The newly established Notions restaurant, based in Two Pups Café, Dublin 8, is offering 20% off on Tuesday evenings for anyone working in the hospitality industry – from bartenders, waitresses, nurses and more.
By Alex Cloud
Anyone who has worked in the hospitality industry can relate to the feeling of not having time on weekends to socialise or to go out and enjoy nice food that isn’t the standard pub grub or takeaways we’re all too familiar with. It is for this reason that the team at Notions has decided to offer a discount for anyone in the industry.
James Walsh, the head chef at Notions, explained: “My vision of hospitality is very much this collaborative community of passionate people coming together and enjoying what we all have to offer.”
“We’re a new restaurant, so engaging with each other is important and not to mention, powerful.”
Notions located in Two Pups Café on Francis Street, Dublin 8. Photo credit: Alex Cloud
The team has used social media and word of mouth to try and advertise the discount. Walsh said: “Obviously, we hope people come and enjoy the food, but we want them to come back, and of course, tell their friends. Come and try! You know?”
The restaurant sources all its ingredients from local farms and Irish producersencapsulating the love they share for food and supporting local. Dishes including steak and pepper sauce, fresh gnocchi pasta and a special where customers can try one of every dish available on the menu.
Walsh recently travelled abroad, which he said inspired some of the items on the menu, and of course, the NO FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) special. “I was recently in Lisbon, and there was so much going on that we decided, let’s find a way to have people try it all,” said Walsh.
“My training has been quite formal as I’ve worked in Michelin-level restaurants – so this is kind of like having fun with it, while still having the techniques behind the dishes and the complexity. It’s food I like to eat!”
Walsh explained that Dublin 8 is a blooming area and that they hope the discount brings everyone in and together, even just to network with one another. “I like to think it’ll be a way for people to get to know each other and maybe meet people in other areas of the industry as well,” he said.
Head chef James Walsh. Photo credit: Mayara SuzartDinner set up at Notions. Photo credit: Mayara Suzart
“Obviously, I work in hospitality, and I love going out to eat, so I just feel like it’s so important to support each other.”
The general manager of the establishment, Moses Rurwendwa, said: “I started off in Greystones and have since moved all the way up to Dublin. Since then, I’ve made so many connections – there is so much community here.”
“I love building on to this community for the future generations, the way it was given to me when I was coming up.”
Moses Rurwendwa behind the counter, setting up for the evening ahead. Photo credit: Alex Cloud
“It’s an amazing industry, but it’s hard, it’s not glamorous, there can sometimes be no thanks,” Walsh said.
The discount is available every Tuesday after 5pm, and anyone who works in hospitality can avail of it. The team even encourages anyone who comes in to try the NO FOMO menu. Rurwendwa explained that patrons can avail of the discount if they can prove they work in hospitality.
“Just come in and see what you miss out on while working weekends,” said Rurwenda. “Come enjoy yourself, with some good food, just the way everyone else does when we’re looking after them.”
A restaurant known worldwide is opening in Dublin this month. Gloria Osteria already has restaurants in Barcelona and Milan. The chain is owned by the Big Mamma Group.
The restaurant had been rumoured to open in Dublin since the start of this year, and the news was confirmed on July 6 when they made an Instagram specifically for the Dublin location. Since September, they have been posting videos of the food they will be serving when it opens. They have also posted three videos about some of the chefs that are involved, as well as a video talking about Parmigiano Reggiano (parmesan).
Gloria Osteria Dublin is set to open Nov. 27 on 41 Westmoreland Street, right in the middle of the city.
Outside of the building where the public can see a sneak peak of the restaurant. Photo credit: Zita Fox
According to the Big Mamma website, they are a French restaurant group formed in 2015. It was founded by entrepreneurs Victor Lugger and Tigrane Seydeux. They opened their first restaurant, Mamma Gorda, in the South of France in April of 2015.
They have said it was with the opening of East Mamma in Paris that they cemented themselves in the Italian restaurant world properly. Before opening they made the effort to transport ingredients from Italy and started making their own pasta. They also mentioned how they found an antique roaster to make their own coffee.
