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07-14-2009, 05:17 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 17
| | Battle Scars of the kitchen Gretings all,
Just finished another 14 hour day on the line and can't sleep so thought I'd jump online and start a new thread I've been thinking about all day. Sorry if this thread has been done before (couldn't be bothered to search for one)
Treat this as our preverbial campfire...a place to tell our war stories of the kitchen so to speak.
So, sititng around this campfire let's swap stories about our battle scars. Let us all know of those injuries you've received in the line (of fire).
Ill go first, and tell you about the injury I received today whilst prepping. This particular scar involves a serious burn to the ring and pinky finger of my right hand (and I am right handed). This burn occured whilst deep frying falafels. I was lifting 3 falafels out of the 70+ degrees celsius deep frying oil when one fell from my ladle and fell back in causing the oil to cover those particular fingers.
This scar is going to be quite large, kinda proud of it ha ha ha. Stupid mistake though, but hope this starts of a thread where we can discuss the scars of our times in the kitchen...Discuss
Line Grunt | 
07-14-2009, 07:15 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Other | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: NYC
Posts: 466
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Line_Grunt (couldn't be bothered to search for one) | ......why??? | 
07-14-2009, 09:12 PM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Commonwealth of Virginia
Posts: 1,223
| | Battle scars? Too funny (ironic)......I roll outta bed every day....as well as carry on through the day and then attempt to sleep....... with a constant reminder of what almost 30 years did for me regarding battle scars.
I can say that after a while, you find yourself just looking at that sheet pan sized brand, the grill marks conveniently made on the knuckle side of a hand or silver dollar sized fryer oil splatter in the kitchen, if things happen often enough (as they do when you have an A&E work ethic..........) with more of a "Oh look what I just did......cool" and shluff it off. Can't say that was what the reaction was the first few years but toward the end...........it was the norm.
Just to share......there are two "scars" (besides the one I vaguely mentioned above) that were with-in my first two years of working in the business.
First was done while cutting salad mix for the Pizza place I got my first restaurant job at. Yes cutting.....it was a pizza place not Chez Paul.......  I cut the tip of my left thumb (more than a 1/2") completely off and had to have it sewn back on........  Even 32 years later you can see the seam where it was sewn back on.
Second was probably the second worst in my life/career....While emptying a pot of pasta in the sink......some maroon I was working with decided to screw around and slap me with a towel while I had the pot resting on the sink edge to dump. The whole pot of scalding water and pasta........fell back against me. Ended up with first degree burns on my left arm bicep and arm pit and second degree burns on my entire chest and stomach. | 
07-14-2009, 09:38 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Auburn, CA
Posts: 374
| |  ...check the late night cafe sectioon....
__________________ Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons... for you are crunchy.... and taste good with ketchup | 
07-15-2009, 02:40 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 35
| | Your topic made me curious. I just counted to scars on my right arm from elbow to fingers. 17. I am right handed, so most of them are burn scars. The worst of which, and also is not really a scar and thus not counted, is obviously the knife callous on the base of the index finger.
The most painful injury I ever had was when I was teaching a girl how to saute some fish. I turned my back for a minute while she had a salmon filet in a pan. When it was time, I went to give the pan a shake and the hot oil literally coverered my hand. Turns out she had half an inch worth of oil in the thing. My hand literally bubbled up an inch over the entire back of it for the next few days. Since then, I've been hit with hot oil on that hand many times over and it doesn't bother me for more than a few seconds, if at all.
The most heinous scar I have is on my left index finger from way back when I wasn't too good with a knife. Carving a raw top round with a very sharp 14" slicer knife, I lopped off the knuckle closest to the hand. Doctors said I was less than a milimeter from damaging the tendons or something along those lines. I still remember putting super glue on it and trying to finish out the work for the day but those above me demanded I go to the hospital. When I got there, the doctor asked me to describe the pain on a scale of 1 to 10. I said 0, it didn't hurt at all. He gave me a scrip for vicadin. Whatever. First and only time I've been to the hospital for work related issues.
I think cooking is easier, perhaps nearly requires, a numbness in the digits. I am somewhat clumsy in the first place with regards to my own safety (never others safety), but I also have a high tolerance for pain. I burn myself way more frequently than I should, but after a while, it just doesn't hurt as much, if at all.
