blog

Job Jargon

December 13th, 2011

Before working with me on a food television show, commit these phrases to memory to get a leg up on the competition!

Breakdown: The culinary script written for all shows, webisodes and live action events that chefs, food stylists and production teams follow to get the cooking action accomplished. Breakdowns include recipes, techniques and specific cooking or prep support needed to get the recipe demo across to the viewer.

Talking Points: Points of discussion that the chef must convey about recipes, techniques, ingredients, etc. Usually written by culinary production staff, talking points are also helpful to the talent who need to fill on-air time while cooking.

Swapouts: Food items, dishes or ingredients used on-air to stay within the time constraints (i.e. 30-minute shows) and undo mistakes. Behind the scenes, food stylists will cook along with the talent to be ready for potential mishaps (burns, over-cooking, undesired final results). The swapouts are used whenever needed – whether it’s partially browned onions to swap for burned ones, or a completed apple pie coming out of the oven just five minutes after it went in – swapouts are the real “magic” of food TV!

Mise en Place: The French phrase for “everything in its place.” Learned the first day of culinary school, this phrase means being organized and ready to go before action begins. Whether you’re cooking in your own kitchen or prepping ingredients for a food show, this is crucial. For a culinary producer that means having breakdowns, talking points and recipes written, having lists of all equipment needed, lists of swapouts and schedules of the day. If you’re testing a recipe or cooking dinner, having all your vegetables chopped, spices measured out, and ingredients at the ready is the first step to culinary success.

Purchasing: To the average eye, purchasing may seem like simply going grocery shopping. But when you’re purchasing for a food show, you have to think about more than just your list of ingredients. Segments of shows can be shot as many as 4 times, including mistakes the talent makes and shots of just their hands moving/chopping/washing. As a purchaser, you have to anticipate how much of each ingredient you’re going to need to make it through all those passes. You never want to be on set and have your director say, “can we take that again?” and have your reply be, “that was our last chicken…”

 

September 10th, 2011

My view from Brooklyn

Being born on September 11th was changed forever 10 years ago.

I temporarily relocated to NY June 2001 to write Tyler Florence’s debut cookbook, Real Kitchen. This was only my second book, and in looking back, was an important transition in my career——crazy to imagine that a decade later I have a total of nine cookbooks published.

Ty and I worked together on the FTV series Food 911 for 3 years and we considered each other family. To this day, he is like a brother to me. Through a series of circumstances, I ended up moving in with he and his girlfriend at the time, Evyn— a Jack Tripper, Three’s Company situ of sorts. I bunked in his five year old son Miles’ room, with a trunk full of toys, a blue Big Wheel, and a bird’s eye view of Flatbush Avenue. Spending the summer in Park Slope, Brooklyn and writing a “celeb-chef’s” first cookbook is in and of itself a memory.

As the hot summer in the city progressed, I rediscovered my New York soul. I moved to LA after college and while I visited the tri-state area often to see my parents and friends over the years, this was the first time I lived in the greatest city on earth as a woman. I was in a different place in my life than when I was going to NYU and bopping around the Village.

Tuesday morning September 11, 2001——day one of food photography for Real Kitchen. Big Day! It was also my birthday and Tyler and I intended to celebrate at Mesa Grill, at the invitation from fellow Food Network chef Bobby Flay.

Renowned photographer, Bill Bettencourt and his assistant are due to arrive at 9:30 am. All food and props were purchased and organized the day before. I wake at 7:30 am to find Tyler already prepping the beauty dishes in the kitchen. “JoJo, we need better baby bok choy for the Hong Kong Crab Cake shot.” “I’ll go down the street to the Korean market on 7th Avenue”, I reply. “No, the produce is better in Chinatown, it won’t take you long to run into the City and come back,” he says. With that, I hop on the orange F train to Manhattan’s lower eastside to procure and purchase photogenic Asian cabbage from an authentic Chinese grocer. In a flash, I jump back on the subway to return to the 718 area code.

After walking up three steep flights of stairs with beautiful bunches of bok choy, I find Tyler in front of the Today Show with a concerned Matt Lauer, talking about how a plane has “accidentally” crashed into the Twin Towers. This had to be around 9:00 am. The fact that I was on a train when the first plane hit, and moreover, that I was within the immediate vicinity of Wall Street while this all was happening is chilling to me. Three minutes later, I could have been potentially stuck underground like a rat in a hole, as MTA closed the downtown subways shortly after. I am forever aware and thankful that timing was on my side.

Ty is a photog at heart, and is always taking pictures and wanted to get up and out. He and I climbed the fire escape to the roof. It’s alarming how close Brooklyn actually is to downtown. We gravely watched as the first tower burns, listening to the radio commentary from a neighbor’s boom box. With a zoom on the lens, Tyler hands me his camera for use as binoculars, as the telephoto provides an upclose view. As I am watching the smoke, I see, what I think is a helpful helicopter hover…then Bam! I see through the magnifier the second plane fly into the second tower and explode into flames right before my eyes. “Holy Fuck!” Is all he and I could mutter! I truly could not believe the flames and smoke; like nothing I’d ever seen.

