and safety stuff you need to learn, but you have to in order to survive the laws as well as being in the restaurant.
@@catherinepham1662 yes definately agree, I work in an all round restaurant with about 40 total kitchen staff so it's definitely better for me to have all those teachers than the few at school. to obtain some knowledge from each one of them. it definitely takes some time to adjust to working though, because you don't know where to start without culinary school
I'm a classically trained musician who picked up cuisine as a side suit (commercially). I'm a better musician than cook and that's just my priorities, but this video was still helpful for getting some perspective on my progress as a cook and, perhaps more importantly, helping me reflect on how I want to train my music students in the future. Thank you for reinforcing the importance of being personally invested in the flavours I'm trying to make. I plan to re-watch this video multiple times.
Every great chef learned the basics at the beginning. I’m no longer in kitchens now but the basics make me a damn fine home cook if I do say so. Fan of Korean/Asian. Indian as well as modern European. Fusion across those made for some interesting meals and some drastic errors. Best lessons were learned in a vegetarian restaurant. Many chefs at least then complained constantly about vegetarian food it can be incredible
Outstanding! Sadly, I’m not a youngin, but just starting out and trying to learn & cook. Will take all this into account. Better to start now even at an old age than regret not trying 5 years from now.
I really like cooking. A lot! I love experimenting and making various types of ethnic foods. I enjoy a broad palate. But what I do not have is a passion for cooking and why I cannot be a chef. I can make the once a month gathering foods, but I cannot devote myself to daily menus and techniques. I know the basics. I know some good recipes and I know I like trying new ones. I'll never be a chef, but I do like to cook, and I love it when others enjoy my cooking.
Great video great advice. There's too many people throwing foods together with no knowledge of flavours, or seasonings, or when buying a cook book, just jump to the recipes, without reading the beginning of the book by the author...
I went to culinary school for 2 1/2. Years and they went over the basics very quickly they were far more interested in teaching fine dining something id no interest in ... Once i went into my first kitchen i was put on the basics and thats were i really started to learn ... But up most you really need to have a passion for food do what your interested in not what people tell you to be interested in ...
i think understanding how food goes into you is just as important as understading how it comes out of you. That's why the first semester, i forbid my students to even approach the cooking station, we just go over these basics, etc
My basics were cutting, how to portion a chicken- had to learn this myself with no internet, and the feeling with your hands of baking with pastry etc.
I regret never going in this direction after highschool, even though the pay is relatively low ive always had a passion for this. Step 8 i couldn't agree more man, like when i work on a meal for friends or family the best part for me is the prep, cooking then giving, the worst part is when i sit down to eat, its almost like a feeling of its all over now.
Excellent video. My son has got cerebral palsy but has really got into cooking/smoking/bbq and is now thinking of doing cookery at college. Is there any thing that you recommend to help him with his challenges
Passion is the one. Everything else should follow with ease if it’s meant to be. I’m 39 years old and acted on my passion during Covid. I left my job in the building industry and I’m on the path.. Where do I learn my skills? TH-cam. Thank you Fallow and your team. I’ll be dining in your restaurant before Santa descends my chimney this year 🫶🏾
Having a good understanding of physics and chemistry helped me develop as a chef, at the end of the day we're chemists making art (imo). Hope any fellow chefs have had a great year so far. Let's av it chefs!
I identify so much with what you said about zoning out and just sharing your creation with other people. I love cooking more than eating so 90% of the time k just want to make things and I’m not even hungry
Watching peoples faces light up if they enjoy it is an amazing feeling. I do cook for friends but strangely enough hardly ever cook anything decent for myself. Even when I am cooking, I'm tasting so much, checking, etc. By the time everythings cooked I'm just not hungry, I just do it for other people. Non professional, just a home cook that has been playing with food for nearly 35 years.
When frying onions off for something like a Bolognese or cottage pie, make sure you fry them until their soft and sweet. You need to sweat that acid out of them. This takes longer than you think, and it may seem like a waste of time but it makes a massive difference. Its the base of your meal and if you get that foundation wrong, youre never gong to get a decent end product. take your time and plan ahead 👍
Food safety is number one! One of the first cookbooks I ever bought on my own was Modernist Cuisine at Home and some of the first pages are dedicated to food handling and safety. Wash your hands frequently, get under the nails, wash your veggies, and follow preparation guides. There are way more things to know than just your mother warning you not to eat raw cookie dough. I've seen popular cooks on youtube with millions of views mishandling garlic in front of their audience. Garlic in oil creates an anaerobic environment for the bacteria that produce botulinum toxin and that can land you in the hospital. Love, and stay safe and healthy!
