GT-Unicrn-Fst-art - 10/10/08 Review of the "Grand Tournament of the Unicorn Feast" served in the Middle Kingdom on April 4, 2008 by Lady Avelyn Grene. NOTE: See also the files: French-Tbl-Srv-art, headcooks-msg, kitchen-clean-msg, Medievl-Feasts-art, prim-sit-fsts-msg, Run-a-Feast-art, servng-drinks-msg, fd-transport-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2008 22:23:44 -0400 From: Avelyn Grene Subject: [Sca-cooks] Grand Tournament of the Unicorn Feast Review - Long Post To: sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org, mk-cooks at midrealm.org I've been mulling this over for a couple of days now, trying to decide exactly how I feel things went. In general, this feast has given me a huge headache for months now, not because of the research or planning, but because of constrictions by the group. After all this though, I think it turned out really well. Background for those who are not aware, I had no kitchen on site to cook in, only a hallway (that led to site bathrooms) to serve out of. Some food was made and put in the freezer ahead of time (sausage and bread), most of it was prepped/made in a professional catering kitchen less than a mile from site, and the rest of it (mostly little stuff) was made/prepped in a small cabin with a kitchen which is walking distance from site. Menu: The food itself was really well received. I was complimented on the balance of all the food within it and within the course. First Course: Cold items were put on the tables before guests came to sit, and the two hot dishes were served when Their Majesties were settled in. I had a bit a trouble getting the cold dishes on the table though, which was the result of two simultaneous problems: one of my kitchen staff, and my hall steward (more on this later). The sausage was very well received, as well as the pasta. People were not really sure what to do with the salat of apples and onions. The flavors blend beautifully, but I think it worried a lot of people. Entrement: The entrement went over really well, which was good. Their Majesties seemed to have a good time throwing grapes at paper boats. They also took it upon themselves to "shoot" the server, who was a great sport and fell over and played dead. Second Course: Cold dishes were plated before feast began, so that helped alot. We had no trouble getting the hot food plated and sent out. The shrimp and rice went over very well, so that was exciting. Head table received their rice in individual blind-baked crusts, since it is a bit messy. Third Course: The marzipan torte was well received, which is good because making them was tedious - the marzipan was pressed into a dragon mold I made, we colored the rosewater that was sprinkled on top green, and it was garnished with a raspberry syrup to make a pale - yay heraldic food. They were individually plated, which meant serving trays were needed. This caused some confusion, as the servers apparently did not receive proper instructions on pairing up to deliver the food. It worked out in the end though. Also, the comfits were well received... I had people sneaking in after feast to grab some. Entertainment: Originally the entertainment line up was the entrement after the first course, and our local comedia troupe, I Scandali, to perform during the third course, which was, I thought, a nice balance, and not overdoing it. However, the autocrat decided to add a bardic performance the day before the event, and she did not come to ask when to perform until feast was starting, she performed during the second course. Also, Her Majesty had requested a local night to sing a song for her, which he told me after feast started, and he performed before the entrement. I think it all worked out okay, though it did make things (like serving) take longer than it probably should have. Clean up: This was atrocious. Generally people volunteer to help clean up after events. Not at this one. We had tubs set up to wash some things as we went (like utensils, as we were short), which worked out reasonably well. We put a tub out in the hall after feast for people to wash feast gear. Our water supply was cut off half way through feast, which meant running to the cabin for more water, ugh. The lack of help amazed me. Ultimately we ended up packing stuff up dirty to take home to clean. If TE Helewyse and Thumper had not helped, we would have been there all night. I also didn't receive any help from the other event staff to carry and load equipment into vehicles. What worked (planning/food): The Brain (tm). Couldn't have done it without it. I had two copies of all recipes, menus, etc (one for me at the catering place, and one at the cabin). I had previously laid out what was being done and where. I figured out where tables were going to go during plating before the event. Pre-marking which plates were being used for what dishes, and having them counted out. Having garnishes ready to put with food. Separating food items by course where they were being stored. -Having a designated area on the staging table for the food for head table. What can be changed/added (planning/food): -Minor kitchen help issues, at least with one person, who happened to be in charge of the cabin since Doc was doing the royalty lunch. Ultimately she did a good job, but she seemed to drop the ball a bit in a few places. -Having the posted menu include the dishes as well as what garnish/plate goes with which dish - in large font. The one we had was a bit small. -I want to get those plastic breakdown-able shelves, mark them by course, and sort/store everything for that course on the shelves. Even when things were separated out on the tables, things were getting mixed up due to people setting stuff down, or pick things up they didn't need to. Outside factors