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Burnbridge
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13 Oct 2011, 7:34 pm

Ok, so a few years ago I realized that I have no interest in filling out generic applications. I have a lot of experience in my field and can afford to be picky, I guess. But when I'm writing my resume, I tend to put way too much information in there. After learning that I'm aspie though, I decided I should leave it all in. Gives them a heads up about how completely "weird" I am, so it automatically weeds out intolerant employers.

I'm moving to Columbus OH, checked out their craigslist, sent off a single resume, and 2 days later: I have a job waiting for me when I get there. Crazy.

I just can't resist sharing the ridiculous resume though. I seriously doulbt that I would hire myself after reading this.

Quote:
Cooking is my life. I'm 36 years old; started cooking in '91, and in '96 I moved to Minneapolis and got into fine dining. At that point, I completely fell in love with cooking.

I currently live in Nebraska, just finishing up after a summer seasonal job. My friend human name here in Columbus wants me to move out there for the winter and help her rehab her house, a hobby of mine. Free rent! An offer I can't refuse.

It may take me a week or two to make it to Columbus.

Finding a "good fit" between worker and employer and environment is very important to me. I'm going to include a lot of personal information at the end of this resume so you can decide whether my personality would mesh well with your kitchen.


---

(Recent) Work Experience


North Shore Lodge: chef / breakfast cook
Spring 2011-present
Site Manager contact: <human & number>
-Classic diner on the shores of Lake McConaughy, Nebraska.
-Clientele are mostly upper middle class from Denver.
-Previous chef left no notes, so was like opening a new restaurant. Made databases for all the inventory and develop a pricing scheme.
-Switched biscuits, pancakes from pre-fab to from-scratch. Customers loved it. Biscuits and scones are "my jam," if you will.
-Cut waste and spoilage down from $30k the previous year (?! seriously), down to about $800. Lots of waste at the end of the year, being a seasonal restaurant.
-Converting the space into a professional (pass window and refrigerated inserts) setup to improve efficiency.
-My busiest day: I fed 270 people, mostly parties of 6-10 people, didn't have a ticket time over 14 minutes, and didn't burn a single omelet.


Onesto, St Louis Mo: pasta maker / prep / saucier
fall 2010 - early 2011
Chef de Cuisine: <human & number>
Busy southern Italian pizza / fine dining. Local ingredients, top local chef. Chef hired me to open a new restaurant, and was filling in shifts for me to retain my availability until the new place opened, which got delayed (of course) from February to March to April to ...? When the winter slump hit, I lost nearly all my hours and couldn't afford to live in St Louis anymore ... then I got the job offer in Nebraska and couldn't refuse. Better than being homeless.


Travelling: freelance associate fellow
summer 2009-fall 2010
self unemployed, by choice
Spent nearly a year and a half travelling the country by train and bicycle. Worked on a lot of art projects. Helped friends rehab their new houses. Built a guitar. I'd been itching to travel since I was 20, and it was a satisfying and eventful mid life crisis.


Citizen Cafe & The Forum, both Minneapolis
Two short lived jobs back to back after the Seward. Brunch & prep at both. Chef at Citizen was the most hostile sociopath I've ever worked with (and that's saying something.) The Forum stopped paying their employees 2 months after opening. Neither is worth calling for a reference.

Seward Collective Cafe, Minneapolis: owner / breakfast cook
fall 2007 - spring 2009
personnel contact: <human & number>
Busy, mostly vegetarian, breakfast joint. Collectively run, not a professional atmosphere. Decent food, lots of local and organic ingredients. I learned right quick that a consensus based collective is not a pragmatic method of operating a restaurant.

Craftsman Restaurant, Minneapolis: brunch chef / grill cook
winter 2005 - fall 2007
(former) chef: <human & number>
Local food, fine dining. Loved cooking brunch but had to fill in a couple nights a week on the burger grill. I am not a night person, was a bad fit. Chef was an amazing chef, one of the top 5 in Minneapolis.


Anodyne Coffee House & Cafe, Minneapolis: general manager: incl. barista / brunch cook
summer 2004 - winter 2005
owner contact: <human & number>
Slamming weekend breakfast joint. I love coffee, and most of my former employees told me I was a great manager, but I severely disliked being "on call" 24/7 and filling in for kids who were too drunk to show up for work. I just wasn't ready to be a GM.

