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Old 07-18-2008, 08:35 PM
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Arrow Harassment - what do you do?

In light of the popularity of Gordon Ramsay's tirades and the seemingly 'accepted' misconduct in many kitchens, what do you do as a supervisor, manager, chef to monitor or otherwise keep harassment (verbal, sexual, etc) in check in your operation? 'Blue' language has almost been accepted as an effective method for communication in contemporary kitchens; does that make it okay? What about changing the face of our industry - is there room for this in foodservice or is it 'just the way it goes?'
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Old 07-18-2008, 08:49 PM
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It starts in the schools Jim. WHen I was in college, I learned that stealing from your employer and your peers was ok, that if you're a drunk, don't worry about, so is the rest of your crew, and that girls should stick to gentle work in a cooler environment. Some of the teachers were bullying the students, using all kinds of racial slurs and still do from what I hear, and can't help cursing in the classroom.

I worked for a chef who professed to be different and in theory believed in teaching by example, but when it came down to it, he couldn't help himself. Slammed door, burned bridge. It was almost worse with him than with the others because I thought he was different.

I've somewhat lost hope and I stay away from the scene somewhat, trying instead to make a difference in the colleges. This is an important thread. Thanks for bringing it up.
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Old 07-18-2008, 09:43 PM
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I have always tried to lead by example. This includes stopping this behavior each and every time I have encountered it. I treat my employees with respect; expect them to treat both me and all of their coworkers with equal respect. In today's litigious society to do otherwise is just begging to be sued.
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Old 07-19-2008, 09:05 AM
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It is so not ok. I'm assuming that Gordon (nitwit) is that chef from hells kitchen..When all my friends( non chef ) told me I should watch that show, then told me about it, him. I would never watch it! He sounds like a jackoff. I would love for someone to raise their voice to me, like that..To me this is a respectable industry. I treat everyone with respect. There is no need for harrasment of any kind. The women I've worked for and with are awsome and definetly didn't come to work to be messed with, they come to help support their families and their lives..

The best chef I ever worked for was a women named Moira from Boston, she rocked. It was in "93" in Hanover, Ma..
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Old 07-19-2008, 09:25 AM
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Thats a real toughie.....even in the best kitchens....there is a tremendous amount of foul language and lewd behavior.....from my experience....it helps to have a kitchen staff thats pretty diverse in age, gender, and race....

If your in a large property...you forever find yourself saying "I want you to know...that kind of language or behavior is inappropriate"....almost as if it will save you a trip to human rescources.....

These days there seems to be a big sense of entitlement....grab someone by the arm......your in HR......ask someone their age....your in HR.....discipline one and not the other....your in HR....

I truly love working in the kitchen.....I've had chefs flip plates back at me...I had chefs tell me how sorry they were they had to work with me. That was the great thing about kitchens....nothing was off limits.....To this day....I truly can't believe my ears when I hear someone say...."They can't speak with me that way...I am a human being".....I don't suppose how I really feel is correct, and,
I must say, I am straight as an arrow when working.....fair to a fault, non-threatening, honest, and open....I do expect some degree of the same from the people who work with me.....but, let me tell you....many people will take you for a ride...just for a simple slip up.....seen it happen, had it happen.....

"if its to hot in the kitchen for ya...get out"

ps: My thoughts on this are a true sign I've been in kitchen way to long
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Old 07-19-2008, 09:55 AM
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This is a dual edge knife.
Whenever you combine passionate, competitive, stressed out and young people together it is a volatile mixture. I personally cuss like a sailor in everyday conversation. I am not proud of it and I try to temper it in my kitchen. I tell everyone who works for me that I will be insanely critical of them. It will never be a personal attack. I remind them that the root of critical is critique and if they can shed ego for a honest assessment of performance and skill every day than they will only get better. In today's work place the kids coming in have never been challenged and they can not handle criticism. I push them extremely hard in the first 90 days to see if they last. I have no problem pulling one of them into my office or a cooler and dressing them down. They need to be prepared for when a customer is belligerent or is not happy. My staff knows I will go to the mat for them every time. They get the accolades and I take the screw ups. As for blue talk my people are adults. If something is said that bothers them they handle it.
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Old 07-19-2008, 10:09 AM
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Cobham Brewer 1810–1897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898.

Blue Talk.

Indecent conversation, from the French, Bibliothèque Bleu. (Harlots are called “Blues” from the blue gown they were once compelled to wear in the House of Correction.)


Had really never heard of blue talk......
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Old 07-19-2008, 10:47 AM
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Hmm

Interesting opinions, thus far. I bring this up because I am rather torn.

On one hand, yes, the kitchen can be a cut-throat, down 'n dirty, swearin' flurry of irreverant acitvity, all for the sake of 'passionate cooking.' On the other hand, in the name of moving the industry to a more professional level, that type of behavior is not acceptable. Do I accept the flagrant use of profanity swirled with contemptuous insults or do I make the environment that much more ripe with more G-rated conduct?
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Old 07-19-2008, 12:31 PM
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You are a culinary instructor....a teacher....G-rated is a must....were you
in a private setting as a chef....do as you like......if your in a large company or a school....you must guard against even inferring anything inappropriate.
Its all about how your employees percieve what you do and say.....very thin
line to walk these days......
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Old 07-19-2008, 12:36 PM
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I don't care how busy we are, how many orders are in the window or being made, I don't care how well people know each other, I have my rules and those rules are:
1. No inappropriate dress.
2. Please and thank you really are the magic words.
3. We work in an open kitchen. So anything you want to say to me or the other staff should be worded such that the couple on the closest table wouldn't be offended either.
4. In my experience people who are unable to keep there keep their cool while under pressure, regardless of who they are or how famous they are are just a bunch of poseurs, That goes for Mr. Ramsey also. He needs to find a field that he is more comfortable around. That, or tell people hes' just playing a character.

