Commi Kitchen
Posted by Literary Titan

Commi Kitchen drops you into the chaotic, greasy, hilarious, and sometimes heartbreaking world of underground chefs hustling through shared commissary kitchens. The story follows Brand, a wide-eyed chef trying to get his catering business off the ground while working in a rundown kitchen filled with misfits, burnouts, and culinary dreamers. What starts as a slice-of-life about kitchen culture quickly turns into something deeper, a gritty, honest look at ambition, failure, and the strange family you find in unlikely places.
The opening chapter immediately drew me in, especially when Brand nervously declares, “My name is Brand, and I like to eat,” only to be roasted by high school kids. Ten pages later, he’s sweating in a chaotic commissary, dodging insults and grease splatter. Crocker’s writing feels raw and unfiltered, like the kitchen itself, grimy, hot, alive. The dialogue pops with realism; Abe, with his cigarette and cane, might be one of the most vividly drawn “managers” I’ve ever read. You can smell the burnt toast and old socks in every scene. The book has a way of making even the worst kitchen nightmare feel strangely poetic.
But what really got me was the way Crocker captures the rhythm of a cook’s life, the stress, the exhaustion, the twisted sense of pride. When Brand and his buddy Jim pull off their first catering event, it’s chaos and comedy rolled into one: sauce buckets spilling, a fuming bride, a furious wife, and then pure joy when the guests rave about the food. That moment when the salsa explodes across the floor had me laughing out loud and wincing at the same time. Crocker nails that emotional whiplash between triumph and disaster that anyone in the service industry knows too well. It’s not glamorous, but it’s real.
By the second half, the story shifts from kitchen antics to something darker and more introspective. Brand’s encounters with bizarre characters, like Oliver and Bob, the creepy old caterers who might be accidentally poisoning funeral guests, add this weird, almost dystopian layer to the story. The “Commi” itself starts to feel alive, like a haunted maze of ambition and decay. There’s this eerie moment when Brand finds Abe literally rehydrating a brick of weed over a stock pot, and I thought, “Okay, this kitchen’s officially gone to hell.” Yet even then, Brand keeps showing up, keeps cooking, keeps trying. It’s absurdly human.
What surprised me most was how emotional the book became without ever turning sentimental. Beneath all the grime and absurdity, there’s this quiet current of hope. Brand isn’t chasing fame, he’s chasing purpose. He wants to feed people, to prove that what he does matters, even when no one else seems to care. Crocker’s writing style mirrors that grind; it’s quick, punchy, and never overpolished. Sometimes the sentences hit like kitchen clangs; other times, they slow down just long enough for you to feel the heat, the loneliness, the small victories that make it all worth it.
Commi Kitchen is a love letter to the misfits who make magic in broken spaces, the cooks who burn themselves out chasing perfection on a dented prep table. I’d recommend it to anyone who’s ever worked in a kitchen, loved a dreamer, or just enjoys stories that don’t clean up the mess before serving it. This book isn’t fancy cuisine, it’s a wild, honest plate of real life, served hot and a little smoky around the edges. And I couldn’t get enough.
Pages: 445 | ASIN : B0FNQ6QT6P
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on October 15, 2025, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged author, biographical fiction, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, chefs and restaurants, Cole Crocker, Commi Kitchen, Culinary Biographies & Memoirs, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. 1 Comment.
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Awesome! Thanks for the review! My favorite chapter is 18 – Heaven’s Dish Pit