The restaurant is known for its authentic Italian food and elegant 1970s interior design in all their restaurants. The Dublin location will seat about 180 guests. It will also have a private dining room that can seat 22 people.
One of the construction workers on site said, “We’ve been working hard every day to make the restaurant as nice as possible. Hopefully the hard work pays off, and we get it done soon.”
TheCity had the chance to have a quick look into the building and from the quick glance we can see the burgundy design within. In the middle of the room, we can see a huge chandelier with marble steps leading up to it. If they are taking inspiration from the other Gloria Osteria restaurants then Dublin can expect to see a lot of mood lighting with funky but fashionable furniture sourced from Italian markets throughout. There will be a huge marble bar that will supposedly sit under 700 used bottles.
Just outside the building, TheCity can see they are almost ready for the big opening night as they are starting to bring in plants and flowers to help bring the place to life.
The name Gloria Osteria is most likely derived from Italian. Gloria translates to glory and osteria is a traditional place to enjoy food and wine in Italy. Therefore, the name is a play on words and loosely translates to glorious Italian food; some may say this is the perfect name for the restaurant as that is what it’s known for.
The original restaurant opened in Milan in 2023 with the Barcelona one opening just last year. Adding Dublin and Paris to the list of places this month, Gloria Osteria is only growing bigger every year.
Just
over two weeks ago, the restaurant Circa
in Terenure won a Michelin Bib Gourmand award recognising a high quality dining
experience at an affordable price. The restaurant only opened its doors in
March but while its rise has been rapid, the journey to get there has been far
from straightforward.
The restaurant
is co-owned by head chef Gareth Naughton, general manager Ross Duffy and
wholesale manager Emmet Murphy. The three friends have a wealth of experience
working in pubs and restaurants and had always dreamed of setting up their own
place.
Ross said: “I met Gareth working in 3FE Coffee in Grand Canal Dock.
Myself and Gareth just got on like a house on fire. We understood each other
and how each other worked. I looked after the floor and he looked after the
kitchen. Then we ended up living together and we always said if we got the
chance we’d open up somewhere.”
Gareth Naughton (left) and Ross Duffy (right) at Circa. Photo Credit: Aidan Coyle
When
Emmet Murphy agreed to join, the trio was complete. Ross said: “Emmet, our
other co-owner, I’ve known since I was a kid. He worked in Celtic Whiskey Shop
on Dawson Street as the accounts manager looking after all premium wines and
spirits.
“He
took me for a little lunch and he was kind of like ‘Jeez I’d love to do
something one day’ so I kind of looped him in on it. I said look you can do the
back end stuff, all the wines and beer. I’ll look after the front, I’ll run it
and then Gareth would run the kitchen.
“We
just kind of said look, if we ever got a chance, we’d chase it. I suppose the
hardest part was just kind of getting the place,” said Ross.
The
men finally got the keys to their restaurant last November but there were
problems right from the start.
“Basically
all of our money ran out cause of how long it took us. We painted the place
ourselves. We couldn’t afford to get the professionals to do it. We probably
should have,”said Gareth.
“It
would have taken a professional like three to four days. It took us 3 weeks. We
just couldn’t do it. It looks like such an easy job but it wasn’t. Like corners
inside there, you’d be surprised how long that takes to paint,” said Gareth.
“I’m never doing it again,” Ross added.
“I’d love to be able to say that’s grand, I’ll spend €5,000 on designer curtains. We have to think about everything we do. Our rent, our staff and our bills”
Ross Duffy: Circa general manager and co-owner
Money
continues to be an issue for Circa but it’s an issue the owners are managing to
navigate.
“Financially,
we’re not backed by money men. Financial constraints are still a major issue
for us,” said Ross. “I’d love to be able to say that’s grand, I’ll spend €5,000
on designer curtains. We have to think about everything we do. Our rent, our
staff and our bills. That’s always our worry. That’s the priority every week.”
Gareth
added: “We even have to discuss if we want to pay €50. That’s the biggest difference
between us and a lot of places.”