The scars are both a badge of honor and an embarassment. It shows that I can tough it out, but at the same time, it shows I should be a lot more careful. The only one I think is important is the knife callous. All good chefs should have one or have a **** good reason why they don't have one. | 
07-15-2009, 05:10 AM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Restaurant Manager | | Join Date: May 2009 Location: Washington State
Posts: 89
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Line_Grunt Gretings all,
Sorry if this thread has been done before (couldn't be bothered to search for one) | better than bumping an old/dead topic IMHO. Welcome to the forums, if I may say, as a new poster myself. Quote:
Originally Posted by oldschool1982 some maroon I was working with decided to screw around and slap me with a towel while I had the pot resting on the sink edge to dump. | WTF is up with that?! I've come sooooo close to face slapping people who do that... Last time someone did that they got their towel thrown back at them in 2 pieces /pet peeve
Never got into that "locker room" mentality.
BEST I'VE SEEN: Best scars I've seen are the carpal tunnel ones. Don't got them; don't want them. But they are hardcore scars.
BEST I'VE HAD: Besides the "sheet-pan-out-of-the-oven-on-my-forearms" scars, I think the best I ever got were when I was a doughnut fryer. Lots of little blisters all over the forearms. Then I did one where i had a 6" x 3/8" blister running up my arm. Old school baker said I "earned my stripes". LOL
CURRENT: Anyhow, these days, my back hurts.  All fingers intact; no carpal tunnel. I got off "the line" before I could really hurt myself. | 
07-15-2009, 07:04 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 17
| | Nice stories all, thanks for keeping the thread alive and reliving a dead one if so.
Very impressive. Gotta agree, burns are a badge of honour and I'm starting to gain those badges rather quickly. I've even started to get my knife callous, so I'm very proud
Lef4Bread: thanks for the welcome, glad to be onboard  (I also hate towel slapping, I think that stems form a childhood memory of my odler brother chasing with a tea towel trying to whip me with it when my right knee collided with a low lying brick wall, fracturing my knee cap and leaving a nice chunk of flesh stuck to the bricks. just another scar story he he).
Oldschool: lopping off part of your thumb?!?! thats hardcore, glad the part that came off didn't end up as topping on that pizza. Your pot of boiling water scar sounds horrible, I hope you exacted some sweet revenge on that Maroon. Reminds me of the scar I've got that is about the size of a bar of soap (strangec omparison I know) across my lower abdomen from that exact same incident as I was filling a pot with boiling water from the boiler, some server was mucking around behind me and bumped me causing the pot to slip, spilling alot of the water over my lower body. Thank god that was all that got burnt.
Schuster: I think I'm begingin to agree with you that a numbness in the digits is a good thing. I play guitar alot and the fingertips on my left hand are well worn with calouses so I don't feel alot of burns on them but my right hand is still very sensitive. You know where I get alot of tiny little cuts. On the thumb of my left hand from using a peeler, when peeling I must make such tiny cuts on that thumb but now my thumb is riddled with them, doesn't bother me until I'm squeezing lemons or pitting olives. Had to laugh though at your quick fix for the knuckle wound...Superglue! so many uses lol.
Feel free anyone else to discuss wounds received on the line | 
07-15-2009, 08:28 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: In the Lab
Posts: 533
| | I have a 3" scar that runs down the outside of my right knee from where a line cook opened an under counter drawer into the outside of my knee and had my knee cap sitting on the inside of my leg. I was laying on the floor of the line cursing like a sailor in an open kitchen on a semi busy Wed night. One of the cooks helped me pop my knee cap back in place. 2 surgeries later to repair the ligaments and cartalige I am able to walk with only a slight limp, I like to think of it as a "swagger" though. I actually worked for 6 months on the knee 12-14 hours a day while I was waiting for the docs to approve the first surgery. While I was waiting I had the knee drained what seemed like monthly and that was actually more painful than the injury itself.
__________________ Taste: The sensation derived from food, as interpreted thru the tongue to brain sensory system.
Flavor: The overall impression combining taste, odor, mouthfeel and trigeminal perception. | 
07-16-2009, 04:57 AM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Restaurant Manager | | Join Date: May 2009 Location: Washington State
Posts: 89
| | uggg...
that story turns my stomach, chefhow.
