now Ed's a celeb - i can say, he nearly poured me a pint once - if the Guardian want to buy the story
MILD:
*insert something clever/humorous/interesting here*
Just to point out Ed has a new blog post. Explains a bit of how busy it is.
Just to follow up on my vice comment earlier in the thread and tie it with that blog post. One of the more interesting patterns in the Kitchen Nightmares show that always impressed me is Ramsey's insistence on simplifying the menu. He is always very insistent that to keep things under control you should have a menu that is at most a page, and preferably very local. It is one of those things that was a bit of a revelation for me watching it, and it is certainly true that when I go out somewhere to eat I only really want a menu that long with my concentration span.
Anyway, hope things smooth out soon Ed!
Just read Ed's blog and really felt for him. You can probably get away with working like that in your twenties, but not ten, twenty years down the line.
Agree with the comment about the menu, forty mains sounds nuts. If they are all freshly prepared the logistics of buying, storing and prepping must be a nightmare.
A pub close to me, The Castle in Sandal, had a TEN page menu last time I called. I should imagine the kitchen hears more pings than a submarine sonar room. I think people are bound to be suspicious when menus are unfeasibly long. Even before Gordon Ramsay, a single page menu suggested a chef doing his thing rather than preparing industrial stodge.
'And where he supped the past lived still. And where he sipped the glass brimmed full' John Barleycorn, Carol Ann Duffy.
Interestingly though I had never thought about it, it was watching the show that made me think about it. I find it really interesting stuff, would hate to do it myself though, I'm the sort of person who would wonder what they had forgotten only to discover it is the food .