However,
despite the pressures and financial constraints, Ross and Gareth always
believed the effort they put in would pay off. Ross said: “We work very, very
hard. Gareth is here all hours of the morning and all hours of the evening the
same as myself and Emmet as well. When you’ve got a chef like Gareth in the
kitchen and he’s delivering, then people kind of hear about it anyway.”
Circa restaurant in Terenure offers a modern Irish menu Photo Credit: Aidan Coyle
Head
chef Gareth is relishing the freedom to design and control the menu. The menu is
modern Irish and showcases local ingredients.
He
said: “I had a very clear vision on the food. I knew what I wanted in the sense
of I didn’t want it to be pretentious and fussy. We wanted it to be casual
enough but sophisticated as well. I didn’t expect Michelin level but we wanted
it to be that standard but without the fuss really. That was important to me
because I hate fussy restaurants.”
The
passion Ross and Gareth have for the restaurant is evident in everything they
do. This is their dream job and they are loving every minute of it.
Gareth
said: “I view a restaurant as entertainment as in going to the cinema, going to
the theatre or going to a gig. You’re parting with your money for the night so
it has to be an experience at some level. That’s how I view it.
“Want to come in and sit at the bar and have a glass of wine? Perfect. Want to come in and have ten courses and go home? Perfect”
Gareth Naughton: Circa Head Chef
“It’s
important to give people some kind of experience to get them coming back.
That’s the most important thing. We’re not in town. For someone to travel all
the way over here, that could be quite out of their way. So give them a reason
to travel. You know, nothing worse than them saying ‘that was mediocre, I’m not
going back there’,” said Gareth.
With
the restaurant now bustling with business, both Gareth and Ross are in
agreement about the importance of looking after everyone who comes in the door.
“That
was a big thing for me from day one,” said Gareth. “Want to come in and sit at
the bar and have a glass of wine? Perfect. Want to come in and have ten courses
and go home? Perfect. Whatever you want to do, we’re here to accommodate you.
We want to be homely, we want to be welcoming.”
Female culinary students are at a premium but where are all the female chefs?
Aoife Lawless looks at what is holding back women chefs in high-end restaurants…
What’s happening to all our female chefs? When I enrolled in Culinary Arts six years ago my fellow female classmates were in the majority, and most of us wanted to be chefs. A recent study conducted a survey of 170 Irish head chefs: only 15% were female. So where have the women gone?
“Cooking has traditionally always been female,” says Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire, veteran lecturer at DIT Cathal Brugha Street. Mac Con Iomaire doesn’t agree that the industry as a whole is male dominated, and says the issue of gender divide in the professional kitchen boils down to “positions of seniority rather than a question of male dominance”.
There is, he admits, a historic division of labour. “Historically, the female ‘cooks’ veered into institutional cooking, such as in hospitals and schools, whereas their male counterparts sought out ‘status’ as leading chefs in renowned restaurants. Female cooks, male chefs!” Similar “glass ceilings”, he says, loom over other professions such as teaching and nursing.
Mac Con Iomaire went on to give me at least twenty names of prominent female chefs in the present day, most at Michelin level, spanning Britain and Ireland. However, such a short list succeeding only in driving me back to my original question: Where are all the female chefs?
“Female chefs are often pushed towards the pastry section,” says researcher Mary Farrell. “A female chef interning at Dublin’s prestigious Michelin starred restaurant, Chapter One, was directed towards pastry by her male mentor, advising her that‘that’s where you’ll make money’.” Farrell, a PhD student, is trying to answer, in rigorous academic terms, that same question as to the whereabouts of leading female chefs.
“They’ll make excuses about unsociable hours, the desire to rear a family and the assumption that female chefs will want to veer into pastry at some stage of their careers”,says Farrell, who doesn’t buy these answers and instead believes that “the industry itself is to blame”, that the male chefs in positions of leadership are controlling the fate of their female subordinates.
A successful business woman herself, Farrell graduated from Cathal Brugha Street in 1984, long before the Culinary Arts programme became a degree. She has owned multiple businesses in the hospitality industry; she was head chef at one of these, Café Fresh, a vegetarian restaurant in the Powerscourt centre.. At present she owns and runs a catering company accommodating for special dietary requirements such as Coeliac disease, dairy intolerance and diabetes.
