...cafeteria cooks. I know that when I'm putting my trust in someone to prepare a nice meal, I'd rather it be a paid professional chef. Food poisoning gives me the schits!
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...cafeteria cooks. I know that when I'm putting my trust in someone to prepare a nice meal, I'd rather it be a paid professional chef. Food poisoning gives me the schits!
Do the Professional Chef's wear white chef hats or black ones?
My grandmother was a school cafeteria cook back in the day. As far as I know, nobody got food poisoning on her watch.
I don't think she wore a hat. Probably a hair net.
We use all volunteer help for our chicken barbeques. And people keep coming back.
Ah snowball, you are a trouble making son of a gun aren't you!!:D
When I read the title of this topic I thought OH NO!! not again. But then I laughed my a s s off when i read your post. Nice work Brother, nice work indeed.
I have no problem with volunteers helping in the kitchen, as some of the cookies they bring or make are really great. I DO however have an issue with them using their own hats or nets. There is no need for that at all. They get their own hat, then they want an ID badge, soon enough they are vying for space in the frig.
You HAVE to draw the line somewhere.
Mr. Ball you know as well as I do that there are "White Hatted Chefs" who have given me food poisoning
and have no business in the kitchen.
Now if somebody ... anybody ... takes a cheap shot at the Swedish Chef .... it's on like Donkey Kong!
a leather hair net ----- now that would be sexy
Bork bork bork!
I would like to see their version of NFPA regarding those "Cafeteria Lady" bras. You know the ones. 18 metal clasps in the back that prevent devastation to anyone within three feet should they fail.
Have you any idea why a raven is like a writing desk?
Volunteer. . . . . They still use the "traditional" hair nets, not the salad bowls. They also deck out the food carts with all of the coolest, new LED's.