Monday, 23 June 2014

Chapter 1 :History of Modern Food Service



CHAPTER 1: History of Modern Food Service
          The Value of History is that it helps us understand the present and the future .In food service ,knowledge of our professional heritage helps us see why we do things as we do ,how our cooking techniques have been developed and refined, and how we can continue to develop and innovate in the years ahead .
How can we challenge old ideas unless we know what those old ideas are?
KNOWLEDGE IS THE BEST STARTING POINT FOR INNOVATION!!!!!!
               Cooking neither has been a discovery nor it has been an invention, it has been an evolution and food has changed with times and societies. The accidental discovery of fire changed the way we eat food today.
Maybe one day some piece of meat accidentally landed in fire and it tasted good .it could have been that the whole animal fell into a fire and got char grilled accidentally to create the world’s first barbeque. Even till this day the cuisine of nomads and tribes essentially whole spit roast.
      After the Colonies were built and the civilization set in, societal structure started developing based on the type of work being done by different people. Man tried to classify food too, food started to be classified as Food for the Warriors, royal cuisine and the poor man’s food.
    Then after people started following different Religions, religious barriers prevented Muslims from eating Pork and beef for Hindus, Jewish follow kosher laws and many others.


The origins of Classical and Modern Cuisine
        Quantity cookery has existed for a thousand of years, as long as there have been large groups of people to feed, such as armies. But modern food service began at the time of the French Revolution in 1789.
The 18th Century – Boulanger’s Restaurants

The word restaurant is derived from the French word restaurer (to restore). Since the 16th Century, the word restorative has been used to describe rich and highly flavored soups or stews capable of restoring lost strength during recuperation from illness. Restoratives, like all other cooked foods offered and purchased from outside the house, were made by guild members. Each guild had the monopoly of preparing certain types of food items.
Before this time of the French Revolution the great chefs were employed in the house of French Nobility. With the revolution and the end of the monarchy, many chefs suddenly out of work opened restaurants in and around Paris to support themselves.
CAREME ----------MARIE –ANTOINE CAREME(1784-1833)
           As a young man Careme learned all the branches of cooking quickly and dedicated his career to refining and organizing culinary techniques. At that time he worked as a chef to wealthy patrons, kings and head of state. He was perhaps the first real celebrity chef.
          Careme emphasisized procedure and order. Is goal was to create more lightness and simplicity. He added seasoning s and other ingredients not so much to add new flavors but to highlight the flavors of the main ingredients. His sauces were designed to enhance, not cover up, the food being sauced .For example, for hundreds of years, cooks boiled meats before roasting them on a rotisserie in front of the fire. But when chefs began thinking and experimenting rather than just accepting the tradition of boiling meat before roasting, they realized that either braising the meat or roasting it from the raw state were better options.
ESCOFFIER-----GEORGES-AUGUSTE ESCOFFIER (1847- 1935)
    He was the great Chef of this century and is revered by chefs and gourmets as the father of the 20th century cookery.
His 2 main contributions were
·        The simplification of the classical cuisine and the classical menu.
The basic cooking methods and preparation s we study today are based on the Escoffier’s work.

