Helper - Should She Stay or Go?

jgny

Registered User
I'm really on the fence about my helper. She is an excellent cleaner, no complaints at all.

BUT she is a horrible cook. I do admit I have high expectations as I am a good cook and I love cooking, but all in all, she can only cook a few basic dishes which my husband and I are sick of. I have to give her a recipe and watch her closely to make sure things are being done right. She does not have a cook's intuition and often lacks common sense - for example, she once almost put 4 bars of chocolate in a recipe which called for 4 ounces. The thing that grates me is that she always give me a blank look whenever something like this happens.

I see my other friends that have helpers have fantastic Chinese and Western food on the table every night and just think that I will be able to find someone who is good at both cooking and cleaning.

At the same time I do feel bad for terminating her. I did offer to send her to cooking classes but she was insulted. She told me she could cook but I told her she could not, not up to our standards. She has been trying, but I've concluded she will never be a decent cook.

What would you do in my situation? Wait out the contract (another 18 months?) or terminate and find a new one? It's also a bit tricky as she is live out.
 
If you are a good cook and love it, why don't you do it ? I do love to cook, and cook every day, even though my helper is very able to cook too... I just ask her to cook once or twice a week, things she knows very well, so we don't get bored with her own recipies, and I've sent her to the YMCA cooking lessons too.
 
Not sure of your personal situation. Do you work full-time or at meal prep times? Might it be an idea to get your helper to just do all the prep work? Cleaning/chopping veges, etc...

If you are a good cook and love cooking, why don't you do the fancy meals a couple of times a week and let your helper do a couple of simple meals a week.

Not all helpers can do everything! I'd be happy with the fact that she's an excellent cleaner! (Often hard to find...) Unless of course you hired her under the distinct impression that she could cook wonderful meals. If you have the time (again, not sure of the whole situation), maybe you could cook together instead of sending her to cooking classes. This way she can learn from you and see how you like things done. Worth a try instead of terminating...
 
I think it depends on how frequently you want your helper to cook, ie how important a job requirement is it? If she has to prepare 2-3 meals a day for you and your family (assuming you have young children) then it is going to be a very unhappy 18 months ahead for all concerned. However if your helper is only required to cook a couple of times a week then it may be a better compromise for you to cook more and have her help with meal preparation and tidying up the kitchen; eat out more, or order in more often.

If you decide to let her go, here's what I think is fair: if you had not clearly stated at the time of hiring her that cooking was an important job requirement then pay her more than the obligatory 1 month's severance, and give her a good reference letter stating that she is being released through no wrongdoing of hers (or something to that effect). If you can help her find another job that does not require cooking, then well and good. Explain to her clearly why you are releasing her. How she reacts - well or badly - is up to her.

The next helper you hire - you have to be absolutely clear that cooking is an important job requirement, and interview applicants thoroughly about this. Eg say that you want daily meals prepared, often have dinner parties, can they bake, etc. The way I see it, this is no different than many companies now stating that fluent business Mandarin is a job requirement.

When I was searching for a maid a few years back, I told the agency that I wanted a maid who was genuinely interested to care for newborns and liked kids. I gave some pretty detailed criteria for newborn care. Those who did not, need not apply. It filtered out a lot of the disinterested ones and probably saved everyone a lot of trouble. The helper we hired turned out to be excellent with my newborn, and she is still with us, 2.5 years later.
 
When we hired our helper, we asked about her good points (good English, educated, babycare experience, mature) and her bad points (cooking). She was very upfront about the one skill she didn't have. My husband and I discussed it, and decided it wasn't our top priority.

Now that she's arrived, I've realized that she really is not a good cook. She knows a few very basic things. But like you said, she has little interest or instinct in the kitchen. Sometimes, I'll make her watch as I prepare food, and hope that she will pick things up with time. But I have no expectation that she will be whipping up fancy dinners for us.

Now, I'm just teaching her to buy the products we like -- people who aren't foodies won't know the differences between wines, imported dairy products, specialty items, etc. There's also a cultural differences. Most helpers come from poor or rural communities. Maybe she's overwhelmed by a modern "expat" supermarket with 14 different types of milk. When I asked what she usually ate, she said "Bread in the morning. Rice the rest of the time with meat." So I can't expect that she will be a gourmet.... And making chocolate at home is hard! If you haven't grown up with that food, you'd have no idea about measurements or proportions.

Anyway, she's useful for washing, chopping, preparing, etc. For now, we're doing our own cooking, and just thankful that she seems good at the other stuff. Maybe with time I will teach her some more.

If I were you, I wouldn't fire her. It's a big deal to fire someone -- they lose their job, their salary and their right to be in HK. I'd only do it if she was lying, stealing, not showing up, etc.

