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Ask Rahul! Plates & Places

Podcast von Rahul Shrivastava

Englisch

Kultur & Freizeit

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Mehr Ask Rahul! Plates & Places

Ask Rahul! Plates & Places is a food and hospitality storytelling podcast where chef and food‑business leader Rahul Shrivastava explores how different kinds of stays create memorable eating experiences. From hotels and restaurants to villas, forts, homestays and hostels, each episode focuses on one place, one plate, and the story behind it.You’ll hear how menus are designed, buffets are planned, and local dishes are turned into signature experiences—plus simple ideas you can use to improve your own property, brand or travels. Whether you’re a hospitality professional, a culinary student, a stay owner, or a curious traveller who loves food, Plates & Places gives you warm stories, practical insights and a fresh way to look at the tables you sit at.

Alle Folgen

17 Folgen

Episode #17 - Restraining Order Against your "Delivered HOT food." Cover

#17 - Restraining Order Against your "Delivered HOT food."

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/fan_mail/new] Episode Title: Why Food Temperature Drops Before the Customer Even Opens the Bag — And Did the Warm Air File a Restraining Order Against Your Packaging? Episode Description: Forty seven minutes. That is the average time between a food order being placed and the moment a customer takes their first bite. In those forty seven minutes, your food moves from a hot kitchen through a container, into a bag, onto a motorcycle, through traffic, and onto a dining table — losing heat at every single transition, according to laws of physics that do not care about your star rating or your packaging budget. By the time that bag is opened, most food has lost between 15 and 25 degrees Celsius from its ideal serving temperature. The fat has begun to congeal. The sauce has thickened. The aromatics have flattened. And the customer — who cannot always articulate exactly why — knows something is wrong. In this episode, Rahul — chef, food engineer, and 24-year veteran of professional kitchens across three continents — breaks down exactly where the heat is going and why it is going there faster than most operators have ever measured. This episode covers the three mechanisms of heat loss — conduction, convection, and radiation — explained in plain language so that every QSR operator, cloud kitchen founder, and delivery-first brand can understand what is physically happening to their product between the hot line and the customer's first bite. It introduces the concept of thermal mass — why your biryani arrives hot and your fried chicken arrives cold even when both leave the kitchen at the same temperature — and why treating every item on your menu with identical packaging is one of the most common and most costly thermal management mistakes in food delivery. Through three real operational stories — a cloud kitchen that was packaging curry and fried chicken identically, a QSR operation losing heat in the staging area before the rider even arrived, and a restaurant owner whose packaging was fine but whose riders were carrying the bags wrong — this episode shows that the temperature problem in delivery is almost never what operators think it is. And the fix is almost always simpler, and cheaper, than they expect. Six practical solutions cover everything from matching packaging thermal specification to product thermal mass, eliminating the staging window, using double-walled containers for thermally vulnerable items, choosing reflective bag liners, tightening the delivery radius, and training riders on the one carrying protocol change that costs nothing and works immediately. Temperature management is not a packaging problem. It is a physics problem. And physics, unlike a difficult supplier or a bad review, follows rules. This episode gives you the rules. Books mentioned in this episode: On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee Food Engineering Principles and Selected Applications — Mohsenin Delivering the Goods — Food Logistics and Packaging Science Contributors This week's listener challenge — the Hashtag Temperature Drop Test: Place a food thermometer into your next delivery order the moment it arrives. Record the temperature at the bag surface, the food temperature on arrival, and the food temperature five minutes later. Post your three numbers on LinkedIn or Instagram with the hashtag Temperature Drop Test and tag us. The most revealing thermal decay data gets a shoutout next episode. Next episode: Why Delivery Platforms Destroy Your Food Margins — and whether the aggregator is quietly eating a bigger meal than your customer ever did. Hashtags: #PlatestoPlaces #FoodDelivery #ThermalManagement #CloudKitchen #QSROperations #FoodScience #DeliveryPackaging #FoodBusiness #TemperatureDropTest #RestaurantOperations Food Issues Solved!  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/support] Food Issues Solved!