·        The reorganization of the kitchen.(The classical Kitchen Brigade).
This resulted in a stream lined workplace that was better suited for turning out the simplified dishes and menus that he instituted. The system that he established is still in use today, especially in large hotels and full service restaurants.
         The typical banquet menu of the 18th century, each course consisted of as many as 20 separate dishes or more .mostly a variety of meats and poultry, all placed on the table at once and the guest helped themselves. Escoffier rejected what he called the general confusion of the old menus in which sheer quantity seemed to be the most important factor. Instead he called for order and diversity and emphasized the careful selection of one or dishes per course, dishes that would follow one another harmoniously and that would delight the taste with their delicacy and simplicity.
       Escoffier’s cookery books and recipes are still important reference works for professional chefs.
Twentieth and twenty-first centuries Changes
A number of French Chefs like Fernand Point in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s became famous for a style called “NOUVELLE CUISINE” (NEW COOKING).
They rejected many traditional principles, such as dependence on flour to thicken sauces, and instead urged simpler, more natural flavors and preparations. In traditional classical cuisine many dishes were plated in the dining room by waiter’s .Nouvelle cuisine, however, placed a great deal of emphasis on artful plating presentations done by the chef in the kitchen.
After the middle of the twentieth century, as travel became easier and as immigrants arrived in Europe and North America from all around the world, awareness of and taste for regional cuisines grew. Chefs became knowledge able not only  about the traditional cuisines of the other parts of Europe but about Asia ,Latin America and other places, which actually gave rise to Fusion cuisine.
“FUSION CUISINE”—THE USE OF INGREDIENTS AND TECHNIQUES FROM MORE THAN ONE REGIONAL OR INTERNATIONAL CUISINE ON A SINGLE DISH.
New technology:
Sous vide (Soo veed, French for “Under Vacuum”) Sous vide began simply as a method for packaging and storing foods in vacuum sealed plastic bags. Modern chefs, however, are exploring ways to use this technology to control cooking temperatures and times with extreme precision. As a result, familiar foods have emerged with new textures and flavors.
In simplest terms, this food preparation technique is a two-step process:   1. Vacuum-pack the food item, plus any seasonings or marinades, in an appropriate plastic bag.
2. Cook the food item, while in the bag, at a constant low temperature, usually in a special water bath.

Molecular Gastronomy
Another approach to cooking precision was pioneered by the Spanish Chef Ferran Adrià in his acclaimed restaurant, El Bulli. Adrià explores new possibilities in gels, foams, powders, infusions, extracts, and other unexpected ways of presenting flavors, textures, and aromas.
This approach to cooking is called molecular gastronomy.
DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGES DUE TO MODERNIZATION AND IMPROVEMENT IN TECHNOLOGY.
      Today’s Kitchens look much different from those of Escoffier’s days, even though our basic cooking principles are the same. Also the dishes we eat have gradually changed due to the innovations and creativity of modern chefs.
·        DEVELOPMENT OF NEW EQUIPMENT
          The easily controlled heat of modern cooking equipment, as well as motorized food cutters, mixers and other processing equipment has greatly simplified food product5ion. Research and technology continue to produce sophisticated tools for the kitchen like tilting skillets and steam jacketed kettles which can do many jobs and are popular in many kitchens.
Modern equipment has made many food service operations to change their production methods. With sophisticated cooling, freezing and heating equipment, it is possible to do some preparations further in advance and in large quantities. Some large multi unit operations prepare the food in quantity, packaged, chilled or frozen and then heated or cooked to order.
·        DEVELOPMENT AND AVAILABILITY OF NEW FOOD PRODUCTS.
        Modern refrigeration and rapid transportation caused revolutionary changes in eating habits. Fresh foods of all kind became available throughout the year. Exotic delicacies’ can now be shipped from anywhere in the world and arrive in peak condition.
    The development of preservation techniques not just refrigeration but also freezing, canning ,freeze dying vacuum packing and irradiation increased the availability of most foods and has also made some foods affordable that were once rare and expensive. Techniques of food preservation have brought in convenience foods and recently convenience foods have accounted for an increasing share of the total food market.
Some professional cooks fear that these products will eliminate the need for skilled chefs. However it still requires skill and knowledge to handle convenience products properly. Convenience foods and advanced equipment free cooks from some of the drudgery, so that cooks have more time to spend on those jobs that require skill and experience.
·        SANITARY AND NUTRITIONAL AWARENESS
     The Development of the sciences of microbiology and nutrition had a great impact on food service. Earlier there was little understanding of the causes of food poisoning and food spoilage. There was also little knowledge of nutritional principles. Today, nutrition is an important part of a cook’s training. Customers are also more knowledge able and the demand for healthful, well balanced menus is increasing constantly. It is important for cooks to keep up to date with latest nutritional understanding.

Referencebooks:ProfessionalChef(SeventhEdition)-WayneGisslen                              
                          Food Production Operations- Parvinder .S. Bali

                                        ---First Year Notes-Food Production


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