---

About Working With Me


I'm a thin and wiry, high energy person. An adrenaline junkie. If I don't have tickets up (or many tickets up), I'm prepping, cleaning, straightening the walk in or cleaning something else.

Breakfast appeals to my need for excitement. Fast ticket times, and delicate foods that have narrow margins of error. Recognizing specific textures and colors. Details. Soups and sauces appeal to my attention to detail. A very typical arrangement for me in a kitchen is to work brunch shifts, or the busier breakfast days, and then do 2 or 3 days of prep and saucier.

I come equipped with an Masamoto Sohonten carbon steel gyuto and keep it well honed. You know how some pepole name their knives? My knife is named "faith," because I worship it. After working or doing a stage in over 38 restaurants, I've only met 3 people who are faster and more accurate with a chef's knife than I am (how's that for modesty?)

I'm pragmatic. Yes, I have high ideals, but I don't see the point in trying to hammer a square peg through a round hole. My inclinations are towards fine dining and local whole foods, making things from scratch. But I'm not limited to that. I defer to the Chef's judgement for what they think is best. It's their show, not mine.

I do enjoy learning and teaching, a frequently will do a stage when I'm passing through a town or on my days off, just to broaden my perspective and experience. One of the things I love about cooking is that you never stop learning. When you think you've mastered something, you learn that there's another step you can take. Maybe 8 more steps.

I play team. "That's not my job" attitude has no place in a restaurant.

I'm odd. If it seems like I'm really amazing or really arrogant, don't believe it. Nobody's perfect. When it comes down to it, I'm crazy as a baker. Not crazy really, just different.

My senses of smell and touch are insanely acute. I can't wear synthetic fabrics or deodorant because they give me skin rashes, but I shower once or twice a day with unscented soap. But I can think with my fingers. So I can hit my target texture with doughs very accurately: in biscuits, scones, pasta, bread, quiche crust. I can smell nuances in spice mixtures, and I know that 1/2 cup of garlic or chilis have a variable intensity range. I cook to the target, not to the letter of the recipe. I also tend to think food has spoiled long before other people do.

I tend to speak kitchen quick talk at work: "kevin, throw me an onion" instead of "hey can someone please maybe pass me an onion when they get a minute, please?" And I bark loud and clear so I can be heard over the exhaust hoods and fridges. Sometimes people think that I'm angry because of the barking. I'm not. The only thing that makes me angry is apathy.

I'm not much on the chit chat, and don't liking hanging out with my coworkers. Work and life stay separate. Oh, I'm friendly and will crack a corny joke every now and then when we're not busy. Morale is important. I just don't care to get involved in the melodrama.

I despise apathy. Apathy, waste, lying and stealing are my enemies. That's about the extent of my morality, right there. If you put bacon on a dish and call it pancetta, I will probably chew you out for it, even if you're the boss. I won't tell you bacon is bad on that dish, or question your decision to use bacon. I'm just not into deception.

I like a clear chain of command. I like working for a chef / manager who knows what they want out of every single dish. I like being told when I do something wrong, and I like being told when I did something right. I don't like secrets and mystery in the kitchen. If I'm working for you, I want to make food the way you want it made.

I'm into food science. "On Food and Cooking" is my favorite book. Baking, soups and sauces especially appeal to me, scientifically.

Oh, and I sure do look funny. For some reason, my face doesn't reflect my moods. Like it speaks a different body language. So when I'm really happy, it just looks like I'm smirking a little. When I'm concentrating, such as at work, I might look pissed off. I'm actually having fun. Sometimes this puts people off a little. No matter how many times I explain it, some people just can't accept that my face plays by different rules.

I'm not an empathizer, but I do care about people (polar opposite of sociopathy). I just can't tell what you're thinking by looking at your face or reading your body language. I probably won't get what you're trying to infer. I'm literal minded, so talk straight to me, boss.

Sarcasm is also lost me, when it's about something serious, like my work performance. Had that problem at Onesto a lot. Chef was very sarcastic about important things. He'd call and say "hey I'm going to be late," (he had the keys to get in), and I'd say "do you want me to come later then?" and he said "sure, why don't you just take your time getting here." "like 10 or 11)?" "sure." Then he chewed me out for showing up late. Frustrating.

---

In my Free Time


I'm not a drinker or drug user. I like to do stuff in my spare time.

