Cross-Utilization and Execution

Post 6 of 7 – Sugarbush Kitchen Series

Every good kitchen runs on rhythm — not recipes.
You can have the best ingredients and the flashiest menu, but if your team can’t repeat it night after night, it won’t last.

That’s what I learned from my mentors, Jeremy Brunt and Jeff Stotts.


The Lesson from Jeremy

Jeremy taught me that every dish should work for the kitchen, not against it.
He made me look at food like inventory — not in a cold way, but in a smart one.

If an ingredient could serve more than one dish, it stayed.
If it only worked once, it had to earn its place.
That’s what cross-utilization means: reducing waste, keeping costs tight, and building flexibility into the menu.

But it’s not just about saving money.
It’s about awareness — understanding how each piece fits into the whole operation.
That awareness builds consistency.


The Lesson from Jeff

Jeff took those same ideas and turned them into execution.
He showed me what leadership looks like during a lunch rush: steady, calm, and structured.

He built menus that any line cook could perform with confidence.
He reminded me that success isn’t when the chef makes it perfect once — it’s when the whole team can do it perfectly together.

That’s how restaurants survive busy weekends, staff changes, and long seasons.
Good systems outlast good moods.


The Application at Sugarbush

At Sugarbush, I design our menus with the same mindset.
Every new dish must be:

  • Easy to teach
  • Built from existing ingredients
  • Sustainable for both prep and service

That’s how we balance creativity and control.
When the kitchen runs smooth, food tastes better — not because it’s fancier, but because it’s done right every time.


The Reflection

Cross-utilization and execution sound like business terms, but they’re really about respect.
Respect for the product, for the process, and for the people doing the work.

That’s what Jeremy and Jeff showed me — that the real craft in cooking isn’t in the flash; it’s in the follow-through.

And when you get that part right, everything else — the flavors, the service, the satisfaction — falls into place.


Your Turn
Next time you design a dish or a process, ask: can someone else repeat this tomorrow?
If they can, you’ve built something strong.
If not, you’ve got work to do.


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