5/3/2023 0 Comments Flamingo grill gordon ramsay![]() However, unfortunately, Gordon Ramsay discover that it was in fact frozen, unappetizing, or over cooked. The food was advertised as being freshly made and healthy. Given how things usually go on Kitchen Nightmares, you can probably guess that Gordon Ramsay did not agree with the duo’s conclusions. The one thing the two did agree on, was that their food was excellent. So yeah…things are a little tense in the Zayna Kitchen Nightmares episode…to say the least.įay brought well over a decade of food experience to the business, while Brenda brought $60,000 that she borrowed from her parents.ĭespite being 50/50 partners, they disagree over the work arrangements and direction of the Zayna grill. They were both 50/50 partners in the business, but they also both told Chef Ramsay they would fire the other if they were not related. The Zayna Flaming Grill owner is a duo, instead of a single owner. In this two-part episode of Kitchen Nightmares, Gordon Ramsay heads to the Zayna Flaming Grill restaurant in Redondo Beach, CA. It was a two-part episode that spanned Kitchen Nightmares Season 7 Episode 7 and Episode 8. Though the Zayna Flaming Grill Kitchen Nightmares episode aired in January 2010, the actual visit from Gordon Ramsay happened before that in mid-2013. I may be wrong about all this though: After all, by bringing Gordon in, she is accepting help.Zayna Flaming Grill was a Redondo Beach, California restaurant featured on Season 7 of Kitchen Nightmares. Especially if this is also an issue with pride, it's not something that can go away easily. That being said, if she had problems trusting people before Gordon arrived, she's going to have problems trusting people after Gorden leaves. She is so convinced they cannot do it that she doesn't even try to teach them, or she is so worried they will do it wrong that she figures they're better off not knowing. She also refused to teach any of her recipes to her other family members. Notice, on Part 2, how as Gordon walks Fay to the car to watch her family try to run the restaurant without her, she is so worried sick about her restaurant that she constantly grumbles about their perceived incompetence, and how it takes a long while for her to be happy when they run the place for a few hours without a hitch. He refused to obtain medical help except as a last resort, he ran a one-man business by himself, and he felt offended if someone did so much as hold a door open for him.) I realized it wasn't true later in life when I'd see people freely and frequently helping out other people, but old habits die hard.įay seems to be a person who is so passionate about her work (despite the food being sub-par, but I blame that on her being completely burned out), she does not trust anybody else to work competently with her food. He drilled into me from an early age that getting help means you're weak. Another thing, which I seemed to have inherited from my father, is taking pride in something that I do all by myself. And I realized that it's because I unintentionally expected them to do things perfectly on their first try. Between those two, any collaborative effort I've attempted with people, more often than not, resulted in a lot of screaming and arguing, and the project, if it finishes at all, ends up a disjointed mess. I have problems explaining how to do things for other people. ![]() I had (and still do have) problems trusting other people to do a task the way I want it to be done. When I got called out on it a few times by different people, I realized that it was a real problem I had with myself and did some thinking about why I behaved in this way. I have been such a person with problems about letting other people help. Watching this episode, I don't think what Fay was doing was evil, but just rooted in a lack of trust.
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