- On The Line
- Season 1
- Episode 16
24 Hours Until Opening LA's Hottest New Restaurant
Released on 08/23/2023
I think the most exciting thing
is just letting people into the space.
This has been ours by ourselves for over two years,
and we're about to give it away.
[upbeat music]
It's been about two years of construction,
certainly about six months of conceptualization of menu.
In 24, hours we'll know whether we've accomplished it.
I am Ari Kolender.
I'm the chef and partner here at Queen Street.
We're about to open in 24 hours,
so I'd love to show you what we've been working on.
Queen Street is two years in the making.
We're setting out to be a classic raw bar
and seafood grill inspired loosely by Charleston,
where I grew up.
In front of you is the horseshoe raw bar,
it's all the raw oysters,
crab claws, all that kind of stuff.
And then the rest of the food comes
off of an awesome wood-fire grill in the back.
It might look calm right now,
but we have a immense amount of work today.
So first thing we have to do is check out the prep list.
Everyone's about to arrive and we gotta be ready for them.
We've got Max and Jen, my sous chefs.
We've been working in this kitchen for a month together
trying to nail down all the recipes.
Joe's our managing partner and running the front of house.
And then we also have a bunch
of new cooks that are joining us for the first time.
So we're also training them
as we're bulking up for tomorrow.
The first thing we're doing, we have to check the prep list,
figure out if there's any issues,
and we can kind of troubleshoot from there.
I'd say this is about exactly
what I thought we were gonna have to do today,
which is basically everything.
We've got everything from making she-crab soup
on here to hard boiling eggs.
We have to make a big batch of hush puppy batter.
So I'm gonna take a look at this,
get a game plan for my day,
and then huddle up with the sous chefs
and start delegating out to them.
I heard the produce delivery just came in.
We're gonna go check on that so we can keep moving.
Just making sure that everything came in properly,
it's the right price, it's the right product,
and that the quality's there.
These onions, we need to get them up here, okay?
That's where all the meat's gonna go.
Right now we're just making space.
We start on the bottom with seafood, meats,
work our way up as the veggies go,
and then lettuces and herbs get put on top.
We also have this mobile speed rack
that's a very handy tool,
so when we get our thousands of oysters in,
we can just move it
throughout the restaurant since they're so heavy,
it makes it very easy for us.
These specific oysters actually come from Charleston.
We have ordered 10,000 oysters for our opening week,
so we're hoping that's gonna take us through.
So these are some of the best sea urchin
in the world coming from Santa Barbara.
We'll crack them open and throw them
on oysters and on hush puppies and all kinds of fun stuff.
So it travels this way.
It uses all of these little times to move along the rocks.
Smells like a walk-in now.
We just got our Cream Co meat delivery,
80 pounds of lamb ribs and a hundred pounds of pork chops.
This lands from Anderson Ranches out of Oregon.
The beginning of this process is quite simple.
I mean, we're really, the work's been done for us.
These are very clean ribs, whereas taking them out,
we'll give them a little rinse
and then submerge them in our brine for a few hours.
We braise it with red wine and tomatoes,
some dried cummin, dried thyme.
After it comes out of the oven,
we grill them and slather them with a anchovy salsa verde.
In the very beginning,
I like to take on all the bigger projects,
make sure we're doing it the best way
and that way we can teach everyone how to do it.
Charleston cuisine is heavily influenced
by the Gullah Geechee cultures.
So you know, you have like barbecue culture
and things like that,
but it's a lot of peas and corn and tomatoes
and just nice summer crops.
A lot of dried beans for the wintertime.
It's really fun to be able to bring a lot
of what I grew up with to Los Angeles.
There's dishes that you can't really even find back home
anymore that we're gonna be showcasing on the menu tomorrow.
So we have our lamb here.
We've made some brine.
It's water, salt, little sugar, lot of hot sauce.
So we just wanna make sure
that everything is submerged underneath the brine.
And it's 10:40, so this will come out at 2:40 today.
This is our bone-in pork chops from Clingman Farms.
That dish gets a nice chard cabbage
that we then braised in fish sauce
and Dijon mustard and some roasted Fresno chilies as well.
We're gonna teach Max here
how to cut these single rib chops.
How many ribs do we have?
One, two, three, four, five, six.
So this side has meat on this side of the rib, right?
This side, a little less.
We're gonna cut on this side of the rib bone
and we're just gonna try and stay as straight as possible.
Any trim or anything that's smaller than we can use,
we're gonna make stock with.
We're weighing these out to about 14 ounces.
Just so happens that is usually, if you cut it right,
the perfect size with one rib.
A little over, a little under, it's gonna happen.
But we need to make sure that we're not straying too far.
So as head chef, one of the things that I do is making sure
that everyone knows how to do everything.
Today we're teaching Katya how to make she-crab soup.
She-crab soup is kind of like the clam chowder
of the south, we're doing a little fresher take on it.
It's a much more robust flavor.
So we start by adding the butter to the pot,
and then we're gonna turn this on medium-high.
Let's go ahead and add our veggies.
We got onions, celery, leeks, and fennel.
And then, so here we have salt, pepper, cayenne, paprika,
and then also some mace.
Once they become translucent in about three minutes,
we'll start the next step.
It takes a little more time to teach new recipes
at a brand new restaurant.
There's one thing about creating a recipe,
but we're also working together for the first time.