Escoffier: ma cuisine or similar for classical French cuisine The silver spoon: one stop for authentic Italian recipes. Jacques Pepin: techniques. For all classical basics. French cooking academy: book and TH-cam channel for classical French recipes and basic techniques. Pomeroy: taste and technique. A series of recipes that introduce a lot of techniques.
And I believe that the books by Julia child are good for French cuisine from an American perspective but haven’t used them myself. I do believe it is good to start with learn learning the basics from French cooking as the technical skills transfer to other great cuisines such as notably Italian Lebanese Thai and perhaps even Japanese but that’s just my opinion.
Knife skills. It annoys me to no end when I see someone using a paring knife to chop vegetables rather than using a proper 10" chef's knife being held properly and sharpened, properly on a clean and maintained cutting board. When I cook at someone else's place the worst is dealling with dull knives. I absolutely understand why chef's have a knife-roll they carry with them! Happy cooking and Merry Christmas from the Piney Woods of NE Texas, December 2024.
This is especially inspirational because from my experience, I don't expect to learn much from the head chef. They've often not been involved. Hope the people you're on the floor with aren't lackadaisical and truly have the right mind frame and attitude. Kitchens are not for thin-skinned people!
Thank you very much chef, your videos are always super helpful and truly amazing, if I could ask you a question what’s your opinion on going to culinary school? And also would you recommend going to work in fine dining/Michelin star restaurant rather than just gastropub or bistro?
Don't go to culinary school if you're not prepared for a life of the line work. As Bourdain said, work at a busy Olive garden for 3 months and then think for the rest of your life.
When learning to cook, do you use any "substitute" ingredients to be more economical? Like swapping beef with duck? or something I usually take a few tries...to reach something "satisfactory" to myself as an amateur at least, but if i go for the ingredients seen in ingredient lists each time, it really burns my wallet.
Get into A good kitchen over 3rd year college, level 1 and 2 is good for learning but level 3 is A waste of time that year is far better spent in A kitchen than A college unless it's really quality
The Food Lab is great. My brother getting it for me before I lived on my own for the first time is what got me into cooking. The answer to your question is On Food And Cooking. And it's not close. TFL is a book that shows how to use science to arrive at the best forms of recipes, which is super valuable. OFAC is a definitive reference on how (nearly) all ingredients in cooking behave. The Flavor Bible and The Flavor Thesaurus (different authors) are both great listicle type books that talk about which flavors match with each other.
Do you even suggest a classic cookbook and learning those sauces etc if you are more interested in eastern cuisine? I feel like they don't really use those classic sauces etc there much. Am I wrong?
I have now worked in kitchens as a cook for 3 years and find that I am thinking more and more that I want to get my red seal, at this point I dont believe that I want to be a chef when I am older but I think I wouldnt mind the challenge. Is it worth it to pursue if I dont plan on having my own restaurant? or should I just leave it and cook at home?
How do you think kids should learn to cook so they eat healthy fresh meals? It seems not enough parents teach their kids home economics so many get bad fast food habits and processed food as an easy out.
I didn't learn how to cook healthy food until I had an incentive to. People think eating healthy is a daunting task. It really isn't. People just don't know how to make things taste good that are healthy. But as in school, you're never taught how to learn and you were never taught what even is healthy. It's a lot easier to sort out the bad things than it is to bring together the good things. For me, I just have a list of things that I don't even eat because frankly it's poison.
My mother always gave me healthy traditional foods. I hated it, and prefered to eat McDonald's, KFC and pizza after school. I avoided helping in the kitchen. But when I left home, I found that I had managed to learn much that she tried to teach me, and had tons of kitchen skills. I found I loved cooking healthy dishes, and wasn't intrested in fast food or takeaways. Continue to teach your kids, they may not seem to listen, but in the long run they will return to eating the healthy food you have provided them from childhood. It's a long game. But scientists have shown that healthy eating in childhood creates adults who will eventually continue to eat healthy as they get older. Let teenagers and young adults eat badly, it's just youthful exploration and it won't last long.
