Check out the recipes posted below.
In my 40-year restaurant career I have been a part of 22 new-restaurant openings. Three of those were at the beginning of my career and were for other people’s restaurants. The other 19 have been restaurants I currently own or have owned.
Opening a
restaurant is one of the most stressful endeavors one can experience Though,
for someone who is consumed and obsessed with the restaurant business, it’s one
of the most thrilling, exhilarating, and fulfilling activities one could
imagine. For those of us who thrive on creating restaurant concepts, menus, themes,
and décor elements, there’s nothing we’d rather be doing.
There are a
lot of moving parts to a restaurant. In the initial days, when all of those
parts are trying to come together, there are hundreds of things that can go
wrong. It has been my experience that, no matter how many years of restaurant
work the front and back of the house teams have under their belts, the first
few weeks are usually an all-out scramble to get through each shift by
doing everyone’s best to get the food prepared and served at the table.
Last week
we opened our newest concept, a Tex Mex restaurant called El Rayo. I am either
a shrewd businessman, or a complete idiot for opening a new restaurant in the
middle of a global pandemic, and at the absolute worst time in the history of
the restaurant business to be in the restaurant business. Time will tell.
We opted
for a soft opening. A soft opening in the restaurant business is where the
owner just opens the doors to the new restaurant without any marketing,
advertising, or notice. In all of those 19 openings I have only had one other
soft opening. It was my first, December 27, 1987.
Back then
I had no clue what I was doing. We probably had a soft opening because we got
so caught up in getting the restaurant ready to open, that we neglected to do
any advertising. Although it could have also been the fact that we had
absolutely no money to advertise. Either way, in 1987 there were only a couple
of other restaurants in my hometown of Hattiesburg and we were slammed from the
minute we opened the doors.
Every
other restaurant opening I have experienced was marketed and advertised to the
maximum extent. They were all busy. Some were handled more successfully than
others. It’s been my experience that, no matter how proficient the kitchen crew
is, and how well-trained the service staff is, the initial days are rocky. There
are several reasons for this. There are so many moving parts and all of those
parts are new to everyone involved. In the early days it always seems as if
there’s no way the restaurant is ever going to run smoothly without running
people ragged every shift. But— every time— things smooth out, and within weeks,
that which seemed impossible days earlier, seems easy.
A soft opening goes against every fiber of my being. I am a marketer and promoter at heart. It’s what I have always done in my company. My main roles in the restaurants are to develop the concepts, design the interior dining room spaces, layout the kitchens, create the menus, oversee recipe development, create the overall image and branding, and get the word out. Once a restaurant is open, my roles are reduced to continual menu development and marketing.
With every
other opening since the first one, we have tried to think of every creative way
imaginable to drive initial business. Until last week.
I didn’t
plan on a soft opening this time out, it just happened. Up until the Tuesday we
opened, I was ready to pull out all of the stops to spread the word. Instead, I
just hung a banner outside the restaurant, and we opened the doors at 5:00 p.m.
Business was brisk, but not overwhelming as it usually is on a first night. We
had a few trial-runs under our belt in the preceding days, but this was the real
deal with paying customers.
The second
night saw double the business from the first and still only a few minor hiccups
in the service. The same went for the next night. Though Friday night was an
entirely different story. We had been seating the dinner shift only. Partially due
to the fact that we’re trying to ease into this new concept, and partially
because the labor pool during the pandemic is the worst I’ve experienced in my
four decades of doing this.
Dinner-only
service is a luxury for a kitchen staff. On our fourth night opened— and our
first weekend night— a line was out the door before 5:00 p.m. The kitchen was
ready, but we dropped the ball in communicating to the host staff that the
dining room should be sat in stages. Instead, we filled every available seat in
the dining room in a five-minute period. We were on a wait at 5:05 p.m. Anyone
who has ever worked in a restaurant knows what happened next. All of those
orders came back to the kitchen at once, and it was a nightmare that took two
hours in which to recover.
The
problem with seating a dining room all at once is that almost everyone gets
finished with their meal at the same time and the same thing keeps happening
for the rest of the night. On top of all of the dining room tickets coming back
to the kitchen, we were also taking carry-out orders. It was rough. We handled
it as best as we could.
The next
night, instead of filling the dining room five minutes into the shift, we
staggered the seating, and were full in 40 minutes. Our guests may have had to
wait a little longer for a table, but that is so much better than waiting for
dinner once seated.
