Social Times of Cooks in France
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Our Approach: Working Time, Social Times and Temporalities
2.2. Methods
2.2.1. National and European Statistics
2.2.2. Literature Review
2.2.3. Interviews with Cooks Who Became Cookery Lecturers (n = 43)
“The essential thing is to be able to place a professional activity in a temporal dynamic, in a working life that includes entry into the profession or job, the course of the activity, the turning points, the anticipation, the successes and failures.”
2.2.4. Observations in French Restaurants
3. Employment Data, Food Practices and Forms of Work
3.1. Time and Employment
3.2. Diversity of Workplaces
3.3. Meals: Time Frames, Structures and Types
3.4. Cooks’ Socialisation and Time Standards
3.5. The “Break” as a Dominant Time Model
3.6. All-Day Duty
4. What Are Cooks’ Time Configurations?
4.1. The Break
4.1.1. “Compulsory-Free’ Time
4.1.2. Extra Time to the Benefit of the Employer
“When lunch service is over, the chef sometimes asks us to prepare for evening service or upcoming events. Sometimes it’s pretty hard, they make us stay in the afternoon even though I only get paid for the lunch and evening services.”[Clément, 38 years old, cook in a commercial restaurant establishment]
“At the end of the lunch service the boss often asks us to anticipate the work for the next services. In reality, instead of having a break and time for myself, I work for the company, without any financial compensation. Even if I like it, it’s tiring sometimes.”[Christophe, 24 years old, cook in a commercial restaurant establishment]
4.1.3. Domestic Time
“I have been working in gourmet restaurants for 12 years. I must admit that it is difficult to work evenings and weekends when my children and wife are at home. But when I am on duty, I take advantage of the “break” to take care of the house, to do small jobs. It also allows me to pick up my kids from school before going back to work,”[Mathieu, 46, cook in a gourmet restaurant].
“I like to have some free time in the afternoon between shifts because it allows me to manage my personal business. The time off gives me the opportunity to manage the house and take care of some of the family tasks. Little by little, my wife and I have organised all this around my job.”[Frédéric, 29, cook in a gourmet restaurant].
4.1.4. Time for Oneself
“During the “break” I have time to relax or go to the beach with friends. I like this type of work because you feel that the day passes more quickly. At the end of the lunch shift, we hurry to change and go swimming. When the weather is bad, we take a nap or go for a drink and play table soccer or cards.”[Mathieu, 35 years old, cook in a commercial restaurant]
“I often ride my bike between two services. It keeps me in shape and helps me to get away from work. Sometimes some colleagues join me, but most of the time I ride 10 to 15 km a day alone. I have always done some physical exercise during the “break”.[Bruno, 36 years old, cook in a brasserie]
4.2. Rules of the Continuous Working Time System
4.2.1. An Organisational Choice against Individuals
“When it was decided that the hospital was going to be restructured, at first, I didn’t think that my job would change radically and that I would have to change location. Even though we were staying in the same city, it still disrupted my routine. I liked my old job because I had a lot of friends and after all, I had been working there for 12 years. I still remember that time even though I kept my job in the new organisation”[Luc, 52 years old, cook in hospital catering].
“I had been working in the same school for eight years before the city council and the urban community decided to set up a central kitchen 10 km away. I found it quite difficult at first because my whole life revolved around the school. So, I had to change my routine, because my new job was in the central kitchen. I thought about quitting, but I had no other choice. So, I got into the habit of driving my 10 km a day to work.”[Philippe, 47, school food service cook]
4.2.2. An Individual Choice for a Collective Organisation
“I met my wife when I was doing seasonal work on the Mediterranean coast in a seafood restaurant. Being older, she wanted us to settle down to start a family. She said, “Look, if we’re going to have kids and enjoy them, you can’t keep working the way you’re working now. It was very difficult for me to choose between my passion for my work and the woman I loved. We now have two children, and I am happy to be able to share my evenings and vacations with them.[Hervé, cook in a food cost establishment]
“The advantage of working in this school restaurant is that I get an early start, but I know my day ends at 4 p.m. Looking back on my years of working in commercial food service, I never knew when I would finish. A single service for lunch makes it a lot easier, as you know when you leave your workplace”[Camille, 33, cook in a school restaurant].