Personally, if I could start over, it's getting a sharp knife and learning how to use and maintain it early on. I wasted so much time prepping for years and years.
These days kitchens and chefs dont care about you as a person, what you can offer and what knowledges you do have. They only look out for your experience in busy restaurants and if you can make a plate faster than someone else, or if you can make a recipe faster than someone else. Its all about whos the fastest and not whos the smartest.. for me if someone wants to become a cook he has to travel first , taste different flavours and understand what you taste, discover new ingredients, new recipes and in general understand the basics of each culture meanwhile reading books that dont have recipes but explaining different techniques and flavours. yes at some point you will need the fast hands but as a beginner it will waste your time and you might not find the passion for cooking.. of course these thing require money and time but sadly you cant change the facts. restaurants dont care about us. we are not cooks but employees..Lets not include and low ass money you get with dozens of hours per week plus extra hours.. This job no matter where you look at it, is for me the worst job you can get by far, and by the owner prespective and as a cook and as a chef. all positions are SHIT
Don't forget a stovetop is something that you need to invest in. Cooking anything on an electric stovetop will not give you excellent it will always give you great or above avarage. Wood burner and gas is just simply better it will naturally taste better
I start taking cooking and being chef seirous 3 months ago now I know how to make handmade pasta some souces and pie and fluffy cake do u think I'm good enough level for 3 months??
A really good one is the masterchef one Sounds naff but has absolutely loads of info about techniques and produce alongside dishes The internet is better for information than books trust me, they're so hit and miss sometimes But generally books by most top level chefs are good inspirational reads Autobiographies are good too especially on audible, devil in the kitchen and humble pie are quality listenings and reads
Number 9: stay away from 99.99999999% of all Tiktok food Trends. Number 10: don't trust most americans when they tell you they make an original Italian recipe. Number 11: before making a dish your own and start with variations, learn to make the original first to perfection. Try one omelette and perfect it, then try the next. For example do the french first, then start on filled ones. Number12: always try to figure out how a dish was made. Dissect it, find out the ingredients. Then try to recreate it. It is harder than you think, especially with complex ones. Number 13: learn spices. They can identify the style of food and thus give you hints on the preparation. Number 14: try everything. You don't have to like it but you might get to love something that was never on your radar. Get out of your comfort zone. For me it was liver. Always hated it when my mum made it. Went to a friend's and was invited to dinner and his mum just made it right. Since then I love liver. Number 15: eat not to get fed, eat to enjoy Number 16: trust people that cook with passion, for example Jack and Will. Number 17: don't start with a 9 course meal. First learn to walk before you run. One dish can be enough stress for most. Number 18: learn teamwork. You will hardly ever be the lone warrior in a kitchen. Number 19: don't limit yourself. You love meat? Tough for you, I also like a fresh home made bread and some nice mousse au chocolate (the classic one). Number 20: educate yourself, learn the lingo. The headchef will only tell you that he wants an onion cut in brunoise or that he needs mirepoix and a bouquet garni.
Step 3 took me the longest and I think it's the hardest to understand. For instance, I don't like cooking with wine, it took me a really long time to realise this. Sometimes it gives me the irks watching other people cook because I wouldn't have done it like they had, however it just comes down to style, and ultimately when I sit down in a restaurant and am blown away by a meal, it doesn't matter how it was prepared.
no gatekeeping on this channel which i really admire. you don't often get tips from a source like this, the advice is valuable n has been helping me a lot
POV vids, tutorials and now a guide like this rly shows the love of cooking and food. only three months time till i can debut the fallow roasties at xmas
agreed, these guys are doing it right!! love there content. gets me excited to go to work!
I'm currently living in student accommodation with a shared kitchen floor, and I noticed that the overwhelming majority of people don't know how to cook ie. basic knife skills, let alone cook properly and efficiently. Its such a neglected skill that doesnt get taught in childhood. And as adults most people don't have enough time or passion for food to go out of their way learn how to cook.
I now feel extremely blessed that my mom encouraged me to learn to cook as a teen before sending me overseas
You are blessed, my mother did not like to cook and it was obvious. I learned so much when I became interested in cooking for myself.
It's all frozen and instant foods fault, why learn to cook when you can just buy some instant crap?
