Don’t Throw Food Away!

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Don't throw food awayIf you are observant, you will notice around closing time that kitchen staff from restaurants all over UK and Spain, are busy throwing away perfectly good food , which they failed to sell by the end of the day.

This is foolish behaviour and it means that the kitchen is not properly organized.

Nobody would come out of a supermarket and throw away what they’d just bought. So why throw away food from a bar restaurant at the end of the day? One might just as well throw money into the bin.

When we first started running our high quality fast food restaurant some 20 years ago, I have to admit that we too would end up at closing time with food stuffs that we would throw in the bin, but by the time we had been running our own place for six months we had mastered the problem and from then on virtually nothing got thrown away.

OK! So how do you get around having to throw away food, which let’s face it is the same as throwing away your profits?

To learn how to plan the quantities of perishable foodstuffs, that you are going to prepare for each session, of course takes months, so what I’ll do today, is give you a list of pointers to help you get started with planning an efficient kitchen, which doesn’t have to throw good food in the bin:

  • Eat your own food! In our bar and restaurant and in other restaurants where we know the owners personally, the owners and the staff sit down to a meal at the end of a shift and eat a meal based on the perishable food that has failed to sell. Often this will be white fish or seafood, but usually we sell out of everything, so the problem doesn’t occur.
  • Always prepare a little less than you think you are going to need. When you’re new to catering you will tend to produce too much food, but with a little experience you’ll soon learn how much of each item/dish you need to prepare to keep your kitchen running efficiently.
  • Fast Food! One of the reasons we sell fast food, is that there is usually little or nothing to throw away at the end of a session. A la Carte restaurants face a much bigger problem, which explains why they have to charge a lot more for what they do.
  • Batch Production: some things like fresh sliced mushrooms or chopped onions, we produce in batches, so during a busy session, we might prepare those items 2 or three times in order to keep up with demand. (We keep the washed mushrooms and peeled onions in a fridge and chop them up when we are running low.)
  • Display Cabinets: Try to avoid having to display food if you can, as food that has been on display will have to be binned if it hasn’t been sold. Anything mayonnaise based will only last one day, even in a display cabinet.

I hope that you find these tips useful and that they boost your profit too!

Quality Visitors

Once in a while on this blog I will break away from my straight to the point: This is how you run a successful bar style and content, to try to give you some idea of just what it’s like living in the sun, instead of drizzle, fog, rain and wind, which is so frequent in the UK.

I will also from time to time give you an insight into how your quality relationships don’t become weaker, but instead grow stronger and today I’m going to talk a little about how wonderful it is to receive visits from your best friends.

Borrowed Lawnmowerss I seem to remember that when I lived in the UK back in 1985, I used to get a lot of visitors to my house. Some of them were quality visitors who’s company was delightful, but I also had to put up with frequent visits from people, who came to borrow my car jack or my electric Fly-Mo. Also I used to get my fair share of boring or self-opinionated people, who frankly just did their best to stop me from enjoying my spare time.

Here on the Costa del Sol things are very different: the boring or tiresome people come to see me in my bar and spend their money there, something, for which I am so very grateful. They can’t pin me into a corner like they would if they were able to visit me in my home, so in the bar I listen to them with one ear and get on with my work saving my other ear for the many wonderful people that I also meet through my bar.

When you run a bar restaurant here in Spain, you only invite really special friends to your home, so in that respect it’s totally different form the UK, where at any moment a “cup of sugar borrower” could descend upon you shattering the tranquility of your home.

Here you get people who come to see you for an evening during their stay, usually calling you first to arrange a good time to meet up. Last night was such a night, as Russell who is a very good friend of ours, came to our Pizzeria and we were able to spend the entire evening together, talking about everything and anything and really enjoying each other’s company. This is what I class as a quality visit.

Russell lives on a farm in Devon with his wife Liz Jamieson, who is one of my very best friends and a brilliant webmaster, is also responsible for creating this blog, making it look and function so cleanly and efficiently and optimizing it in Google’s search engine, so that I get tons of people finding it. I just write the content and she does all the rest for me, so a very big thank you to Liz.

So you may loose the Fly-Mo cadgers when you come to live in the sun but you don’t loose your quality friends, as they come to see you especially and whenever they do you spend real quality time together.