Colin Nagy | March 21, 2019

Why is this interesting? - Thursday, March 21

What it takes to run Soho’s busiest restaurant

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A long time ago, Noah and I would randomly invite people we thought were interesting to breakfast at Balthazar. There was no agenda, just a spirited breakfast conversation that would span markets, technology, literature, and whatever the Brier obsession du jour was. Skip forward to today, a lot of these relationships still stand. Reporters like Emily Steel, as well as thinkers, entrepreneurs and more. So I thought it was interesting to share this amazing piece about the inner workings of Balthazar. It’s a New York institution and love it or hate it, functions like a Swiss watch. The consistency is astounding.

Why is this interesting?

The restaurant business is always tricky. But when you pull back the curtain to see the sheer amount of logistics, service, and purchasing to keep a Soho restaurant operating it is hugely interesting. We are often passive consumers of service and hospitality, settling into a red banquet, ordering a coffee and some eggs with the paper, but the rush behind the scenes to make everything run efficiently, as well as keep those tables turning over, is fun to think about.

Some stats: 80 pounds of ground beef, 700 pounds of top butt, 175 shoulder tenders, 1 case of New York strips, all from the Midwest; 5 pounds of chicken livers, 6 cases of chicken bones, 120 chicken breast cutlets; 30 pounds of bacon; 300 littleneck clams, 110 pounds of mussels from Prince Edward Island, another 20 pounds from New Zealand, 50 trout, 25 pounds of U10 shrimp (fewer than 10 pieces per pound), 55 whole dorade, 3 cases of escargot, 360 Little Skookum oysters from Washington State, 3 whole tunas, 45 skates, 18 black sea bass, 2 bags of 100 to 120 whelks, 45 lobster culls. That’s just the fish and meat order.

There’s also some incredible staff who have worked at the restaurant for years, and the regulars, like our friend Paul Woolmington, make the place feel convivial and familiar in the morning. So to the unsung heroes that make this place what it is, a word of thanks. (CJN)

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Thanks for reading,

Noah (NRB) & Colin (CJN)

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