@@HeavenlyPhantomStar Right. If I have a choice between making a pot of chili or eating it out of a can, I am most definitely taking the time to make that pot of chili.
Well said Chef! I admire what you and your team are doing at fallow. I have been the head Chef at a winery for the last year. This has been my first role as Head Chef after many Sous roles, it has been filled with Joy, sorrow, Pain, pride and of course hard work. I think I can tick every box that you mentioned in this clip and I encourage every cook to find, identify and work towards your shared goals as a team wherever that may be. Noho Pai, ka kita ano au I a Katoa from New Zealand!! Chur BRO!
Basic knife skills, heat regulation, seasoning.
If you dont get step 2 done right at least step 3 is a freebee
True. Switching between various types of stoves and pots/pans, understanding the baking process
In a nutshell 👍.
adding also - science behind it - Maillard effects, brining, etc.
Not floggin' it but Science of Good Cooking I think is a great start.
I completely concur with everything you spoke about in this video. I lost my passion for food/cooking at one point and it showed, especially when my kids were younger and would normally hoover down the meal and ask for more and they suddenly started returning plates half eaten. I took it rather personally but stepped back for a bit let them do it and when I felt ready went right back into it with gusto and confidence and haven't looked back since. Thanks for the great advice and keep up the amazing work. Can't wait until the day we get the chance to get to the UK and visit one of your restaurants.
Thank you so much for this, i'll be re-watching at least once a week for motivation and guidance. This channel is becoming the goat for young chefs.
Much appreciated! Let us know when your ready for a job 💪 Will
this is the best advice you can get. START ON THE LINE. Go to culinary school AFTER you already have experience really working on a LINE so you know its what you want to do for the next 20 years.
Lol yeah
That's definitely a good way to go if you're interested working in the food industry. But that's not a reasonable method for home chefs who simply want to elevate their skills
@@LaniakeaLeathercrafts Yea I figured since he was inside a restaurant he was talking about the food industry
That’s what I did and I was amazed how bad some of the people in my class are
Good advice, I spent a little time on the line making pizza and pasta - changed plans and went to business school. I cook as a hobby now and love it, probably would have lost my mind if I stayed in the industry.
love this. and love the point about more advanced techniques and sauces complimenting your foundations - it's spot on. The small/fine details a woodworker uses on a chair won't matter if their basic joinery skills aren't on point - the chair would still fall apart .
Glad it was helpful! Will
Watching this was kinda funny, since around 14 I was encouraged to cook for dinners and parties at home, often groups of 8-16 people. This definitely had two benefits, first I couldn't screw up, so I had to meticulously learn recipes and if I did screw up I'd have to figure out how to fix it or recreate it from scratch in a limited time (Initially I liked finding 3 or 4 recipes from different books then combing what I thought were the best bits from each). Two, the reactions, seeing people enjoy the food I cooked, just how their faces would light up, it makes me so happy. Thankfully, from quite a young age I was taken to restaurants, ranging from hole-in-the-wall to quite nice establishments, so I had a fairly good idea of the flavours I was looking for.
I'm currently in uni, doing a master's degree and about to turn 22, and the reason I said it was kinda funny watching this video was that I've naturally ended up doing most things you talked about, learning how to keep my knife sharp, preparing veg (need to get faster while keeping accuracy), buying seasonally and more recently buying larger pieces of meat to break apart myself, to make a noodle dish toppings with the meat and broth with the bones. I love trying new cuisines and combining new flavours (I'm a lot better with my spices these days, used to just chuck things in to see what would happen, within a reason, but I guess it was just part of the learning process).
More recently, I recreated the grilled abalone mushrooms with black truffle from Noma Kyoto for a dinner party (after watching Babish's trip there), but instead using local British ingredients, so large portobello mushrooms, egg yolks cured in salt and rosemary, truffle oil and around a teaspoon of sherry vinegar with some smoked paprika sprinkled on the egg yolk to finish. It was a really fun challenge, especially as it was quite a delicate dish both in flavour and having to deal with egg yolks (a couple burst so they were mine and Dad's), it went down a treat though, so I'm sure I'll give it a go again but may experiment with the curing process.
To cut to the chase, Chef, I love cooking and would love some advice on what books I should read, any resources I can look at, and, most importantly, how I can make it my profession.