She has in the past worked with a male head chef who was “aggressive and resistant to change”, she says, creating an awkward and hostile kitchen environment for all his colleagues. As a woman, she was treated as though she “didn’t know what she was talking about”, no matter what the issue, and his opinion was “absolute”. When he left her organisation he went on to work at a Michelin level restaurant and she was forced to take over the kitchen. “In his absence a change occurred in the kitchen – the tension was lifted and the staff were happy.” She doesn’t think male chefs can look far enough past their own ego to see a restaurant as a whole entity, as a business, not just a stage on which they play the lead.
Tom Kerridge, head chef of the Hand and Flowers, a Michelin two-star gastro-pub in England, made some controversial statements regarding female chefs at the Cheltenham Literature Festival in October. “I like girls in the kitchen a lot: it brings down that testosterone level.” He continued to disparage female chefs, stating that women lack the “fire in the belly” to make it at Michelin level. “They are out there; it’s just whether it’s the industry for them. I’m not sure, at that level,” he added before further patronising remarks such as “girls in a kitchen make blokes feel happy at work” before covering himself with a last-minute save: “This doesn’t apply to just girls. We have loads of blokes who do a runner because the pressure and intensity of cooking at that level is so intense.”
All this talk made me think about my own kitchen experiences and reflected on how I had been treated as a young female chef.
On my first internship I was immediately referred to the pastry chef for training in a separate kitchen from the main one. The pastry chef was delighted to have company in his usually segregated kitchen and I was relieved to not be joining a much feared “boys’ club” environment. I meekly pointed out in my mid- apprenticeship review with my college supervisor and head chef that I had no interest in pastry and perhaps I could be involved in the workings of the main kitchen. I was then entrusted to the sous-chef, a pregnant Polish woman who was strict but kind and taught me more in one month than I’d learned in all of my first year in college. The chef directly under her, a male chef, barked orders at me daily and refused to give me measurements for recipes whilst scoffing at my inadequacies.
In my third year I interned at Fallon & Byrne and it was here that I fell back in love with cooking; I had already begun plotting a career as a writer, but this place drew me toward a career as a chef. The hierarchy of the restaurant was equally divided between males and females. The head chef was only 30 and had risen to his position not only through years of experience, but also through education. He had returned to Cathal Brugha Street a couple of years after completing his chef training in order to study management and it was with his combined skills he achieved head-chef status. His sous-chef was a very pregnant and very capable woman of the same age. They had worked together at a hotel and when he graduated to the position of head chef at Fallon & Byrne he took her with him, along with two other female chef-de-parties. Below the head- and sous-chef, male chef-de-parties outnumbered females three to two, but the numbers were evened out with the addition of a pastry chef and occasional chef-de-partie. Another intern from Cathal Brugha Street was female and, lastly, the recently promoted kitchen porter was a male commis-chef. The female chefs were both feared and respected, though they rarely raised their voices. They made it clear they had standards and these were adhered to even when they were not present. I continued to work for them throughout my final year in college and was never put in a position where I felt uncomfortable or undervalued because of my gender and the kitchen environment maintained constant professionalism.
My experiences in a professional kitchen highlighted many of the issues Mary Farrell raises about attitudes to female chefs. I was directed towards pastry. Male chefs did, sometimes, try to undermine and bully me and certainly did succeed in clouding my judgement for a time. Yet the main excuse, as was given to Mary, of females stepping back for family life was unfounded in my experiences, I had witnessed female chefs balancing family life and their careers whilst still providing positive role models.
But I was never content to chop and peel for endless hours, or endure burns, cuts and scalds on a regular basis in the hope of eventually obtaining a senior role in a kitchen after spending four years completing my degree. Perhaps therein lies the answer: education creates aspirations beyond manual labour for minimal reward. Many male chefs rise through the ranks from porter to head chef. The male students who dropped out of Culinary Arts continued in the profession, some of them very successfully. Many of my female peers continued their education at Masters and PhD level in areas of product development and education, the latter now delivering the lectures they once attended.
The glass ceiling of female seniority in the professional kitchen may remain unbroken, for now, simply because female chefs may have their eyes on a bigger prize.
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