So we have to talk
and understand each other and teach and learn.
So it's 11:45.
We have the whole staff in house now,
so it's getting a little hectic in the dining room.
We're gonna go in the back
and check in with Jen, make some pie dough.
Make sure we're locked in on that recipe for tomorrow.
Jen's been working on this
for the last three weeks, so we're almost there.
So just final tweaks.
Figure out what the best thickness is gonna be
so that we can get a nice even crust,
perfectly toasted on the bottom.
The challenges are working with this new oven
and just understanding how that bakes.
But also we're working with grandma's derby pie recipe,
this pecan chocolate pie.
Other than good crust, good chocolate,
we use Valrhona chocolate here.
We're just also tweaking that recipe
to be exactly right for the restaurant.
Wanna give that a shot?
This roller that we're working with right now is new,
but it controls the thickness and makes it even.
There's these adjustment pieces
on the side that can come off.
You can change your thickness.
We're at a quarter inch right now
so where do you think we are
as comparison to what we've been doing?
I think it's a lot more even.
It's definitely a lot easier to roll out, that's for sure.
[Ari] I guess I'm here right now. This is it.
[Jen] And it looks like about
perfect size for this already.
We're just making sure
that it's pressed well into the pan.
Next, Jen's gonna poke all these holes in here.
After we poke those holes,
we're actually gonna weigh the shell down with beans.
That way it doesn't puff up.
And really just make sure that it's pushed out.
I feel like we nailed it.
[upbeat music]
So it's 12:35.
We finally got our seafood delivery from Sea Stephanie Fish.
So we've got these great crabs from Steph.
So we're gonna make stock out of the bodies,
but we wanna serve these claws on the raw bar.
So first thing we need to do is take the claws off.
We boil them alive because it's the most delicious.
But also, you know, it happens quick.
It's over fast.
It's not making a big mess for us.
Honestly, dealing with fresh seafood
is my favorite task of all time.
If I were to retire somewhere,
I'd probably still take up a trade job.
We also have some amazing rockfish, five pounds each.
Whenever we're getting fish in,
we're just trying to make sure that we have nice, clear eyes
like this, that the gills are fresh and bright and red.
All signs of a healthy fish.
Not bad.
Everyone's on break,
I got the whole kitchen to myself,
can spread out and get it all done quickly.
It's obviously important to keep everything at temperature.
So we've got some ice.
We're making about 1,200 pounds of ice here.
We're lucky enough to be able to put it
in a machine that was big enough that would handle the load,
or so we think, we'll find out tomorrow.
You know, when the fish comes in,
we want to go ahead and get the guts out,
get the scales off.
Those are the things that go south the fastest.
Tomorrow, we'll actually butcher the fish off
of the bone and start cutting it for the crudo that day.
Make a little incision here.
The liver, intestines, the roe sac, all that's in here.
Just gonna rinse them off,
For this rockfish ceviche,
we make a, I like to call it a tomato mignonette.
We add some lime juice, tangerine juice,
a little fish sauce, some shallots, a little olive oil,
a little black pepper, some fresh herbs.
It's a very light, easy crudo, high in flavor.
So you'll notice some of these have
like perfect pristine eyes
and some of them look like a villain in some show.
So that happens because these rockfish live
on the bottom of the ocean and as they're caught,
they get reeled up really quickly.
The change in pressure in the water,
they basically just get the bends.
So it's 1:20,
just gonna finish getting this rockfish put away.
I heard our caviar guy Marcus
from Dorosti Caviar's in the house.
I wanna ask you one question about the Siberian.
Yeah, so what you do is you wanna scoop it from the top,
you don't wanna give it too much space on that thing.
So have everybody just scoop around--
Yeah, stay settled.
Exactly. Okay, cool.
All right man Appreciate you.
We have three different kinds of caviar here.
So the Siberian caviar is from Poland,
that goes onto our oysters with a little uni.
And then for our caviar service,
we have two different kinds.
We have a Kaluga hybrid
we serve an ounce of for around $100.
And then we also have a golden osetra,
which comes in its own little tin.
And that is a little bit more pricey at around $250.
[Producer] How much is that box of caviar?
This? Put it in a briefcase
Guys, so these shirts, these cook shirts, they're for you.
There should be sizes for everybody.
Do all the corn for the special tomorrow?
Shuck it all. Shuck it all. [upbeat music]
Lots of reservations.
I just made one for your wife.
She told me that it's the first opening day
she's ever been to.
She's the only one to-- What could go wrong?
Actually get in.
We're booked solid except for the bar.
Just walk-in only.
We've got about 12 people every 15 minutes.
I figure we litter in some walk-ins as we go.
Nice and slow, nice and easy.
I'm gonna bring the iPad back
to sleep with so I can make any changes.
Perfect.
Have we identified who could potentially
be the expediter for tomorrow?
Demetria, bunch of smart kids.
So what time do we need family meal?
3:00 would be great.
I don't know.
Something's gonna happen tomorrow
and we're gonna be like, oh no, we don't have enough forks.
And the next day it's gonna be like, ah shoot.
[Ari] Still not enough forks.
Yeah, or need more forks again.
So we'll be here for the next three or four hours.
We'll just tighten up everything,
get a great night's sleep, and be ready for tomorrow.
You have obviously plenty to do, so you guys now need to go.
You just want to get a shot at the carnage?
We're doing okay.
We can just 86 the whole thing.
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