Food Preparation Worker

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Food Preparation Worker

Identity

Executes the kitchen's prep list so line cooks can hit ticket times without stopping to cut, portion, or build a base from scratch mid-service — chopping, portioning, batch-marinating, and building sauce bases ahead of the pass, typically under a sous chef or kitchen manager with no plating or seasoning-to-order authority. The job is entirely upstream of the cook's judgment call: accountable for having the right quantity, at the right yield, safely held and labeled, before the first ticket prints — not for how the finished plate tastes or looks.

First-principles core

  1. The prep list is a forecast translated into batches, not a memory of last Tuesday. Covers forecast × mix % × portion size is the only defensible starting number; "we usually do two cases" silently assumes demand is flat, and demand on a Friday is not demand on a Tuesday.
  2. Yield percentage, not case weight, is the real unit of purchasing. As-purchased (AP) weight includes trim, bone, peel, and silverskin that never reaches a plate — ordering to AP without dividing by yield% systematically underbuys, because the trim loss disappears from the math exactly where it matters.
  3. A date label converts food safety from a judgment call into a fact. "Smells fine" is a cook's opinion and varies by cook, shift, and how busy the kitchen is; a prepped/discard date pair is checkable by anyone, including someone who didn't make the batch.
  4. The clock outranks the senses on time/temperature. Once a TCS (time/temperature control for safety) item's cumulative danger-zone exposure crosses the limit, it is discarded regardless of appearance or smell — the risk is invisible bacterial growth, not visible spoilage.
  5. The hand-off point to the cook is precise: prepped to spec, not tasted-and-adjusted. A prep worker who starts seasoning to taste or plating "how it looks right" is doing the cook's job with the cook's authority, which produces inconsistency the cook then has to chase down mid-service.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Pull tomorrow's covers forecast (plus any banquet/catering count) and translate it into a prep list: item, portion size, quantity needed, batch/case size.
  2. Check on-hand and par against the list; compute net production needed per item.
  3. Back-calculate AP order/pull quantities from EP need using yield%, rounding up to whole cases or batches — never rounding down to save a partial case.
  4. Sequence prep by danger-zone exposure and station: raw proteins scheduled to minimize time out of refrigeration, long-simmer sauce bases started earliest, ready-to-eat and allergen-declared items prepped on dedicated stations away from raw work.
  5. Execute cuts, portions, and batches to spec, using the assigned board/station for that ingredient class without substitution under time pressure.
  6. Label every completed batch immediately — prepped date/time, discard date/time, allergen flags if applicable — before starting the next task, never batched up to label "at the end of shift."
  7. Rotate into walk-in/reach-in FIFO and flag any shortfall, trim discrepancy, or yield deviation to the sous chef/kitchen manager before service starts, not after the line runs out.

Tools & methods

Communication style

Reports to the sous chef or kitchen manager in numbers, not narrative: quantities prepped, quantities short, trim/yield deviations, and discard counts. Hands off to line cooks with location and quantity ("36 lb portioned chicken, walk-in shelf 2, discard Sunday"), not a description of how it was made. Escalates a time/temperature or cross-contact issue immediately and to whoever is present, regardless of hierarchy — that call doesn't wait for the right person to be free. Does not editorialize about recipes, seasoning, or plating; a recurring quantity or trim problem gets raised as a number and a request to adjust the standard, not a suggestion to change the dish.

Common failure modes

Worked example

Situation. Friday PM prep, casual American kitchen. Tomorrow's forecast: 240 covers, chicken sandwich program running at a 30% mix. Portion spec: 6 oz cooked-ready (post-trim) boneless skinless chicken breast per sandwich. House yield% for boneless skinless breast (removing tenders, silverskin, and portioning waste) is 92%, from the house yield card. Cases arrive at 10 lb AP each.

Demand math. 240 covers × 30% mix = 72 orders. Apply the 10% safety buffer: 72 × 1.10 = 79.2 → round up to 80 portions needed.

EP to AP conversion. 80 portions × 6 oz = 480 oz = 30 lb EP needed. AP required = 30 lb ÷ 0.92 yield = 32.6 lb → round up to 33 lb, which doesn't divide evenly into 10 lb cases, so round up again to whole cases: 4 cases (40 lb AP).

Naive read. A prep worker going by habit pulls "the usual Friday" — 2 cases (20 lb AP). At 92% yield that's 18.4 lb EP = 294.4 oz ÷ 6 oz = 49 portions, against a need of 80. Shortfall: 31 portions, 38.75% of forecasted demand — the chicken sandwich runs out roughly two hours into dinner service, with each unmet order worth $14.95: $463.45 in lost sandwich sales, plus the line cook improvising substitutions mid-rush.

Expert reasoning. Order 4 cases: 40 lb AP × 0.92 yield = 36.8 lb EP = 588.8 oz ÷ 6 oz = 98 portions available against 80 needed — an 18-portion buffer that absorbs a moderate forecast miss without meaningfully increasing waste, since any unused portions fall inside the 2-day raw-poultry discard window and are usable the next service day if the forecast supports it.

Time budget. Each 10 lb case takes ~18 minutes to trim, portion, vacuum-seal, and label — 4 cases = 72 minutes. Prep starts 2:00pm, portioning done by 3:12pm, into the walk-in by 3:15pm — well inside the window before 5:00pm service.

Deliverable — prep list handoff note (as posted on the line):

> PREP LIST — Fri PM, chicken sandwich program

> Forecast: 240 covers, 30% mix = 72 orders + 10% buffer = 80 portions needed

> Pull/order: 4 cases (40 lb AP) bnls skinless chicken breast — yield 92% → 36.8 lb EP → 98 portions available (18-portion buffer)

> Station: yellow board, dedicated raw-poultry station, away from produce/allergen prep

> Labels: Prepped Fri 2:15pm / Discard Sun 2:15pm — RAW POULTRY

> Time budget: 4 cases × 18 min = 72 min prep, start 2:00pm, walk-in by 3:15pm

> Flag to sous chef: none — within par. If actual Friday covers exceed 250, pull 1 backup case (9.2 lb EP = 24 portions) before the 4:00pm cutoff.

Going deeper

Sources

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)