Then we watched as the towers came crashing down, imploding on themselves like the Sands Hotel or a Jerry Bruckheimer movie. This could not be real?! I was shaking, full of sadness and devastation, not knowing the facts and watching the News for any morsel of information.

The smoke, the white powder debris that covered seemingly everything, the putrid bitter smell of electrical fire, the constant sirens, the singed piece of paperwork I still have from a lawyers desk in tower 2 that floated all the way to Brooklyn and into my hands.

I will never forget how small I felt on that day. Or how I watched an army of commuters trek for miles on foot across the Williamsburg Bridge to their homes and families. Or how my birth was an accident, while innocent people and firefighters lost their lives. My birthday will forever be known as 911——tainted with terrorism, death, and the day my city and the nation were attacked.

Ten years later, it has not gotten any easier to “celebrate” my birth. I have been intentionally out of the country for at least 5 of the last 10 September 11ths because I end up watching the news; grieving and crying. How can I celebrate? What I have learned is that I am meant to mourn. I am meant to greet each morning with joy.  I am meant to create, and write, and cook, and share a smile, and be a friend, and in so many ways be a gift to the world.

But I will never forget.

July 14th, 2011

Being a culinary producer and working in television certainly has its advantages—I get to cook with top-notch chefs, travel the country, and eat in the best restaurants to name a few. I recently wrapped production of a new series called Bar Rescue—premiering this Sunday 7/17 @ 10pm on Spike—which was an amazing experience. A crew of 50 of us traveled all over the country saving bars, during a grueling 9-week shoot schedule. The bonus was we shot in a few delicious dining cities like Chicago, Philadelphia, and Boston. The 3-Ball crew is one of the best I’ve worked with in my 12 year career: professional, intelligent, fun to work with, and total foodies. This dream team made living out of a suitcase and working 15 hour days a lot more tolerable.

When I go out to eat, I usually do what most food people do—order as many different dishes as I think I just might possibly be able to put away. This is part because I relish the experience of dining in restaurants, particularly when I’m out of LA. The other part is that I love good food. My Italian grandmother used to call me a “good eater”—thankfully I’ve turned my hunger into a successful career. Compounded with long shooting hours, craft service, little exercise, not enough water, and too much wine, comes more than a few extra pounds and an overall sluggish, polluted, unhealthy being.

Just for giggles, here’s a list of some of the places I ate; I want to reflect on my utter unabashed gluttony:

Chicago
The Gage
Gino’s East
Portillo’s
Greek Isles
The Purple Pig —Twice!
David Burke’s Primehouse
Graham Elliot
Frontera
Rockit
Sweetwater Tavern

Scotch Eggs @ The Gage in Chicago

Philly
Pietros Pizza
Fergies Pub
Pho Saigon
Amada—Twice!
Village Whiskey
Tinto
Garces Trading Co.
Cuba Libre
Amis
Campo’s Deli
9th Street Italian Market Festival (still bummed they didn’t have zeppolis)

Lamb Chops @ Amada in Philadelphia

Boston Area
Nebo
Modern Pastry
Harvest
Samba Steak & Sushi
Oishii Sushi
J&M Diner
Lumiere
Deluxe Town Diner
Allium
Baba Louie’s
Fiori

Salmon Tartare @ Oishii in Newton

When I returned home to LA a couple of week’s ago, I was faced with the hard fat truth that the size 2 clothes hanging in my closet no longer fit—my sweats were even tight! I didn’t dare step on a scale for fear of going into a deep depression. My stomach was constantly bloated and I just looked awful! No matter how well I was eating now in my own kitchen or spinning in my neighborhood gym, I just felt like crap and was not operating anywhere near optimum capacity. I’m pretty health conscious and I’ve always practiced fasting or going on a veg only diet when I feel my body is in toxic overload. But this time I felt like I couldn’t cleanse at home, I was too far-gone and needed to commit to a more stringent program. I found The Spring Resort and Spa in Palm Springs that has a 7 day retreat with detoxing through juice fasting and colonics. Now, I know the latter is not for everyone, and trust me; I have been the “butt” of jokes by guys on the crew more than a few times. To each his own but for me, this is the right move to get my body and mind clear, and eliminate waste. When I make up my mind to do something, I jump in and do it with power and determination.

There will be a group of us at the spa, all there for the same reason—to eliminate all the crap (pun intended) in our bodies, as well as our minds. I believe that when you cleanse and detoxify physically you also do mentally, purging negativity takes you to a happier level. 7 days of no solid food may sound severe but I know the result will be beyond worth it. My 7 day fast will be supported with sauna, mineral springs, pool, Jacuzzi, yoga, breathwork, and of course colonics. I may treat myself to a massage too while I’m there—hey, I work hard!

It’s too jolting on the body to just jump into a program this drastic, so I have gone on a Precleanse, to ease my body into fasting. Ahh…more on that next time.