I ride my bicycle everywhere, and do all the repairs on it myself. Longest ride I've taken was 1,442 miles.

I have a cat named Mr Bonkers. He's my best friend.

I read books. In the last 2 months, I read 12,000 pages.

I cook. At home, before work and after. Can't stop cooking. I'm especially into making fermented & salt cured condiments: pickles, sauerkraut, bacon, kombucha, ketjap, etc.

I play guitar. Actually, I built my own guitar from scrap wood and brass.

I fix houses. Carpentry, electrical, drywall, windows and doors are my main house skills.

I sew, by hand with needle and awl. Make my own bags, backpacks and clothing.

I screen print. Posters, album covers, shirts, patches, plate glass, bumper stickers, sheet metal; you name it, I can print on it.

I make & fix guitar amplifiers. Electronics, enclosures, speakers. Rock out. Used to make microphones, too.

I like camping, bonfires & swimming.

Sometimes I go to shows, but not if I'm working the next day. Sleep is better.

---

So that's me. Too much information, sure.

If it seems like a good fit and you can wait a couple weeks (or if the person you just hired isn't working out) give me a ring: <my contact info>



ab65
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13 Oct 2011, 9:02 pm

I enjoyed reading that, thanks for posting.



Last edited by ab65 on 13 Oct 2011, 11:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.

MountainLaurel
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13 Oct 2011, 9:08 pm

Bridge, this post made my day. Your resume is ridiculous, sure. I adore it. The About Me section is an outline of how to tell an employer what to expect without saying; I have Aspergers Syndrome. It works because you have the chops to back it up.

The REAL clue to the aspergers:
I read books. In the last 2 months, I read 12,000 pages.



Ilka
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13 Oct 2011, 9:55 pm

I absolutely ADORE your resume. It is so personal and full of energy! I have hired people before, and I would have called you... Good luck with our new job!

By the way, I am not a chef, but I also enjoy cooking. Very much. Like in growing my own spices and making my own broth much.



PaintingDiva
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14 Oct 2011, 8:08 am

You have a wonderful writing style, direct, breezy, no nonsense, this is me and this is how I operate at work. You got your points across in a conversational style and you hit all the salient points. You are a hard worker, you don't like apathy, dishonesty and you are passionate about food and cooking. And you will even do extra work that might not be 'your job', radical. Same kind of work ethic I adhere to. Drives me crazy to see work not done because, oh well that is not in my job description....

You also explain how you present to the world, so you are nipping in the bud, before you even get there, any NT blow back on how you work in the kitchen.

You understand waste, loss and theft in the restaurant business and you won't tolerate it, any restaurant would be lucky to have you working for them.

Thanks for posting! Do an update sometime to let us know how your new job goes. I sent a copy of your resume to my son, as in take a look at this, isn't it great?

Maybe you should write a book about your adventures in cooking someday? Can you post your favorite biscuit recipe? I bake biscuits, eating most restaurant biscuits is a disappointment to me always. Same for pecan pie for that matter, but I digress. Great job!



Burnbridge
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14 Oct 2011, 8:37 am

thx for the feedback! :D

Diva, I am writing two books about the restaurant biz right now, albeit very slowly. I spend so much time on my feet that I rarely have the inclination to sit and write.

The first book consists of what should be taught in cooking school, but isn't. Cooking school is insanely expensive, because you have to pay for all the truffles and other "fancy" ingredients, but then you only spend a week or two on each discipline. 2 weeks baking cakes really doesn't teach you anything. Cooking school also tells you nothing if you want to be a waiter, or about how the delicate dynamics between manager/waiter/cook/dish/baker/prep function.

the second book will be called "A stage" (pr. ah-stazghe), which is french for "training" or "apprenticeship." It's a fine dining phenomenon that is very confusing for those who have never experiences it. A strange process where you go work a day at a restaurant for free. You give them 8 hours of work, they give you a meal or two. Sort of a temporary apprenticeship.

Most nice restaurants require a stage as an interview. Most cooks are liars (85% of ex-cons become cooks), and you have to demonstrate your abilities before they hire you. The stage also determines your starting wage. The thing about it that most people forget is that it also lets the prospective employee to decide whether they want to work for that Chef.