that affected feast: -A number of things were left at the cabin, and had to be fetched. The hazards of working out of multiple places, and people overlooking things... while I understand these things will happen, there were multiple trips made back to the cabin to retrieve items. It was frustrating. Especially since my staff should have been plating instead of searching for things. -Court being pushed back half an hour, and my not being informed of it. Had I known, I would have brought hot food from the catering kitchen over later. This way my sternos on my chafers would not be going out when feast started. -It took forever for people to get settled in. I had planned on feast beg ginning around 6:30-6:45. It started at 7:45. It ended at 9:15. -Troll did not have a sign up sheet for feast. This resulted in confusion over how many seats had been sold. After counting, they were a few under, and decided not to sell it out or create a waiting list. Ultimately they did not sell 7 seats (I planned for 80 seats). -Four servers did not show up. So, when servers needed organized to put the first course on the tables, my hall steward was frantically looking for more servers. -Our feast hall is underneith a campus dining hall, and they graciously supply our water for the event for fighters and for feast. The dining hall employees leave and lock up at 8pm, which means we can't get water after 8. Since feast started at 7:45 this was a bit of an issue. We filled the containers (2 5gal jugs) before they closed, but ended up having to ration drinks toward the end (We did not completely run out though!). We were also lacking easy access to more water for dish washing. Any thoughts or opinions are graciously accepted. Avelyn -- Lady Avelyn Grene Apprentice to Master Edouard Halidai Chronicler and Historian for Barony Flaming Gryphon The Commonplace Boke of Lady Avelyn Grene www.greneboke.com Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2008 15:02:28 +1200 From: Antonia Calvo Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Grand Tournament of the Unicorn Feast Review - Long Post To: Cooks within the SCA Avelyn Grene wrote: > Clean up: > This was atrocious. Generally people volunteer to help clean up after > events. Not at this one. I find it's helpful to sign people up for cleanup beforehand and/or have a Herald "remind" people that help is needed in the kitchen. > -Minor kitchen help issues, at least with one person, who happened to be > in charge of the cabin since Doc was doing the royalty lunch. > Ultimately she did a good job, but she seemed to drop the ball a > bit in a few places. Inexperience? Too many responsibilities? > Outside factors that affected feast: > -A number of things were left at the cabin, and had to be fetched. > The hazards of working out of multiple places, and people overlooking > things... while I understand these things will happen, there were > multiple trips made back to the cabin to retrieve items. It was > frustrating. Especially since my staff should have been plating > instead of searching for things. I think it's a good idea to schedule a "missing items" run during the course of the feast. We're very organized and do mental walkthroughs of everything when getting the equipment together, but there's usually still one thing or another left behind. > -Court being pushed back half an hour, and my not being informed of > it. Had I known, I would have brought hot food from the catering > kitchen over later. This way my sternos on my chafers would not be > going out when feast started. May I recommend developing a very fearsome reputation :-) (I don't know how I did this. I'm hard to really rile and rarely even raise my voice. But there is no dessert for naughty Kings who come late to dinner.) > -It took forever for people to get settled in. I had planned on feast > beg ginning around 6:30-6:45. It started at 7:45. It ended at 9:15. See above. Get people onto the idea that when you say that the feast will be served at 6:30, the food will be on the table at 6:30. > -Troll did not have a sign up sheet for feast. This resulted in > confusion over how many seats had been sold. After counting, they were > a few under, and decided not to sell it out or create a waiting list. > Ultimately they did not sell 7 seats (I planned for 80 seats). Can't suggest much that you can do as an individual. Southron Gaard has made advance bookings pretty much compulsory for all feasts, so we always know how many to expect. > -Four servers did not show up. So, when servers needed organized to put > the first course on the tables, my hall steward was frantically > looking for more servers. That's a damn nuisance, but it's also something that begins to resolve itself as you build rapport with the available people. (I've got it down to the point where, when I failed to organise servers for a big feast, I got the Hall steward and told him "Go find one of the [usual gang of] idiots and get them to round up enough of the other idiots to serve. :-) ) > -Our feast hall is underneath a campus dining hall, and they graciously > supply our water for the event for fighters and for feast. The dining > hall employees leave and lock up at 8pm, which means we can't get water > after 8. Since feast started at 7:45 this was a bit of an issue. We > filled the containers (2 5gal jugs) before they closed, but ended up > having to ration drinks toward the end (We did not completely run out > though!). We were also lacking easy access to more water for dish > washing. Find a better solution for that. Seriously. No access to water is not just inconvenient, but when you're cooking, it's a bit of a health hazard. -- Antonia Calvo (formerly known as Adele de Maisieres) Edited by Mark S, Harris GT-Unicrn-Fst-art Page 5 of 5