My experience is that I have never ever solved a problem or correctly managed a crisis by losing my cool and blaming it on someone else. I feel if an employee doesn't understand their job or lacks the ability to perform said job its a reflection on my hiring and training. Ever think of that?
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Old 07-19-2008, 01:49 PM
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I think there is a difference between swearing while talking, but not swearing at someone. i normally work in closed kitchens. I don't care what people talk about or what people say, as long as their not directing towards me or anyone else.
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Old 07-19-2008, 09:18 PM
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Chef Ramsay is always the poster child for these types of discussions and he probably is showing a side of himself at times (Anyone remember the Boiling Point tapes when he was trying to earn his 3 stars at an earlier age than MPW? I don't think that was acting, definitely not all of it.). He's made his mark now and I'd be willing to bet pints against pennies that 99.35% of it that you see on ****'s Kitchen is staged. It's made for the primetime tv "Oooh did you see that chewin' Ramsay gave that guy?" crowd to discuss at work the next day. I could be wrong, I'm not home when it's on, that's just my guess.
That aside, it's a tough call. Everybody has their own lines drawn. I personally can take it. I've dealt with it (in the kitchen and from construction bosses in my younger years) and it didn't hurt me. Could I live with a ****'s Kitchen-esque Chef to learn what a Ramsay, Blumenthal, Keller, Achatz (just examples, I'm not suggesting any of them are that way in their kitchens), etc. could teach me? Yes, definitely. I'd be glad to. Should anybody have to live with that? Nobody has to, the option to not work there always exists. I'm not saying it's necessary for anyone to deal with their staff that way but I figure their kitchen, their rules. Find a kitchen/job where you're comfy with the rules/atmosphere. Should a Chef that's run his/her kitchen a certain way all along without problems suddenly have to change the way the entire place operates because the new Sensitive Sam/Sally doesn't like it when he/she yells? I try to stay calm and reasonable with staff and mostly succeed but sometimes a verbal kick in the pants is the only message that gets through.
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Old 07-19-2008, 10:20 PM
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Some chefs are perfectionists. What is easy for them is very hard for other people, but since it's easy for them they become frustrated that the worker cannot replicate their product. Like someone else said, add the pressure of the waitress badgering for their dish along with the never ending growth of orders on the rack and tempers fly. There is no room in the kitchen for emotional babies who cannot take verbal punishment. If the victim is serious about furthering their career in cooking then rather than cry or get angry about it they will strive to not mess up and do it right the next time so they don't ever get a verbal bashing again. Anyway, if the chef wants to keep his or her employees then he will discuss the problem with the employee later in a calm and caring manner. Even Ramsay does that on his show.
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Old 07-19-2008, 10:53 PM
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Quote:
There is no room in the kitchen for emotional babies who cannot take verbal punishment.
I disagree and stick by what I said. Its up to me, the person who hired and believed that the person what either knowledgable or capable of learning. If someone I hire isn't up to the work and fails when you need them the most then its my problem not theirs. I should yell and get angry at myself for hiring a person and being incapable of seeing their inability. I personally never ever want to be put in a position where I feel somehow justified to be able to scream or lose it on a person just because I felt the need to enter into a voluntary employment agreement. I never should ever need to know whether an employee is an emotional baby or not.
This is just another aspect of the foodservice myth that a person has to put up with no money, poor working conditions, long hours, verbal and sexual abuse to make a life in a culinary field. As long as the belief that this sort of atmosphere is condoned or even celebrated shows just how far we haven't come.
My restaurant is like my house, and the people working for me are like roommates. At this point in my life since I have the power to control my own environment, professional courtesy, professional work ethic and professional attitude are all very big parts of my set of expectations. Oh, and the last time I had to hire to replace a person who quit? 2 1/2 years ago. So I also believe that a professional working environment significantly lowers our turnover rate.
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Last edited by Peachcreek; 07-19-2008 at 11:01 PM.
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Old 07-20-2008, 06:10 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chef.ESG.73 View Post
It is so not ok. I'm assuming that Gordon (nitwit) is that chef from hells kitchen..When all my friends( non chef ) told me I should watch that show, then told me about it, him. I would never watch it! He sounds like a jackoff. I would love for someone to raise their voice to me, like that..To me this is a respectable industry. I treat everyone with respect. There is no need for harrasment of any kind. The women I've worked for and with are awsome and definetly didn't come to work to be messed with, they come to help support their families and their lives..

The best chef I ever worked for was a women named Moira from Boston, she rocked. It was in "93" in Hanover, Ma..

gordon ramsay is your standard english bloke who doesnt dull it down for the cameras... i dont know where you guys come from where swearing isnt ok... but where i come from, its just a word and if you cant take it... tell the person swearing and shouting to either chill and speak quietly or to **** themselves backwards in the bacon slicer



btw... that last insult is tried tested and gets laughs everytime

Last edited by Jim; 07-20-2008 at 11:51 AM.
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