22. Mai 2026 - 22 min
Episode #16 - Why Fried Chicken Turns Rubbery Under Heat Lamps! Cover

#16 - Why Fried Chicken Turns Rubbery Under Heat Lamps!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/fan_mail/new] Why Fried Chicken Turns Rubbery Under Heat Lamps — And Is the Holding Drawer Secretly Running a Sauna for Your Best Sellers? Episode Description: It left the fryer perfect. Shatteringly crisp crust. Juicy interior. Seasoned exactly right. Someone on your team looked at it coming out of the oil and felt genuine pride. That piece was exactly what it was supposed to be. Then it went into the holding drawer. And twelve minutes later, a customer opened the box to find something that was soft, leathery, and resistant in all the wrong ways. The crust did not crack. The interior did not yield. The chicken was, in the technical language of food science, rubbery. In the everyday language of a one-star review, it was terrible. Nothing went wrong in the fryer. Everything went wrong in the drawer. In this episode, Rahul — chef, food engineer, and 24-year veteran of professional kitchens across three continents — breaks down the two simultaneous and completely separate mechanisms that the holding environment uses to destroy your fried chicken. The moisture problem that attacks the crust from the outside. And the protein tightening problem that attacks the interior from the inside. Both are happening at the same time. Most operations are only aware of one of them. This episode covers the complete science of what happens to chicken muscle protein under sustained heat after cooking — why it continues to denature and contract long after the fry is complete, why a piece held for 20 minutes is a fundamentally different product from one held for 8 minutes even at identical temperatures, and why the humidity function on your holding drawer — designed to keep chicken moist — is one of the most common and most damaging settings in QSR operations today. Through three real operational stories — a delivery QSR brand whose holding drawer settings were quietly destroying every piece that left the kitchen, a five-star hotel wedding banquet where two hours of steam table holding turned a perfectly fried product into something texturally closer to boiled chicken, and a high-volume Middle East operation that solved its holding problem with a convection airflow system nobody had tried before — this episode shows that the holding drawer is not a neutral environment. It is an active force acting on your product. And right now, in most operations, it is working against you. Six practical solutions cover turning off the humidity function for all fried products, calibrating holding temperature to the lowest safe point rather than the highest convenient one, defining and enforcing a hold time limit as an operational non-negotiable, elevating product off the holding surface for air circulation, reformulating your breading system for hold time performance rather than just initial crunch, and frying as close to despatch time as your operation allows. The holding drawer is where your best product goes to become your worst review. This episode gives you everything you need to stop that from happening. Books mentioned in this episode: On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee The Science of Good Cooking — America's Test Kitchen Meathead — The Science of Great Barbecue and Grilling — Meathead Goldwyn This week's listener challenge — the Hashtag Drawer Test: Fry or order a piece of fried chicken and taste it at three specific points — immediately, at ten minutes, and at twenty minutes. Rate the crust texture, the interior texture, and the overall experience at each point on a scale of one to ten. Post your three scores and observations on LinkedIn or Instagram with the hashtag Drawer Test and tag us. The most methodical experiment and the most honest finding gets a shoutout next episode. Next episode: Why Food Temperature Drops Before the Customer Food Issues Solved!  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/support] Food Issues Solved!

15. Mai 2026 - 22 min
Episode #15 - Fries - Going Through an Emotional Softening Phase! Cover

#15 - Fries - Going Through an Emotional Softening Phase!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/fan_mail/new] Episode Title: Why Fries Lose Their Crunch Within Five Minutes — And Are They Just Going Through an Emotional Softening Phase? Episode Description: Five minutes. That is all you get. From the moment a perfectly fried batch of French fries comes out of the oil — golden, crackling, impossibly light — you have approximately five minutes before the crunch begins to die. Not degrade slowly. Not fade gently. Die. And yet the average delivery journey is forty seven minutes. The maths has never worked in the fry's favour. Until now. In this episode, Rahul — chef, food engineer, and 24-year veteran of professional kitchens across three continents — goes inside the fry itself to explain exactly why crunch fails, where the moisture is coming from, and why the enemy of your fry's texture is not the air around it but the fry sitting right next to it. This episode covers the complete science of starch retrogradation and moisture migration — why the same gelatinised starch structure that creates the crunch in the first place becomes the mechanism that destroys it the moment the fry is packaged. It explains why fries at the bottom of the box always go soft first, why holding at higher temperatures accelerates moisture loss rather than slowing it, and why the five-minute crunch window is not a limitation of the fry but a failure of everything that happens to the fry after the fryer. Through three real operational stories — a QSR delivery brand whose kitchen was producing excellent fries that were being destroyed by a single packaging decision, a food manufacturing project that spent months engineering a coating system specifically for delivery crunch retention, and a single-operator kitchen that was solving entirely the wrong problem — this episode makes the case that soggy fries are never a recipe problem. They are an engineering problem. And engineering problems have engineering solutions. Six practical solutions cover coating formulation for moisture resistance, the double-fry technique and why it extends your crunch window from the very first minute out of the oil, vented packaging and elevated container bases, hold time discipline, delivery radius management as a quality variable, and the par-cook and finish system that high-volume delivery operations are using to produce a consistently crispy product at scale. Your fry does not lose its crunch because frying is imperfect. It loses its crunch because the environment it travels through after frying has never been treated as a design variable. This episode shows you how to treat it as one. Books mentioned in this episode: The Food Lab — J. Kenji Lopez-Alt Coatings Technology Handbook Food Physics — Ludger Figura and Arthur Teixeira This week's listener challenge — the Hashtag Crunch Clock Challenge: Order fries from three different QSR or delivery operations this week. Open one portion at the one-minute mark and rate the crunch on a scale of one to ten. Open another portion at the eight-minute mark and rate again. Post both scores on LinkedIn or Instagram with the hashtag Crunch Clock and tag us. The most methodical crunch decay curve gets a shoutout next episode. Next episode: Why Fried Chicken Turns Rubbery Under Heat Lamps — and whether your holding drawer is secretly running a sauna for your best-selling products without anyone's permission. Hashtags: #PlatestoPlaces #SoggyFries #CrunchScience #QSROperations #FoodDelivery #CloudKitchen #FoodEngineering #FoodBusiness #CrunchClock #DeliveryPackaging Food Issues Solved!  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/support] Food Issues Solved!

