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Untitled Document
Hustle & Flow
By Brandon Farrell | Stones Pizza

In the 20 years that I have been in the restaurant
industry, I have worked in close to 50 commercial
kitchens, and it still amazes me how many seem
like they were designed by someone who has never
actually worked in a kitchen. One thing though, no
matter who designs the kitchen, or how large it is…
there is still never enough bench space, but that is
just one of the laws of the universe that we just can’t
seem to conquer.
There was one particular kitchen I used to work
in, that had a bench that jutted out just that little
bit too far, so almost every time I walked by I would
strike it with my thigh…I had one bruise that did
not heal the entire time I worked there. This same
kitchen also had a salamander that hung in just the
wrong place that used to gouge the top of my head
on a weekly basis, for some reason I never enjoyed
that job… I think I lasted four months before I
couldn’t take it anymore. Are any of your staff feeling
the same way now?
Designing a kitchen requires a lot more thought
than is usually afforded, as it usually seems to be
done once all the equipment is already in the
premises. It becomes a case of simply trying to find a
place for everything until there are no more pieces
left to fit, and everyone can leave with the feeling
that they have just put a kitchen where there was
once an empty space. When it comes to actually
working in this kitchen, you may find yourself with a
nightmare of inefficiency, and if your kitchen is too
slow, your profit limitations will be lower than they
have to be. Of course, the other aspect is that if your
staff find it frustrating to work in the space, they
aren’t going to hang around too long.
The first thing you have to do, of course, is to
decide what equipment you actually need and
design this around the space that you have…some
equipment is “wish list” stuff, like perhaps a smoker,
so if starting a new kitchen, leave that stuff out until
the business has proven itself, but keep it in the back
of your mind when designing your space, so when the
time comes, you already know the best place for it.
The next is to draw up a floor plan, with a
checklist of what the kitchen needs, and draw it in to
scale. Then, imagine that you are watching from above
as people try to maneuver around your kitchen. Do
the little ant people have to weave about a maze of
benches every time they go to the cool-room? Is the
hand washing sink out back behind the drystores?
Where are the bins? Every kitchen needs some
decent sized bins…be sure to draw them into your
plans and see if any of the ant people trip over them.
The main areas to look at, are the path from cool
room to the make-bench, when you are at peak
service, you want to be able to get your make bench
filled as quickly and efficiently as possible, so you
want as clear a line from fridge to bench as you can
get. The next main thing you have to look at is the
route your product has to take upon completion to
the customer. If you have takeaway, you will probably
have to leave pizzas keeping warm on the oven
waiting for the customer to pick it up, so you will
have to take that into consideration as well.
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