I thought Michelle's comments seemed very sincere! I love the fact that she takes the time to talk and address any issues people have expressed here. I didn't see what she said as excuses, I saw her try to explain the truth.
I'm a professional pastry chef. Spent 10 years cooking in my families catering/bakery business, then the past 18* years as a pastry chef only. The items that were sited in the article about the sinks, garbage etc... don't surprise me in the least. Crazy things happen constantly in professional kitchens!! Items break from abuse, sinks clog from stupidity, refrigerators break down. Sometimes you have a ton of delivery's on one day clogging your garbage bin with boxes, sometimes your neighbors "borrow" use of your paid for cans. You can't always prevent stupid people from doing stupid things and get business done. It's hard to baby sit every employees work. You trust them until they prove themselves incompetent. You'll drive yourself crazy as an owner if you don't trust your employees............but sometimes, they fail you. You teach them from there, but you can't always prevent problems.
I've worked in kitchens with-out running water or electricity for the day, when we should have been shut down. But since no health dept. inspectors knew of our dilemma so we kept working. You have to, you have commitments and deadlines to meet... and your employees depend upon their daily income.
As far as the comments about the quality of their products...........I have made several purchases from them. I didn't personally like any of the items I choose. BUT I will tell you, I will not even attempt to bake organic or vegan!
It's DAMN HARD TO DO WELL!!! Most bakeries use tons of mixes and products straight from buckets. That's what she's competing against and there's no way she's going to beat the texture and moisture factors those artificial mixes provide. Those mixes are idiot proof. They take no skill to mix or bake. AND our American society now uses those mixes as their standards of what a baked good should be like texturally.
The type of product Michelle is doing is very demanding, it can never be the same texture as a mix no matter what!I would suggest to Michelle to change around her workers tasks. I'd never let an intern or anyone with less then 10 years of skill man my oven. Let the interns scale up all your products, batch them, decorate them, pack them, do all the grunt work etc... But keep your most experienced person on the mixer and the oven. Those two positions are the most important for maintaining quality control. Interns don't understand that an item continues to cook out of the oven, just like a steak. A cake in a hot pan continues to cook longer then a steak.
Recently, I interviewed at the goddess and grocer, for the pc position. The nightmare stories from their last pastry chef confirms to me what Michelle ran into with selling her work wholesale. Very often chefs keep items until they are sold, with no regard to shelf life. They watch the bottom line too often instead of the quality. That especially happens with regards to baked items. Because most Chefs lack the expertise/knowledge about serving and storing baked goods. If they get a complaint on dessert it's not their problem because they didn't make it, they blame the maker. Never do they see they've contributed to the problem. I've heard stories of moldy creme brulee's being served because no one kept track of the dates once the product was in the serving line cooler.
I also don't think it's fair for people to anonymously knock others. If you want to have a real voice then you need to post using your real name.
I'm Wendy DeBord.