staffing levels.’”

Andrew explains how after the recession in the 1980s the Americans, who provided much of the trade in hotels and restaurants in London, were hit in the pocket and business across the capital slumped.
“A lot of the big hotels decided to close big areas of their hotels down and refurb in the down time,” said Andrew. “When I was younger I was on the meat section which had nine different chefs. Today that same section would have three. We used to come in and we used to make four different types of soup, all the stocks daily, it was proper old school cooking, and when I came back after the recession and things were put back in place, we realised that this was the opportunity to change; this was the opportunity to charge the F&B outlets to make money within the operation, each individual department charged with being its own profit centre.”
As a result, he noted big changes and said: “Do you need to have five soups just because you’ve always done it? If you look back at all the old menus, even before Trompetto, look at the size of the menus. They were 20 times larger than they are today, so when you might have seven starters, seven mains, and seven desserts, you would have had 30 starters, 30 mains, an egg section in there, a pasta section in there and 15 desserts plus probably an ice sorbet trolley. So that all changed and the new way of thinking was: how many starters, how many mains, how many desserts? How many staff do you need to do that, how many covers do you need to do to sell that, and so on and so forth.”

With fewer staff and hours in the kitchen, the need for simplicity and efficiency is paramount. But as Andrew emphasises strongly, there needs to be balance.
“That’s the beauty of everything,” he explained. “Finding the right balance between what is enough to keep a chef interested about food which is exciting, but at the same time it’s not a cost of labour that has an effect on the business. And that takes experience.”
Some larger establishments and hotels are slowly bucking the trend. A quick search online for chef jobs will reveal job descriptions proudly advertising in capital letters “chef de partie – NO SPLIT SHIFTS!” The styling of such offers shows that employers realise the situation, and in a time when they are having to become more responsive to their workers’ needs, witnessing changes in attitudes is a positive step. In this vein, Andrew is proud to proclaim how seriously the Hotel Café Royal takes staff welfare.
He said: "Here at the Café Royal we have 14 cubicles for toilets for males and 14 for females with shower facilities, which is unheard of. We very much care that the food that the staff consume is freshly cooked, appealing, that they are also a part of the journey that produces the ideas that go into the food, that there is not that attitude from us that it’s just staff food, but we really do take it seriously that people get something really good to eat. We very much produce cooking of fine food and things like that; it’s very much about fresh. All of these anomalies make a working environment a good working practice environment. The more that you focus on those things, the more you look after someone.”

Staff shortages and increasing numbers of competitors has led to employers needing to be more attentive to their personnel.
“There are so many opportunities and so much choice and there are so many agencies out there now that it’s rough with agencies across London,” added Andrew. “Whereas before you had a queue of staff waiting at your door to want to come and work at these fine venues, you tend to find the queues have dropped off because there’s so much choice. So what you need to do is to make sure that what you offer is very attractive.”
The obstacle is not necessarily attitudes but rather a lack of concrete alternatives, especially for smaller business with limited funds. So, can employers run an efficient and profitable business with staff not on split shifts?
Maybe you can suggest some alternatives? Join the debate on Twitter and Facebook
By Mark Savile