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Corner Kitchen: A Biltmore Village Restaurant Blog

Archive for March, 2009

Laying the Foundation for the Corner Kitchen

Friday, March 27th, 2009

This being my first blog entry, I think it may be appropriate to give a little background on me. I also feel that this info should not be the boilerplate bromide that is published on our website. I mean, what’s the pay off for making the extra effort to go the blog, right?

As you may realize, it takes a special type of person to stay in this business for any length of time. “Special” has too many meanings to list here, but suffice it to say, I ain’t braggin’. I am saying that I have been in the Hospitality industry for the last thirty-one years. It all started because I was out of work and putting myself through college. My older brother Vin got me a job as a host at Houlihan’s Old Place at Riverside Square Mall in Hackensack, New Jersey.

Try  telling New Jerseyan’s that they would have to wait for a table,even for a minute. The wait could grow to as much as two hours. Can you say thick skin? Oh yeah, it was very colorful.  After several months of hosting (which I really liked), I quickly trained through out the whole operation, ending up working in the kitchen. Back then the “American Bistro” restaurants like Houlihans’ and TGI Fridays were doing a lot of scratch food preparations. They also did (and do) huge volume. When I started cooking I was lame, very lame indeed. I had to be talked through the rush by a kindly manager by the name of Jimmy Knikos. It was so different from working the door, in the kitchen a confident smile carries no weight, it didn’t matter that I had manners or was glib. The only thing of importance was the food. And getting the food out in sych with the other three cooks on the line. Thankfully my brother had gone on to the Culinary Intstitute before my inauspicious start, so I had no witnesses to my daily humiliation.

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I have to say, it was love at first sight. Where else can you work with a large group of fun (and usually good looking) people, all bent on making money and having a good time doing it? Not only that, they fed us, we could buy beer and the dating game was fast and furious. I never wanted to go home. Problem was, school faded into the background and my life quickly became work-centered. I dropped out after two years as a communications/theatre major. To make matters worse in my parents minds, Don Pardo, the famous announcer, was going to help me find a job at NBC after graduation. Alas… but as the zen master said, “We’ll see…”

More on the next post. JWS

Corner Kitchen Apple Vinaigrette

Friday, March 27th, 2009

This is our first recipe entry. It is a good example of how we do what we do. Fresh herbs, familiar flavors with something of an interesting twist. We will try to put out a recipe each week, but don’t hold us to it!

Apple Vinaigrette

Ingredients:

1 cups Olive oil

1/2  cups Apple Cider

1/4 cups Cider vinegar

1/4 cups Lemon juice

1 Tbsp. Lavender herb mix

1/2  Tbsp. Chopped Chives

To taste Salt & Pepper

To taste Sugar

Lavender Herb Mix

Ingredients:

1 part Lavender (picked)

1 part Rosemary (picked)

½ part Thyme (picked)

½ part Oregano (picked)

¼ part Sage (if available)

1 part Parsley

Method: Combine and chop all.

Blogs, Facebook, twitter – what does it all mean?

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

For those of you that don’t know, most of my career has had nothing to do with restaurants.  I spent several years in retail management, six years in medical settings, and six years working for an information technology company.  In those years I saw the advancement of technology in both home electronics and computer technology.

I was an early adopter, so I had a first generation laser disc player, a first generation cd player,  one of the first Epson IBM PC clones (complete with a 5 1/4 floppy drive only),  an S-VHS video recorder, and bought a dvd player when the whole divx temporary dvd technology was still considered a possible alternative to dvd.  I was on the internet (such as it was) in 1994.  Through my friend Phil Yanov (an early adopter’s early adopter), I was introduced to the first Palm Pilots,  and how the internet could be used with all types of devices,  including amateur radio.

As someone that enjoys marketing,  I have watched with interest the efforts to use the internet as a marketing tool ( I sound like someone in the fifties saying that “maybe this television thing will make some money someday”).  I watched the internet bubble burst while working with consultants from Oracle and hearing the moans from many of them who had invested in companies that really didn’t have products to sell or real plans to make money with the products they had.

Since then, a lot of internet products have come along that make the marketing options for a small business such as ours much more diverse.  We spent the first four years placing ads in multiple print outlets, on radio stations and their related websites, on television (rarely and at very specific times), sending email updates to our customers that request them, and using our website as the main vehicle to get our name on the internet.

Over the last several months we have added a Facebook page for the Corner Kitchen, a twitter site for the Corner Kitchen, and this blog.  While one of the attractions of these recent additions is the cost (basically my time), the other thing I like about these sites is that they give Joe and me the ability to interact with our customers.  Joe has such a history with food and restaurants that he can supply interesting stories until the cows come home (thanks to my late grandmother, Grace Lackey, for that saying) and we can communicate special things to our guests with more immediacy.

Our goal is not to inundate our customers with information, and these sites allow access when people want it and can be ignored when people don’t want to hear from us.  The goal is to give people the ability to interact with us.  I have started posting our daily specials on twitter and using the Corner Kitchen facebook page to highlight events here as well as our staff.  This blog will have more meat on the bones – at least that is the plan – and will let Joe and me write about things that interest us (and hopefully you) both inside and outside the restaurant industry.

If there are things you would like to see here or on one of the other sites, let us know.