Mise en place (everything in its place) is not merely a cooking technique but the foundational philosophy of the professional French kitchen — the discipline of preparing, measuring, cutting, and organising every ingredient, tool, and component before any cooking begins. It is the principle that separates a professional kitchen from an amateur one, that enables a brigade of twenty to serve two hundred covers in an evening without chaos, and that underpins every successful complex preparation from consommé to coulibiac. Auguste Escoffier systematised mise en place as part of his revolutionary brigade de cuisine, recognising that the greatest source of kitchen errors was not lack of skill but lack of preparation. The practice operates at three levels. First, ingredient preparation: all vegetables washed, peeled, and cut to the required shape; all meats trimmed, seasoned, and tempered to room temperature; all aromatics measured and grouped by recipe; all sauces, stocks, and bases prepared and held at appropriate temperatures. Second, equipment preparation: all pans, knives, boards, and tools laid out and within reach; ovens preheated; grills lit; water baths at temperature; plates warming. Third, mental preparation: the service plan reviewed, the timing sequence understood, the critical steps identified, the potential failure points anticipated. The professional cook's station is a model of organised efficiency: small containers (mise en place cups) arranged in a consistent order, each containing a precisely prepared ingredient; tasting spoons clean and accessible; towels folded and stacked; a garbage bowl for trimmings. The tournant, as the most versatile member of the brigade, must maintain the most extensive mise en place of all — ready to step into any station at any moment. In the home kitchen, mise en place transforms cooking from a stressful improvisation into a calm, confident execution. Read the recipe completely before beginning. Prepare everything before turning on the heat. Group ingredients by the order in which they enter the pan. The cooking itself then becomes almost mechanical — a flowing sequence of additions and actions, each prepared and waiting in its place.
Prepare EVERYTHING before cooking begins. Three levels: ingredient prep, equipment prep, mental prep. All vegetables cut, meats trimmed, aromatics measured and grouped. Mise en place cups arranged in consistent, logical order. Read the recipe completely before starting. Cooking becomes a flowing sequence of prepared additions.
Colour-code your mise en place by course or recipe if preparing multiple dishes. A wet towel under your cutting board prevents slipping. Clean as you go — a cluttered station creates errors. In professional kitchens, the quality of a cook's mise en place is the first indicator of their overall skill. Prepare twice what you think you need of garnishes and finishing herbs — you will always use more than planned. The time invested in mise en place is always recovered during cooking — it never slows you down, only speeds you up.
Starting to cook before all ingredients are prepared. Not reading the recipe through before beginning. Disorganised station that requires searching for ingredients mid-cooking. Not tempering meats to room temperature. Not preheating ovens, grills, and water baths in advance. Preparing only the first few ingredients, planning to cut the rest 'while things cook.'
Le Guide Culinaire — Auguste Escoffier