I love your videos! I am learning more every video ❤
I just made Italian sausage (not your recipe, but your technique), from scratch and used it to make many meals after working a whole day, normally I would save this for the weekend when I have time.
Aw thanks, Jack. I always love Fallow videos. I still yet to dine there and I’m only 30 minutes away. Life hasn’t been great for me recently so kinda taking everything slowly at the moment. These videos always raise my spirits though, when things have been bringing me down over the past few months.
iny personal chef career, if id change anything, id take out culinary school. i wish id just started working in a restaurant straight out of high school. I'd do it for nothing until i get promoted to commis chef, atter about 2 years. yes school taught me alot of the theoretical work behind why certain things happen, but being in the restaurant, learning solutions, was learning about theoretical and practical problems. so yeah much love for this channel, it's helped me alot on my chef career ❤
I think it certainly depends on what culinary school you go to. I do think if you know NOTHING, where do you start to learn how to cook? I have had great teachers in culinary school and also met great farms, producers and makers. Which are all paid for by my workplace for me to go to culinary school (of course, I get a reduced wage)
If you go to a shit culinary school, I can understand (VISA problematic culinary schools). I was predominantly in a seafood based restaurant so getting to touch and cook with game meat, cattle, poultry of all kinds was also a treat. Then also the boring health and safety stuff you need to learn, but you have to in order to survive the laws as well as being in the restaurant.
@@catherinepham1662 yes definately agree, I work in an all round restaurant with about 40 total kitchen staff so it's definitely better for me to have all those teachers than the few at school. to obtain some knowledge from each one of them. it definitely takes some time to adjust to working though, because you don't know where to start without culinary school
I mean for me it’s definitely helped but fuck it is too expensive
thank you chef
I'm a classically trained musician who picked up cuisine as a side suit (commercially). I'm a better musician than cook and that's just my priorities, but this video was still helpful for getting some perspective on my progress as a cook and, perhaps more importantly, helping me reflect on how I want to train my music students in the future. Thank you for reinforcing the importance of being personally invested in the flavours I'm trying to make. I plan to re-watch this video multiple times.
So genuine and so true all the way, I love it! Thanks for putting that out there chef! :)
Every great chef learned the basics at the beginning. I’m no longer in kitchens now but the basics make me a damn fine home cook if I do say so. Fan of Korean/Asian. Indian as well as modern European. Fusion across those made for some interesting meals and some drastic errors. Best lessons were learned in a vegetarian restaurant. Many chefs at least then complained constantly about vegetarian food it can be incredible
Superb and stateful video truly. Your channel is sooooo sincere and it is clear you enjoy your work.
Thank you very much!
Outstanding! Sadly, I’m not a youngin, but just starting out and trying to learn & cook. Will take all this into account. Better to start now even at an old age than regret not trying 5 years from now.
I really like cooking. A lot! I love experimenting and making various types of ethnic foods. I enjoy a broad palate. But what I do not have is a passion for cooking and why I cannot be a chef. I can make the once a month gathering foods, but I cannot devote myself to daily menus and techniques. I know the basics. I know some good recipes and I know I like trying new ones. I'll never be a chef, but I do like to cook, and I love it when others enjoy my cooking.
Great video great advice. There's too many people throwing foods together with no knowledge of flavours, or seasonings, or when buying a cook book, just jump to the recipes, without reading the beginning of the book by the author...
This is the video I’ve been waiting for.🙏 Thank you so much
Great advices and I agree 100%✨
I went to culinary school for 2 1/2. Years and they went over the basics very quickly they were far more interested in teaching fine dining something id no interest in ... Once i went into my first kitchen i was put on the basics and thats were i really started to learn ... But up most you really need to have a passion for food do what your interested in not what people tell you to be interested in ...
i think understanding how food goes into you is just as important as understading how it comes out of you. That's why the first semester, i forbid my students to even approach the cooking station, we just go over these basics, etc
Brilliant presentation. In another life I could see myself in this vocation.
Thanks for the good advice chef.
Absolutely loving your content
Yes Chef! Great advice and video! ❤
My basics were cutting, how to portion a chicken- had to learn this myself with no internet, and the feeling with your hands of baking with pastry etc.
