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When you have your recipes
selected. Make a trial run of all of them. You need to know how long preparation
for each recipe takes.
Now then:
How many people are you going to
be serving? Take the number the recipe serves and multiply it to get the number
of times you will be making that specific recipe. Now, multiply each of the
ingredients and their quantities to get the total quantity of each ingredient
for your shopping list.
Do this for each recipe.
Now, sit down and figure out
which recipes can be made ahead of time, a day, or a week, and which must be
made that day. Desserts like pies and pudding served cold, and bread can be made
before the day of the feast. Meats must be cooked the day of, but can be
partially cooked or parboiled (as in chicken) a day or two before. This will
help prevent you from serving undercooked or raw meats and poultry.
When are you serving feast? Is
everything being served at once? Or are you doing multiple courses? If multiple
courses, which ones must come out of the oven to be served first? Which recipes
are served last. Do you have enough stove and oven space to cook what needs to
be cooked and served when it needs to be served?
For example: You are serving a
hot pie, beef roast, and an apple tart all in one course. Do you have enough
oven space for all of these dishes at once? If not, you need to rearrange your
recipes into a different order. I try to have only one baked item per course,
and one or two stove top items per course, and one cold or room temp. item per
course. This means that my ovens will not be over loaded and I won't be serving
something half cooked, because I overloaded the ovens.
Next, are you putting the items
that need the longest baking time in an earlier course, and the ones that need
the least or a short amount of baking time in a later course? You don't want to
plan on taking your ember pie (1/2 hour cooking time) out for the first course,
and then put in your roast which requires two hours of cooking time for the
third course. No one, including you will want to wait two hours between courses.
So, again, rearrange your recipes, so that the more time-intensive in the oven
goes into the early course, while the least time-intensive in the oven goes into
a later course.
Once you have all that done, now
build your schedule. What needs to be prepared in what order to be ready at a
specified time to serve. Plan your entire day this way. Early in the day, have
helpers cutting up the vegetables or fruit for pies and beef stocks, or grating
the cheeses, or making the pie crusts needed. Then later, plan on putting the
recipes together, the times they should go into the oven in order to be done on
time, or start cooking on top of the stove to be done on time. Add the prep time
for each recipe and add that into your schedule. For example: My pork pie needs
to be done at 6:30, it takes 1 hour to cook, and 45 minutes to prepare. After
adding in some slop time, my schedule just for this one recipe reads like this:
At 4:00 prepare crust for pork pie. At 4:30 start preparing the pork pies. Pork
pies go into the oven at 5:15 (allow for a slow or overwhelmed oven). Pull out
of oven at 6:25, serve at 6:30. You need to do this for each and every recipe
you are going to serve.
Once you have this schedule made
up, make multiple copies and multiple copies of the recipes and post them in
multiple places all over the kitchen. You want everyone to know what the
schedule is, and you want everyone to know what the recipes are. Believe me,
this is one detail you really don't want to overlook. You never know what will
happen - you could fall and break an ankle, and then who would run the show in
your place? Make sure you give at least one copy to one other person going to
the event early in the day, not traveling in the same vehicle as you (car
accidents are just too easy). You want this feast to go on without you if for
some reason you can't make it or you get injured.
Having schedules posted also
allows your help to figure out if they need to be working harder, or if they
have time to slack off and have a little fun. It also frees you up a bit from
having to make more decisions on the day of than are necessary. You will have so
many people asking you questions all day long, it will be nice to have a
no-brainer answer for some of them such as "Well, let's take a look at what the
schedule says." You are going to be very tired by the time the time it comes to
actually beginning serving the feast. Eliminating some of the questions, and
decisions, by good preplanning, helps tremendously.
Another plus to schedules - you
can move the whole thing forward or set it back without a lot of fuss and bother
if informed an hour or so ahead of time in order to accommodate court or another
activities.
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