My Hell, My Kitchen

  • Sara K.

    Rank #37 of 1949

    Votes: 972

    About my essay:

    Work may be hell, but it does not swallow me whole.  Allow yourself a brief moment to step into my world and see a glimpse of my love for cooking.

It's 10am. I'm wired on coffee and have just finished my last cigarette. It's time to begin another day in the trenches, and I can already taste the mutual contempt in the air. I see the cashiers and runners right away as I enter, struggling during the last breakfast rush. One of them is Ann, a girl who's been there at least as long as I have. Her face is twitching as she says hello to me. Two minutes later I've washed my hands, clocked on and strapped on a random apron. For eight hours a day I am a ruthless, no-nonsense mercenary who takes no prisoners...and no bullshit either.I am not a chef. By most people's definitions, I'm not even a cook. I have spent the last eleven years of my life (five and a half years in this particular restaurant) in a do-or-die battle to the death...me versus the restaurant. After a long number of customer complaints, I have been gradually moved to the kitchen, where I am free to swear and sling ingredients about in a manner similar to the Swedish Chef. I keep a close watch over the screen that towers above me, which sends out a series of shrill beeps before listing the orders that must be made within the next ten to fifteen seconds. It could be a grilled club sandwich without tomato, it could be ten cheeseburgers...but it is usually a Big Mac. Yes, that's right. I work at McDonalds. Automatically that should be enough to disqualify me. I have never seen the inside of a "real" restaurant, much less worked a double shift as a line cook or a dishwasher. Yet I know what it means to cook well.When I come home from an emotionally taxing day at work, I want to collapse on the couch, cigarette in hand, and forget how close I came to killing someone. When I cook at home, I put more in my food than the skills taught to me by my mother, who learned how to cook damn near everything from scratch because of the restaurant she worked in for ten-plus years. I put my heart and soul into my cooking. It shows in the meals I prepare and in the faces of my friends and family. Each ingredient has a history with me, time-tested truths that turns the dish into a story that I've written, a painting that I've created. Even when all that is left are scraps, bones and greasy dishes piled up into an impossible mess in the sink...at the same time it is approval, respect and happiness that can only be brought on by a good steak or a bowl of French onion soup, many reminders that life is delicious...with many roads left to "travel" around the world and you never know what will be dished out next. Life, love, family and a content belly full of food...this is why I cook well.

comments

Sara K.:

I didn't know that paragraph breaks would be removed...please excuse the inadvertent typos. 

July 6, 2010 Report Abuse
Anelia P.:

Hey, I think your essay's cool. Good competition! Best of luck!

July 8, 2010 Report Abuse
Anthony B.:

This is absolutely wonderful. A triumph of the human spirit over the Evil Empire. The author may work at McDonalds, but that hasn't destroyed either his appreciation for food--or his desire to cook well. And some damn good writing! Love this.

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Anthony B.:

HER appreciation. HER desrire. Congratulations on a terrific essay, SARA and my apologies for previous gender oversight.

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Thomas K.:

Great essay! Smoke 'em if you got 'em and try not to put any of the ingredients you throw around the kitchen in my Big Mac.

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Sara K.:

No worries Tony!  I am so thrilled you enjoyed this...your comments alone is the best prize of all (next to winning, hehe), thanks so much!

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Brian L.:

Love it!!!!

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Rick I.:

Mr. Bourdain, thank you for your compliments on Sara's essay. I know that she is worthy of winning this thing because I've worked with her and am in constant awe at her grace under fire under the pressures of the McJob. She is a worthy contestant, indeed.

July 9, 2010 Report Abuse
Caitlin P.:

ha. I just entered my own essay but after reading this, I think you're going to win :) best of luck to you!

July 10, 2010 Report Abuse
Sara K.:

awwww Caitlin...you're sweet, but you've got a good chance too!

July 10, 2010 Report Abuse