I regret never going in this direction after highschool, even though the pay is relatively low ive always had a passion for this. Step 8 i couldn't agree more man, like when i work on a meal for friends or family the best part for me is the prep, cooking then giving, the worst part is when i sit down to eat, its almost like a feeling of its all over now.
Love this very informative for someone like myself keep up the good work
Excellent video. My son has got cerebral palsy but has really got into cooking/smoking/bbq and is now thinking of doing cookery at college. Is there any thing that you recommend to help him with his challenges
Inspiring! Passion and knowledge is everything. Go for it! Will
I would suggest to learn how to cook like your great parents did. I recall almost all recipes by memory and people really love it!
Passion is the one. Everything else should follow with ease if it’s meant to be. I’m 39 years old and acted on my passion during Covid. I left my job in the building industry and I’m on the path.. Where do I learn my skills? TH-cam. Thank you Fallow and your team. I’ll be dining in your restaurant before Santa descends my chimney this year 🫶🏾
Having a good understanding of physics and chemistry helped me develop as a chef, at the end of the day we're chemists making art (imo).
Hope any fellow chefs have had a great year so far. Let's av it chefs!
I identify so much with what you said about zoning out and just sharing your creation with other people. I love cooking more than eating so 90% of the time k just want to make things and I’m not even hungry
Some great advice from a great person :)
Watching “Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat” on Netflix completely changed my cooking.
Great Chef , Thank you .
Great advice! Sharp knife a must!
Wow so young 3 restaurants in London well done !
A quick vid on how to keep your knives sharp with a steel would be helpful
Brilliant ....thanks for this
Watching peoples faces light up if they enjoy it is an amazing feeling. I do cook for friends but strangely enough hardly ever cook anything decent for myself. Even when I am cooking, I'm tasting so much, checking, etc. By the time everythings cooked I'm just not hungry, I just do it for other people. Non professional, just a home cook that has been playing with food for nearly 35 years.
When frying onions off for something like a Bolognese or cottage pie, make sure you fry them until their soft and sweet. You need to sweat that acid out of them. This takes longer than you think, and it may seem like a waste of time but it makes a massive difference. Its the base of your meal and if you get that foundation wrong, youre never gong to get a decent end product. take your time and plan ahead 👍
I love all the TicTok videos that say it takes a few minutes to caramelize your onions 😂😂
Well said ❤
Great video 👍
Food safety is number one! One of the first cookbooks I ever bought on my own was Modernist Cuisine at Home and some of the first pages are dedicated to food handling and safety. Wash your hands frequently, get under the nails, wash your veggies, and follow preparation guides. There are way more things to know than just your mother warning you not to eat raw cookie dough. I've seen popular cooks on youtube with millions of views mishandling garlic in front of their audience. Garlic in oil creates an anaerobic environment for the bacteria that produce botulinum toxin and that can land you in the hospital. Love, and stay safe and healthy!
You can always inject the Botox into your forehead 😅
Do you have any recommendations on a classic cook book?
Escoffier: ma cuisine or similar for classical French cuisine
The silver spoon: one stop for authentic Italian recipes.
Jacques Pepin: techniques. For all classical basics.
French cooking academy: book and TH-cam channel for classical French recipes and basic techniques.
Pomeroy: taste and technique. A series of recipes that introduce a lot of techniques.
And I believe that the books by Julia child are good for French cuisine from an American perspective but haven’t used them myself. I do believe it is good to start with learn learning the basics from French cooking as the technical skills transfer to other great cuisines such as notably Italian Lebanese Thai and perhaps even Japanese but that’s just my opinion.
7. The journey never ends.
Knife skills. It annoys me to no end when I see someone using a paring knife to chop vegetables rather than using a proper 10" chef's knife being held properly and sharpened, properly on a clean and maintained cutting board. When I cook at someone else's place the worst is dealling with dull knives. I absolutely understand why chef's have a knife-roll they carry with them!
Happy cooking and Merry Christmas from the Piney Woods of NE Texas, December 2024.
Hey chef, can you please recommend books that support your steps that youd recommend?
1 Looking after your skin, such as hands and face. 2 staying hydrated. 3 Stress management.
This is especially inspirational because from my experience, I don't expect to learn much from the head chef. They've often not been involved. Hope the people you're on the floor with aren't lackadaisical and truly have the right mind frame and attitude. Kitchens are not for thin-skinned people!