We will
continue with dinner only for another week or so, and then we’ll add lunch, and
eventually brunch. Carryout will be a measured rollout, too. I like this new
method of a slow rollout and may incorporate it into future openings. I hate to
think that it took this many years and that many openings to finally unlock the
key to a successful restaurant opening, but, as the man said, “It takes what it
takes.”
My wife keeps
telling me, “You don’t need to keep waking up at 5:00 a.m. and going into the
breakfast place if you’re going to be working long nights like this at the new
place.”
My reply
to her is, “This is what I live for. This is what I love to do. I don’t know
how many more restaurant openings I have in me. I am going to milk every minute
of this.”
Onward
Grillades and Grits
2 lbs Veal top round cut into two-inch strips
2 tsp Kosher salt
1 Tbl Black pepper, fresh ground
1 /2 cup Bacon grease (or canola oil)
3 /4 cup Flour
3 /4 cup Onion, diced
1 /4 cup Shallot, minced
1 /2 cup Celery, diced
1 tsp Garlic, minced
3 /4 cup Green bell pepper, diced
1 /2 tsp Dried thyme
3 cups Chicken broth, hot
1 cup Tomatoes, peeled, large dice
1 /2 cup Red wine
2 tsp Hot Sauce
1 Bay leaf
1 tsp. Salt
Place one to two tablespoons of the bacon grease in a large
heavy skillet and place on high heat. Season meat with one teaspoon of the
fresh ground pepper and the kosher salt. Place the meat in hot skillet. Once
browned, remove meat from the skillet.
Place the remainder of the bacon grease into skillet. Once melted, lower heat and slowly stir in flour. Cook three to four minutes. Add onion, shallot, celery, peppers, thyme and garlic. Continue to cook roux mixture for four to five minutes. Using a wire whip stir in the hot chicken broth, red wine, bay leaf and tomatoes and bring to a simmer.
Add veal back to the mixture and cook over a very low heat
for two to three hours, stirring occasionally. When meat is tender stir in hot
sauce, the remaining black pepper and salt.
Prepare garlic cheese grits during the last 30 minutes of cooking. Spoon grits onto a serving dish and top with grillades.
Yield: 8-10 servings
Andouille Cheese Grits
1 tablespoon bacon fat or clarified butter
1/2 pound andouille sausage, medium dice
2 teaspoons garlic
4 cups milk
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
2 tablespoons Hot Sauce
2 tablespoons Creole Seasoning
1/2 cup unsalted butter
1 cup white grits, quick cooking
1
cup cheddar cheese, grated
In a large skillet, heat clarified butter until hot. Add andouille and garlic and sauté for 4–5 minutes. Remove from heat and drain off excess fat using a fine mesh strainer. Set the andouille and garlic aside.
In a large saucepan, bring the milk, seasonings, and butter to a boil. Slowly pour < /br>
in grits while stirring constantly. Reduce heat to low. Continue to stir for 15 minutes. Add < /br>
the sautéed andouille and garlic mix, and cheese. Serve immediately.
11 comments:
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Enjoyed this article. Thanks!
Here's to all the great folks that are involved in America's favorite entertainment-eating out!!
Self-serving.
Good story on the soft opening and how it works/doesn't work.
But better is learning why I like Robert St-John's food so much - reading his receipes. Both of these start with "Bacon grease". An absolute staple that so many folks don't want to use any more.
Keep on cooking, Robert. And looking forward to your opening in Fondren, soft or not!
Recently, St. John wrote about tough times, closing restaurants, possibly selling his home, etc. Sometime doesn't add up about this. Who put up the money for this restaurant for him?
" In my 40-year restaurant career I have been a part of 22 new-restaurant openings. Three of those were at the beginning of my career and were for other people’s restaurants. The other 19 have been restaurants I currently own or have owned. "
Geez, this his opening sentence for every article he writes.
6:56...somebody pretty smart put the money up
3:14, I assume you work for a non-profit?
He's so deep into marketing and promotion that he completely forgot to say where this new restaurant is located. Last I heard he was planning to put one in The Fondren. Maybe it's there. Maybe it's not. Maybe Kingfish is so deep into stroking St. John that this post will be zapped.
And I am stroking Mr. St. John how?
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