Monday, November 18, 2013

All 68 Chefs Signed In At Official Roll Call

-Marina del Rey, Calif.
-Feast Fest 2013 was officially gaveled into session Monday evening with the official roll call, and all 68 chefs--one more than previously believed due to a processing error surrounding a new addition signed on the last day of the scouting offseason--made it, despite a few close calls.

Still, those close calls are expected to only fuel the debate over the much-maligned practice of a chef not being able to participate on Thanksgiving Day if they do not approach the podium within 45 seconds of their name being announced at the roll call.

D.A. Cook, the final chef to be announced in a list of all 68 chefs in a random, computerized order, raced into the Grand Ballroom, fresh out of a car ferrying him from LAX, making it at the last second to be registered in one of three close calls and four chefs whose registration was in dispute Monday night; all four chefs were eventually successfully registered.

Cook's name was announced as the final name on the list 1 hour and 53 seconds into the official Roll Call clock, in what was one of Feast Fest's longer roll calls due to several pauses for technical and clerical issues.  The Roll Call is sometimes only twenty minutes long.  Cook was not present in the Grand Ballroom, however, and fellow chefs, knowing he was expected to be late, moaned as they believed they would be one short.  The forty-five seconds for Cook to approach the podium began ticking.

But Cook burst through the doors with ten seconds left, rushed toward the podium and successfully was registered before time fizzled out.

"Cutting it a bit close?" joked Dave Welterman, who presided over the Roll Call. 

But Cook's was not the only close call.  A tired Wallace Mornett went up to his hotel room after checking in Monday evening and fell asleep, barely making it to the podium in time.  Chefs corroborated that they had seen Mornett earlier in the day.  He was seen with only about fifteen seconds left, and successfully registered.  "I went to my room and fell asleep, I just came down now [...]  I heard everyone making a fuss, and I said, 'Oh, God, is that [for] me?', and it was!"

Patti Anriyyi had to be called in her hotel room to authenticate that she was present after a friend of hers approached the podium on her behalf, claiming she was feeling sick.  Anriyyi was eventually registered.

Catcalls also came for the Rousswicks, Alan and Jane, as their names were called, due to the scandal involving scouter Peter Chilphingham, who has been fired.  The Rousswicks will miss Core Skills Runthroughs tomorrow while they are interviewed about the matter.

FF Wire Service

FF Chefs Arrive, Await Roll Call

-Marina del Rey, Calif.
-One question pervades throughout Feast Fest this evening:

Where is D.A. Cook?

Cook was the only of the 67 chefs not present at the Beachview. He must be present at the Roll Call at 8 p.m., just an hour away, or else be benched from Feast Fest Nov. 28.

Cook was yet another chef to complain about that regulation of being punished with derostering if one misses the roll call, tweeting about four hours ago, "Weather delays such as the one that has stranded me at ORD should not be followed up by scratching. #Unfair" It was not known if Cook would make the roll call. Adding to Cook's stress is the fact that, while the roll call can take up to twenty or thirty minutes, names are called out in a random, nonalphabetical order. "His name could be the first or the last called, which heightens the rush," Jim McAllister said. McAllister's name was called last in 2007, enabling him to just squeak in after travel delays caused him to arrive during the middle of the Roll Call.

FF Wire Service

21 of 67 Feast Fest Chefs Have Arrived as of Sunday

-Marina del Rey, Calif.
-While Monday morning will be the official arrival period for most of the Feast Fest chefs, 20 chefs arrived in Marina del Rey on Sunday ahead of the ten-day preparation and practice period preceding Feast Fest, which is on Nov. 28.  The activities officially begin Monday evening with the official Feast Fest roll call, with practice sessions commencing Tuesday morning. 

Andruw Stephan, Lynn Avi, Joe Pasik, Lisa Choi, Laelech Crellas, Peter Dumas, Daniel Mettling, Lakeland Donavert, Jacqueline Pierce-Mulleone, Ivan Peterman, Pete Willis, Jawrodly Jurrjens, Jarolde James, Miranda Morimota Patton, Keith Wholehreh, Tony Ruscoso, Wiley Anders, Adam McNeese, Marc Monde, and Jane Rousswick all arrived Sunday.   Andruw's brother Jan, the Mason Duo, and Co-Head Chef Jim McAllister are all based in the Los Angeles area and thus will be able to participate in the 10-day preparation session without checking in to the hotel.

Rousswick's connection to a scouting scandal may bench her from Feast Fest.  She is expected to sit out early practices as she faces interrogation over the matter wherein a now-fired scouter dipped into Feast Fest's official budget to give her $122,222 in lavish gifts.

However, those 20 chefs all arrived later than first-year newbie Eric NacGnissecorp.  The wunderkind arrived on Saturday to get in an extra day of practice, and was billed for his room after he found out that Feast Fest only comps rooms beginning on Sunday night.

The other 46 chefs are expected to arrive Monday, and they must if they want to participate: chefs MUST be present at the official roll call, at 8:00 p.m., in order to be rostered on Thanksgiving.  A chef has not been scrapped from the roster due to failure to make the roll call since 2006.  Still, though, chefs are lobbying hard to have that rule changed, saying that their actions on Monday should not affect whether or not they get to participate 10 days later, and also making the point that the rule does not grant chefs any measure of amnesty for failure to show up based on travel or weather delays.  However, the rule will still remain in place this year, despite efforts to abolish it beginning in 2014.

The arrived chefs, most of them Feast Fest veterans and higher-ups, convened Sunday evening.  Some had dabbled in a bit of practice earlier in the afternoon.

"After two terrible exhibitions," Jan Stephan said, "we want to get every inch of practice that we can before Thanksgiving.  We can't let the score slip like we did at Edelyn and Morro."

FF Wire Service