Whats really clever about this video is you have spawned 8 more videos to elaborate on the steps, that most people will click through to.
Thank you for the video.
Thank you very much chef, your videos are always super helpful and truly amazing, if I could ask you a question what’s your opinion on going to culinary school? And also would you recommend going to work in fine dining/Michelin star restaurant rather than just gastropub or bistro?
Don't go to culinary school if you're not prepared for a life of the line work. As Bourdain said, work at a busy Olive garden for 3 months and then think for the rest of your life.
My best advice is you can always cook down but never cook up. Meaning get some top level XP then you decide the level you want to cook to.
How to cook? Bro I wanna learn how you shoot these videos!👌🏻
When learning to cook, do you use any "substitute" ingredients to be more economical? Like swapping beef with duck? or something
I usually take a few tries...to reach something "satisfactory" to myself as an amateur at least, but if i go for the ingredients seen in ingredient lists each time, it really burns my wallet.
Is there a video thats been made about what these guys have in there kitchens?
Get into A good kitchen over 3rd year college, level 1 and 2 is good for learning but level 3 is A waste of time that year is far better spent in A kitchen than A college unless it's really quality
Could you give cexamplws lassic cookbooks that are good to start with ? Every chef has different recommendations and I eould love to hear yours!
Gread advice! What are the best sources to learn food science? (Eg: how certain ingredients go well together and necessary chemistry stuff).
The Food Lab by Kenji Lopez-Alt is wonderful for this
On Food & Cooking by Harold McGee is the ultimate book on food science.
Trial and error, so experience is the best way to learn!!
Thank y'all so much
The Food Lab is great. My brother getting it for me before I lived on my own for the first time is what got me into cooking.
The answer to your question is On Food And Cooking. And it's not close.
TFL is a book that shows how to use science to arrive at the best forms of recipes, which is super valuable. OFAC is a definitive reference on how (nearly) all ingredients in cooking behave.
The Flavor Bible and The Flavor Thesaurus (different authors) are both great listicle type books that talk about which flavors match with each other.
You’re giving advice on if you had to start again - what path did you actually take and what were some major mistakes you made?
yes chef!
Thank you chef!
Do you have any basic cookbook recommendations regarding step 2?
What would be a good list of basics that every chef should know?
I love passionate people
I can't wait to eat there 😋
Do you even suggest a classic cookbook and learning those sauces etc if you are more interested in eastern cuisine? I feel like they don't really use those classic sauces etc there much. Am I wrong?
I have now worked in kitchens as a cook for 3 years and find that I am thinking more and more that I want to get my red seal, at this point I dont believe that I want to be a chef when I am older but I think I wouldnt mind the challenge. Is it worth it to pursue if I dont plan on having my own restaurant? or should I just leave it and cook at home?
Based on your other videos: Put 4x the amount of butter you think, make a French mother sauce for every meal
Do you have special book recommendations for the fundamentals?
Buy as local as you can, know the source of your food, it's origins. Don't over complicate, respect the ingredient.
how to learn to season :D thats my the biggest issue of all
who do you get your shirts from? your uniform looks great
What classic cook book would you suggest Chef?
What are some cookbooks you recommend to learn foundational recipes/techniques? 👀
‘Larousse Gastronomique’ and Escoffier’s ‘Le Guide Culinaire’ are the only essentials you need
Larousse is great, first cook book I purchased, something much more condensed would be fine.
Can't go wrong with Mastering the art of French cooking by Julia Child
How do you think kids should learn to cook so they eat healthy fresh meals? It seems not enough parents teach their kids home economics so many get bad fast food habits and processed food as an easy out.
I didn't learn how to cook healthy food until I had an incentive to. People think eating healthy is a daunting task. It really isn't. People just don't know how to make things taste good that are healthy.
But as in school, you're never taught how to learn and you were never taught what even is healthy. It's a lot easier to sort out the bad things than it is to bring together the good things. For me, I just have a list of things that I don't even eat because frankly it's poison.
My mother always gave me healthy traditional foods. I hated it, and prefered to eat McDonald's, KFC and pizza after school. I avoided helping in the kitchen. But when I left home, I found that I had managed to learn much that she tried to teach me, and had tons of kitchen skills. I found I loved cooking healthy dishes, and wasn't intrested in fast food or takeaways.