...
sounds ghastly. | 
07-16-2009, 11:05 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 6
| | oh gravy, i couldn't even begin to count burn scars. i was once using a piece of shite pull through knife sharpener to sharpen a carving knife when it popped out and sliced my left index finger down to the knuckle bone. i was on the carving station at a casino buffet. by the time i made it back to a sink in the kitchen, my glove was full of blood and people started screaming thinking i had sliced my finger off. i just wanted to super glue it. they insisted i get stitches. fail. of course, my real badges of honor are worn on each forearm. they're actual battle scars from Iraq. doing a raid on a market in abu gharib, some guy materialized out of the crowd holding a switchblade, slashed at me twice, then buried the knife a half inch into the ceramic plate of my body armor. i didn't realize until after the mission was over that the dipstick had flayed me open on both arms. two marine medics and half a tube of super glue later, the scars are barely visible. of course, the iraqi learned the hard way not to bring a knife to a gunfight. | 
07-16-2009, 11:16 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: In the Lab
Posts: 533
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by left4bread uggg...
that story turns my stomach, chefhow.
...
sounds ghastly. | I am reminded of it every morning when I get out of bed and take those first steps.
__________________ Taste: The sensation derived from food, as interpreted thru the tongue to brain sensory system.
Flavor: The overall impression combining taste, odor, mouthfeel and trigeminal perception. | 
07-16-2009, 01:49 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 40
| | Hi there,
The higher up the food chain (pun intended) you get the more you look at "battle scars" as paper work and loss of productivity.
We all have them and if we thought about it carefully we would all admit that they where caused by carelessness or in-attention in fact when I fill in the W.C.B. claim forms under reason for incident (not accident anymore) I usually write Stupidity.
You say that you just finished a 14 hour shift, why? is the establishment you work for breaking labour codes? Are they understaffed? does ownership or management have that little respect for their staff that they would let them work a 14 hour line shift? or are you trying to prove something, nobody is doing anybody any favours by working those kind of hours on the line, productivity drops, quality drops and accidents happen, luckily this time it was you and you didn't end up putting some poor immigrant dishwasher with a family to feed in the hospital.
Get some balance in your life, if you continue to work those kind of shifts you will end up hating your job and resenting the ownership, or else looking for other ways to keep the energy levels "high" and that won't do you any good at all. | 
07-16-2009, 03:16 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Host | | Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Porterville, CA
Posts: 354
| | M.d. Hughes,
Any room for a "waiver" for owner/operators, especially in a "one person shop"?
__________________ Chef/Owner
Le Bistro
33 W. Putnam Ave.
Porterville, CA 93257
559-783-8151
Last edited by PeteMcCracken; 07-16-2009 at 03:17 PM.
Reason: add
| 
07-16-2009, 03:36 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Eureka, CA
Posts: 819
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by m.d.hughes
You say that you just finished a 14 hour shift, why? is the establishment you work for breaking labour codes? Are they understaffed? does ownership or management have that little respect for their staff that they would let them work a 14 hour line shift? or are you trying to prove something, nobody is doing anybody any favours by working those kind of hours on the line, productivity drops, quality drops and accidents happen, luckily this time it was you and you didn't end up putting some poor immigrant dishwasher with a family to feed in the hospital. | As a rule, you are correct.
There are always exceptions though.
Busy day, multiple banquets, a call in sick and a no call/show....someone is staying over.
Happened here last week.
Regularly scheduled 14 hour days, no.
14 hour day due to the above scenario, youbetcha.
__________________ You should have been here when the shiitake hit the flan! | 
07-16-2009, 04:25 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Baker | | Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Deep South, USA
Posts: 28
| | As a baker, I mostly have burn scars; I don't use a knife often enough or fast enough to get many cuts.
When I was young, I spent a couple of years baking at a place with tiny old convection ovens. The racks were too close together, but we needed to use all of them, so I couldn't take any out. Anyway, I ended up with burn scars that line up perfectly to form a straight line across the fingers of my right hand.
I guess that ruins my career as a hand model, huh? |  | |
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