Which is what I want to write about. Most Chefs are pure, unadulterated evil. I travel a lot, and I want to start doing more stages at renowned restaurants...just so I can decline the job and chew out the chef. Even if the chef is great and doesn't get chewed out - hey, well it's kind of like washing dishes for a meal (which I've also done, it's much fun.) Then write a humorous book about it, including restaurant reviews from inside the kitchen.

Biscuit recipe is forthcoming. Will deserve it's own thread, as most of what happens in a biscuit typically cannot be written in a recipe. That's why most restaurant biscuits are not so great, at best.


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DialAForAwesome
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14 Oct 2011, 9:14 am

Congrats! You'll be right around my area.....


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Ichinin
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14 Oct 2011, 9:27 am

Dude, you should also consider a second career helping the unemployed learn how to write kick-ass resumes!


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Ilka
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14 Oct 2011, 10:39 am

Burnbridge wrote:
Diva, I am writing two books about the restaurant biz right now, albeit very slowly. I spend so much time on my feet that I rarely have the inclination to sit and write.


Could you post when your finish, so I can get them? I like reading about the restaurant biz. I have just read "Kitchen confidential" and "Medium raw", but I enjoyed both. I have also read countless recipe books, but that's another story... I liked your resume, so I think your books will be very enjoyable...



AardvarkGoodSwimmer
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14 Oct 2011, 12:12 pm

I think he might be hoping to make some money on his writings, and nothing wrong with that!

Burnbridge, you write very well. But please keep in mind that any artistic pursuit has elements of being a long shot, with a lot of luck factors and external factors.

Congrats on your new job and new move. And good luck with art and everything else. :D



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14 Oct 2011, 12:28 pm

A wonderful example of "right place, right time."

I got an part-time job in graduate school because I e-mailed many firms over Christmas break (looking for a summer job). The recipient was impressed with my "initiative" (which I thought was odd because if you don't start looking around December, nothing will be open by the time April rolls around.

Someone looking for a dedicated chef found your ad and opened a door.

Congrats.

If you wait for someone to advertise that they need someone, you don't always find the best selection of options. Most upper-tier employers don't advertise...they already have resumes on their desk from people who want to work there before the opening even comes up.



Burnbridge
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14 Oct 2011, 12:57 pm

Anthony Bourdain can be really funny, even if he does romanticize the gruesomeness of kitckens quite a lot. Kitchen Confidential is fun though.

Ilka: it will probably be a few years, I hope you can wait for it!

Aardvark: I'm not actually planning on making money off the books at all. I follow Scott McCloud's definition of art: "anything that is not done for food, shelter or procreation."

I just like to teach, and get frustrated when I get started and exceed someone's attention span. The only real way to get it all across is to do it in writing (& pictures). So for me, it's more of something I need to do for myself than it is a scheme to profit from.

zer0netgain & ichinin: I actually think I'm a lousy resume writer. most employers don't like "too much information." In the past, I've almost always been able to find a new job in about a week ... and the last couple years shattered that streak. It's nice to get my groove back on though.

Oh, during the phone interview, I spontaneously came up with a good answer for a question that has always stymied me:

boss: "i don't know, you are really overqualified for this job"
me (laughing): "yeah! I'm overqualified for every job!"


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Ilka
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14 Oct 2011, 2:13 pm

AardvarkGoodSwimmer wrote:
I think he might be hoping to make some money on his writings, and nothing wrong with that!


Oh. I did not meant it that way. What I intended was to ask him to let us know when the book is ready so I can buy it. I have no problem paying and I believe in copyright if I have the chance to get the info in a legit way. If I do not have access to the info by any other means... then I become a pirate. :twisted:



Ilka
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14 Oct 2011, 2:15 pm

Burnbridge wrote:
Ilka: it will probably be a few years, I hope you can wait for it!


Dont worry. No rush...



mvaughn32
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15 Oct 2011, 10:54 am

Wow, I knew a guy that worked at North Shore a few years ago. Small world!



AardvarkGoodSwimmer
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18 Oct 2011, 1:01 pm

Please note, this may not work near as well in a corporate workplace.

Burnbridge is appealing to an owner who is interested in the operational side, for example, not wasting food, and wanting someone who is going to be honest and candid.

In many corporate work places, what they really want you to do is to paper over unpalatable reality with official, neutral-sounding language. Yeah, really.

---------------

PS I like your definition of art.