Continue to teach your kids, they may not seem to listen, but in the long run they will return to eating the healthy food you have provided them from childhood. It's a long game. But scientists have shown that healthy eating in childhood creates adults who will eventually continue to eat healthy as they get older. Let teenagers and young adults eat badly, it's just youthful exploration and it won't last long.
whatta content.
Personally, if I could start over, it's getting a sharp knife and learning how to use and maintain it early on. I wasted so much time prepping for years and years.
Give us your top 3 books, that every culinary journeyman needs?
These days kitchens and chefs dont care about you as a person, what you can offer and what knowledges you do have. They only look out for your experience in busy restaurants and if you can make a plate faster than someone else, or if you can make a recipe faster than someone else. Its all about whos the fastest and not whos the smartest.. for me if someone wants to become a cook he has to travel first , taste different flavours and understand what you taste, discover new ingredients, new recipes and in general understand the basics of each culture meanwhile reading books that dont have recipes but explaining different techniques and flavours. yes at some point you will need the fast hands but as a beginner it will waste your time and you might not find the passion for cooking.. of course these thing require money and time but sadly you cant change the facts. restaurants dont care about us. we are not cooks but employees..Lets not include and low ass money you get with dozens of hours per week plus extra hours.. This job no matter where you look at it, is for me the worst job you can get by far, and by the owner prespective and as a cook and as a chef. all positions are SHIT
Don't forget a stovetop is something that you need to invest in. Cooking anything on an electric stovetop will not give you excellent it will always give you great or above avarage. Wood burner and gas is just simply better it will naturally taste better
My electric hob I fitted in our last house blows the pants off the gas hob I have inherited in our new house. It's coming out!
I been cooking most of my life and I believe you need to sit under a master for years.
I start taking cooking and being chef seirous 3 months ago now I know how to make handmade pasta some souces and pie and fluffy cake do u think I'm good enough level for 3 months??
I would have chosen a different career here in Australia as the pay is horrible.
Oui chef !!
@fallow, what basic cookbook should I start with?
What cook book would you recommend?
A really good one is the masterchef one
Sounds naff but has absolutely loads of info about techniques and produce alongside dishes
The internet is better for information than books trust me, they're so hit and miss sometimes
But generally books by most top level chefs are good inspirational reads
Autobiographies are good too especially on audible, devil in the kitchen and humble pie are quality listenings and reads
loveee
Does anyone have a recommended "classic cookbook"?
Number 9: stay away from 99.99999999% of all Tiktok food Trends.
Number 10: don't trust most americans when they tell you they make an original Italian recipe.
Number 11: before making a dish your own and start with variations, learn to make the original first to perfection. Try one omelette and perfect it, then try the next. For example do the french first, then start on filled ones.
Number12: always try to figure out how a dish was made. Dissect it, find out the ingredients. Then try to recreate it. It is harder than you think, especially with complex ones.
Number 13: learn spices. They can identify the style of food and thus give you hints on the preparation.
Number 14: try everything. You don't have to like it but you might get to love something that was never on your radar. Get out of your comfort zone. For me it was liver. Always hated it when my mum made it. Went to a friend's and was invited to dinner and his mum just made it right. Since then I love liver.
Number 15: eat not to get fed, eat to enjoy
Number 16: trust people that cook with passion, for example Jack and Will.
Number 17: don't start with a 9 course meal. First learn to walk before you run. One dish can be enough stress for most.
Number 18: learn teamwork. You will hardly ever be the lone warrior in a kitchen.
Number 19: don't limit yourself. You love meat? Tough for you, I also like a fresh home made bread and some nice mousse au chocolate (the classic one).
Number 20: educate yourself, learn the lingo. The headchef will only tell you that he wants an onion cut in brunoise or that he needs mirepoix and a bouquet garni.
👏👏👏
Work for knowledge. Not for money when starting. Money will come later proportionate to how good you are.
Step 3 took me the longest and I think it's the hardest to understand. For instance, I don't like cooking with wine, it took me a really long time to realise this. Sometimes it gives me the irks watching other people cook because I wouldn't have done it like they had, however it just comes down to style, and ultimately when I sit down in a restaurant and am blown away by a meal, it doesn't matter how it was prepared.
❤
Salt, fat, acid, heat. And knife skills.
What brand of jacket is that?