The Day

Chefs trade fancy jackets for Carhartts to cut costs

- By KATE KRADER

At renowned Philadelph­ia restaurant Fork, owner Ellen Yin spent $17,500 in 2019 dry-cleaning the chefs’ jackets and uniforms. This year the chef whites are gone, and so are the cleaning bills.

It’s another way the pandemic has changed the profile of the restaurant business, possibly for the long haul. At Fork, the formality of a wellpresse­d chef’s jacket became irrelevant when the dining room closed in March. Fine dining gave way to pickup and takeout food, and the menu shifted from $40-plus tiger prawns to $21 chicken pot pies. And chef de cuisine George Madosky transition­ed to shirts from chef-wear supplier Tilit, a more practical choice that also reflects the more casual menu.

Now, although Fork has reopened for indoor dining, “Tilit will stay for the foreseeabl­e future,” says Yin.

At Lark, a Mediterran­ean restaurant opening this spring in Balla Cynwyd, Pa., chef Nicholas Elmi is outfitting cooks in Dickie’s shirts instead of the pressed jackets he wore at his Philadelph­ia spot, Laurel. He estimates he’ll save $130 a week in dry-cleaning bills.

Even cooks who value pristine jackets almost as much as their knives are recalibrat­ing. Jonathan Benno has spent close to two decades cooking in an elegant coat, notably at Per Se in New York, and more recently at his eponymous restaurant Benno, in Manhattan’s Flatiron district. The pandemic provoked change.

“We were doing hospital meals, taking the garbage out. I ruined one jacket and said, ‘This is ridiculous,’ “says Benno. “The game has changed.”

Benno said he began buying $40 utilitaria­n Carhartt shirts. (His father was a carpenter, so he grew up with them.) He estimates each of his Bragard chef jackets cost $150 and cost about $5 to clean. “At Benno, we’d clean 25 to 30 jackets a week,” he says, which added up to about $600 a month.

The classic white chef coat was first introduced to profession­al kitchens in the 1820s. A chef in a crisp jacket has long signaled the apex of excellence. For chefs, including Jack Logue of the new Tribeca’s Kitchen in New York, it still does.

“I’ve always viewed proper chef coats as the equivalent to wearing a suit-well maintained, pristine, and pressed,” Logue says. “There is something of a mentality switch when I put on a chef coat; it’s a costume change that kicks in an extra gear of focus.”

As on Wall Street and in office parks, the shift to casual has been years in the making at restaurant­s, where chefs had slowly adopted more comfortabl­e, utilitaria­n jackets and sturdy shirts. Even so, many restaurant­s had those chefs’ duds profession­ally cleaned. Now, the pandemic has accelerate­d both the sartorial transition and a move away from paying for profession­al cleaning.

When Dana Cree opened Pretty Cool Ice Cream in Chicago in 2018, she decided to ditch the white chefs coats she’d worked in for years, opting for colorful Big Bud Press coveralls. “We were having them profession­ally laundered but stopped doing so at the beginning of the pandemic, when we cut all costs we could,” says Cree. Her team has been since laundered them at home. “I’ll gladly pay to have them washed profession­ally again, when we can,” she says. “Maybe this summer.”

It’s the latest blow for cleaners. As far back as 2012, 43% of dry cleaners said their sales had decreased more than 5% as a result of the move to more casual dress, based on a survey by American Dry Cleaners. Add the pandemic and forced work from home, and by November 2020 one in six cleaners had closed or gone bankrupt, according to the National Cleaners Associatio­n.

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