Foobooz - Your guide to food and drink in Philadelphia
  • Neighborhoods

     
  • Features

  •  
  • Tip Jar

    Have a food or drink tip? tips@foobooz.com (AIM:foobooz)

  • Opening Soon

  • Upcoming Events

  • Categories

  • Archives

  • Masthead

  • Fun Things To Do in Philly

  • Subscribe

George Sabatino To Morgan’s Pier For The Summer

Posted by Jason Sheehan on March 15th, 2013

MorgansPierCrowd

“The first time I saw the place, all I could think was, ‘This is fucking bad ass’.”

That’s George Sabatino, the very-recently-ex chef of Stateside, talking about his newly-announced gig as chef at Morgan’s Pier. And the bad-assery to which he’s referring? That’s not the space (the size of which frightens him more than a little). That’s not the view (which is lovely on a summer evening). No, it’s the kitchen. The huge, fully-outfitted kitchen which is just so much bigger than anything he’s become accustomed to that he can’t wait to get in there and just start playing around.

“Dude, do you have any idea what I’ll be able to do there?”

This whole Morgan’s Pier thing came together in a hurry for Sabatino–the perfect opportunity at the perfect time. He was originally in talks to come aboard as a consultant, but, as he himself will admit, “I think I’m not good at sitting still. Being off work, it just makes my anxiety about everything even worse.”

So the consultant’s gig quickly gave way to a chef’s position that would have him in the kitchen and on the line daily, where he belongs. And once that was settled, he knew he’d need a team, so he tapped Paul Lyons (his long-time friend and the guy who took his place at Barbuzzo when he left to open Stateside) to be his chef de cuisine. After that, he just started making calls.

“One of the things that’s great about this is it’s a place for some of my guys to land,” he told me. A place where some of his old crew from Stateside (many of whom left along with their chef) could get back together and do what they do best.

But his old team is not going to be enough. Morgan’s Pier is a HUGE space–300 or so seats including a new, raised dining area that’s being built for this summer’s season, so roughly 10 times the size of the crowd he got accustomed to dealing with at Stateside. We got to talking about the logistics of supplying and staffing such an enormous operation and he seemed to be just beginning to wrap his head around the number of cooks he’s going to need. “I’m probably going to do oysters on the half-shell,” he said, “which means I’m going to need a guy who does nothing but shuck oysters all day. At least on Fridays and Saturdays. I’m going to do hand-cut fries–I’m just calling them Really Awesome Fries, served with a bunch of different house-made condiments–so I’m going to need a guy who just cuts fries all night. That’s crazy.”

In terms of the food, Sabatino admits that he never got the chance to check out Morgan’s Pier last year, under David Katz. “I didn’t go to Morgan’s Pier,” he explained. “I was holed up in South Philly banging pans.” But whereas last year’s vision for the menu leaned heavily on the grills and simple, easy-to-bang-out wood-fired dishes, Sabatino is looking at doing something different when Morgan’s Pier opens to the public around May 1st.

“The way it was explained to me in the first couple meetings, they wanted it to be like a backyard barbecue. That was their whole thing.” But Sabatino took that concept a step further. “I wanted it to be kind of like a barbecue for me and all my chef friends. You know, that thing where you get a bunch of chefs together and they’re all trying to outdo each other without ever acting like that’s what they’re trying to do?”

In terms of details, that means a lot of fresh seafood first. A lot of shellfish. A raw bar. He wants to do specials in the form of large, shared plates like whole fish or suckling pigs. And super-fresh produce, too, because now he’s in a position where, if he wants ears of corn or something for the menu, he can go to a local farm, look out over the day’s harvest and just buy up the entire load.

“It’s going to be simple food, but really good food,” he says. “Really fresh. Really awesome.” Like the fries, I guess.

Of course he’s also going to have a hamburger made with liquid nitrogen. He wants to call it the “Rocket Ship Hamburger“. But even that doesn’t seem that strange coming from a chef like Sabatino. The food at Morgan’s Pier? The menu? That’ll come. That’s not what he’s worried about right now.

“It’s the size,” he says. “That’s the risk in it. The large scale. I mean, I cooked in a place that had 30 seats, you know? So I figured I might as well go ahead and try 300.” Because then, once the summer is over and Morgan’s Pier shuts down (which should happen right after Labor Day) and Sabatino gets back about the business of opening his own restaurant, the 50 seats he wants to finally end up with?

There’ll be nothing scary about that at all.

Morgan’s Pier [Official]


    Related Tags: , , ,

    Related Posts

    • JimiConway

      Good luck George

    • racheal maddow

      mmmm…frozen hamburgers.

    • barn yard bill

      looking forward to his new restaurant

    • Ring ring

      Time for a wake up call. Have you even expo’d anything over 100 seats. Imagine getting half the room sat at once. Your clientele is going to change too. Think you are miss judging this a bit

      • whybothercallingyouass

        seriously? you are a dick

      • uglyjack

        Who is “Miss Judging?” I don’t know her.
        But seriously, what are you talking about, man? If some random dude at a Red Lobster can figure out how to expedite 300 seats, I’m sure he’ll do just fine.

    • T

      You guys are so talented, this is gonna be awesome. Can’t wait to visit- best of luck!

    • Ring ring ring

      This is your alarm clock. Not trying to be rude but I’m just saying running a real sized restaurant and managing an actual staff is a part of being a Chef. I mean– you can be great cooking with just you and one of your homies but to be able to train staff, hold labor and food costs, and get cooks that speak a different language to do the food that you want the same way every time and every time perfect is what seperates the men from the boys and makes great chefs.
      I have all the faith in you.

      • J

        Umm…last time I checked, George Sabatino was the number one chef with the number one restaurant. He didn’t do that by cooking with his homies, even though his homies seem to be the other top chefs in the city. Also, name one other chef,(besides Katz who did it last year) who runs any restaurant in Philly with something of this scale. Anyone would be intimidated to take this on. You are a dick.

    • Ring ring ring

      Yes, yes, yes, we all know… #1 chef #1 restaurant. All I am saying is being back there cooking on the line and having a staff of 3. Is a lot different than a 300 seat restaurant. This will judge his real management skills. How he can handle an expo station. We all know he can cook but can he manage a staff and train a large staff to copy what he wants. That is what makes great chefs. Ohhh and P.S. not every restaurant in Philly seats 50 Parc will do over 1000 people a day. Do you remember Dominique Filoni??? Certified Master chef. Won tons of awards. Yeah was great doing fine dinig French food but when he got hit in the face with that volume he couldn’t handle it. Ohhh what about Matt Moon. Oh he was so great doing 12 seats. He even got a 4th bell. But when he stepped out of that role and into restaurants that were doing covers. We all saw what happened

      Just saying. 300 is a complete different beast than 50. And if you remember Katz had a lot of experience from all types of restaurants. He was well groomed

      • unplug

        just saying, your still a dick

      • uglyjack

        Katz barely set foot in the place last year.

    • Dan Marcantuno

      running a 5+ million dollar per year restaurant is nothing like running 1 million dollar restaurant. Ring ring ring is 100% correct. its not the same. 5 kitchen employees is not the same as 30 kitchen employees. I ran both (successfully) and one is not like the other. I wish Chef George good luck.

    • Rizzo

      Hope they keep the tomato and corn salad on the menu…and the watermelon rickey