5. Discussion: The Future of the Time Configurations: All-Day Duty versus the Cultural Specificities of Food Intakes
5.1. The All-Day Rationalisation Trend
5.2. The Resilience of the Break Model
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Thereafter we will use the plural form of social times to match the variety of activities with the plurality of times. In accordance with French employment surveys (DARES), we use the word “cook” here to refer to a category of employees that includes kitchen assistants, apprentices and multi-skilled restaurant workers as well as cooks and chef. |
2 | The length of time in the restaurants was based on the permits obtained for each establishment. Whenever possible, we focused on a long duration. The establishments studied (informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study) in the 2000–2003 period are not the same as those observed in 2017–2019. The first allowed us to describe the organizational forms of the restaurant industry in the early 2000s. The second allowed us to identify more contemporary forms of organization. The main interest for us was to compare two different contexts, at two different times, inorder to understand if one organizational model has developed more than another. |
3 | Dares, French National Reform Program Statistical annex on employment (Dares 2015). |
4 | However this work organisation varies when municipalities decide to pool resources by setting up inter-municipal cooperative public establishments to provide a catering service, centralise meal production in central kitchens (or central production units) and disconnect the production stage from distribution. In that case, cooks make meals which are only distributed the next day or the day after. |
5 | Insee, Répertoire des Entreprises et des Établissements (REE) (Company and Establishment Directory), Sirene Database, 2010. |
6 | Fifty-two percent of cooks work Saturdays and/or Sundays, Dares, 2012. |
7 | The casinos’ national collective agreement (2002); Cafeteria chains national collective agreement (1998); hotels, cafés restaurants national collective agreement (1997); outdoor accommodation national collective agreement (1993); fast food industry national collective agreement (1988); Paris and Ile de France three, four and four luxury star hotels regional collective agreement (1985); rail catering national collective agreement (1984); collective catering staff national collective agreement (1983); hotel national collective agreement (1975); catering staff national collective agreement (1970). |
8 | In September 2008, the municipality of Lannion, Côtes d’Armor, set up a central kitchen to distribute meals to 17 of the town’s public schools. Almost 1400 meals are produced and distributed by this new structure replacing outdated sites. The hygienic quality control of the meals was one of the main arguments in favour of setting up a new production site. |
9 | Sodexo, Compass and Elior are three main foodservice catering chains operating with concession contracts in the commercial and collective catering fields. |
10 | As early as 1974, the technique of the positive cold chain allowed cooked produce to be conserved more than three days after their production day. Conservation time significantly increased when the negative cold chain started being used. |
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Issue of Observation in France | Duration | Period of Observation |
---|---|---|
Corporate restaurant 1 | 2 days | 2019 |
Corporate restaurant 2 | 3 days | 2018 |
Corporate restaurant 3 | 3 days | 2018 |
Restaurant in hotel 1 | 1 day | 2018 |
Restaurant in hotel 2 | 1 day | 2018 |
Restaurant in hotel 3 | 3 days | 2018 |
Four-star hotel | 2 days | 2018 |
Central kitchen 2 | 5 days | 2017 |
Central kitchen 3 | 10 days | 2017 |
Fine dining restaurant (2) | 2 months | 2003 |
Fine dining restaurant (1) | 4 months | 2002 |
Central kitchen 1 | 3 months | 2001 |
Restaurant in Casino | 4 months | 2000 |
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Laporte, C.; Thoemmes, J. Social Times of Cooks in France. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 109. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030109
Laporte C, Thoemmes J. Social Times of Cooks in France. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(3):109. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030109
Chicago/Turabian StyleLaporte, Cyrille, and Jens Thoemmes. 2022. "Social Times of Cooks in France" Social Sciences 11, no. 3: 109. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030109
APA StyleLaporte, C., & Thoemmes, J. (2022). Social Times of Cooks in France. Social Sciences, 11(3), 109. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11030109