8. Mai 2026 - 20 min
Episode #14 - Peak Hour in Kitchen & Beyond the Pass! Cover

#14 - Peak Hour in Kitchen & Beyond the Pass!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/fan_mail/new] Every kitchen has a breaking point. For most, it arrives at exactly 8 PM on a Friday — when the printer stops pausing, the pass fills up, and everything that was running smoothly thirty minutes ago begins to quietly fall apart. In this episode, Rahul — chef, food engineer, and 24-year veteran of professional kitchens across three continents — breaks down the real reason peak hour destroys food quality. And it is not the volume of orders. It is the absence of systems built to absorb that volume. This episode covers the four things that fail first when a kitchen hits chaos — communication, portioning discipline, temperature management, and judgment — and why each one shows up silently on your guest's plate before anyone in the kitchen realises it happened. Through three real kitchen stories, including one where Rahul himself got it completely wrong, you will understand why the best peak hour kitchens do less with complete precision rather than more with constant compromise. And why the chaos you experience every Friday at 8 PM was actually created at 4 PM — or last Thursday — or the day you decided not to write the playbook. Whether you run a QSR, a cloud kitchen, a restaurant, or a delivery-first brand, this episode gives you six practical, implementable solutions — from building a peak hour playbook to protecting your expeditor function to knowing exactly which items to pull from your live menu before the wave hits. The food does not fail at peak hour. The preparation does. Books mentioned in this episode: Setting the Table — Danny Meyer Turn the Ship Around — L. David Marquet The Kitchen as a System — Culinary Operations Management This week's listener challenge — the Hashtag Peak Hour Audit: Set a timer for 8 PM this Friday. Observe for 60 seconds. Write down three things that are breaking. Post your honest audit on LinkedIn or Instagram with the hashtag Peak Hour Audit and tag us — the most practical self-assessment gets a shoutout next episode. Next episode: Why QSR Fries Lose Their Crunch Within Five Minutes — and whether your holding drawer is secretly a retirement home for food that used to be excellent. Hashtags: #PlatestoPlaces #PeakHourChaos #KitchenOperations #ChefLife #QSROperations #CloudKitchen #FoodBusiness #RestaurantManagement #FoodQuality #PeakHourAudit Food Issues Solved!  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/support] Food Issues Solved!

30. Apr. 2026 - 18 min
Episode #13 - Issues of a Burger Bun! Cover

#13 - Issues of a Burger Bun!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/fan_mail/new] Burger Bun Issues is a practical podcast that explores the many challenges behind making a great burger bun. Hosted by Rahul, the show dives into bun quality, texture, shelf life, structure, softness, absorbency, and how the bun affects the overall burger experience. From food development to real-world kitchen and manufacturing problems, this podcast breaks down the details that decide whether a bun supports the filling or ruins the bite. Whether you work in food product development, operations, QSR, baking, or simply love understanding what makes burgers better, Burger Bun Issues offers clear insights and useful ideas. Each episode focuses on the science, craft, and problem-solving behind one of the most important yet overlooked parts of the burger. #BurgerBunIssues #BurgerInnovation #FoodProductDevelopment #BakingScience #QSRInsights #CulinaryInnovation #FoodTechnology #BurgerBusiness #FoodSolutions #RahulPodcast Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546223/support] Food Issues Solved!

25. Apr. 2026 - 49 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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