Did you outline cooking as one of her main jobs when you hired her? Is she generally responsible and doing everything else right?

It is a little weird that she won't take a class, though. If you pay for it, I think she should be cooperative and go.
 
As for helpers with excellent cooking skills -- most have been in HK a long time and learned on the job here. Former employers taught them, or they were sent to classes, and some of these top-end amahs command higher salaries. A rich friend of mine had a helper who could do a full Western dinner party, complete with starters, mains, dessert and wines. But she was with them for years and years, and was paid much more than the minimum wage.
 
My vote is for you to send her to cooking class and see if she improves after a month. If she hasn't, then revisit this issue.

We had a similar situation when my helper arrived. She said she could cook and she did know how to make simple things, but not the type of food that we wanted. We actually hired a woman who was a former helper to come to our house and cook with our helper. Since our helper was learning special foods that she didn't know how to make because they were specific to my husband's cultural background, it wasn't insulting - it was just practical.

Anyway, I understand your helper seemed insulted by the cooking school, but you can ask her to go anyway. You can also explain it's not to teach her to cook, it's to teach her to cook a specific type of food (Italian, Spanish, whatever) that she doesn't know how to make now and that you yourself don't know, but like to eat.
 
Another detail... I can cook anything, but i have no clue how much is 4 ounces ! just because we use a different measurement in my country. So I have a conversion table in my kitchen, with cups/ml/gr/tsp/oz etc... and it makes a big difference !
 
Thanks ladies for all your replies.

A little bit more about the situation. I have my own business from home and some days I have time to cook, and some days I don't. I do love to cook but I think what frustrates me is that every time I cook I also try to teach her at the same time. She does not pick up quickly and it ends up frustrating me and her. So that's why I think cooking classes would be a good idea. Does anyone know if the classes at Town Gas are better or the ones at the Y?

The other issue is that she can be defensive and insists she is right (even in the face of common sense). Sometimes the lack of common sense is just something I don't want to deal with (particularly when I have a busy day). For example, when she buys eggs I ask her to write down the expiration date since she throws the container away and puts everything in the egg holder on the side. The other day I noticed she wrote the eggs we have now expire at the end of October. I explained to her that it must be wrong as eggs do not last for that long but she was adamant that the container did say October. Another example is that she called me from Park n Shop where I asked her to buy Haagan Dazs strawberry ice cream. She said there was none. Fine, I asked her to tell me which brand had strawberry ice cream. She said no brands had strawberry ice cream. Now, that seemed strange to me but I had to believe her. So I asked her to go to Wellcome that was 2 minutes away and get it there. It was there. Common sense would dictate that you go to another supermarket or 7-11, right? I mean they are all on the same street (Robinson Rd). Now it may not sound like a big deal but if you get a bunch of these things every day it starts being annoying.

Lisa88 - good points. I was too "general" when I was hiring. We were just happy to finally find someone that we both liked and I was so sick of cleaning and going to the market. She can cook basic Chinese but I need a make dumplings from scratch level cook and to be fair to her, this was not obvious in the beginning. We are a couple, no kids, husband travels a lot but when he is here I like to make healthy dishes that taste really good as he spends a lot of time in hotels and restaurants eating food that is too rich and greasy. The problem comes up when I travel (I'm gone for 2-5 weeks at a time) and he does not like her cooking so he will go out and eat at the noodle shop and Tsui Wah and all these other places that are not good for him. So it's frustrating because what good is it to have a helper when you can't even enjoy her cooking?

But (to your points Gracey) I feel terrible about letting her go, she has a horrible personal situation.

Let me think about this and see if I can work out some solution.

Thanks for all your thoughts ladies. So very helpful.
 
For example, when she buys eggs I ask her to write down the expiration date since she throws the container away and puts everything in the egg holder on the side. The other day I noticed she wrote the eggs we have now expire at the end of October. I explained to her that it must be wrong as eggs do not last for that long but she was adamant that the container did say October.

You might find she is indeed correct with this. I have just check the eggs I purchased about well over a week ago and they have an expiry of 29/09/11. So the eggs she has just purchased could very well have an expiry in October. I would never have thought eggs would last that long either.
 
A working couple, no kids and the job is not done to your satisfaction (which I feel is your own doing given that you don't have time to train her). You're going to be even more unhappy when the baby comes (I'm presuming you are pregnant). Otherwise, if your husband is the baby, you are on the wrong site!

Let me get this straight. You want to fire the poor woman because
(a) she cannot cook for your husband who is a grown man capable of managing his own diet and making choices about them i.e. healthy or unhealthy options.
(b) she doesn't have the 'common sense' to go to another shop to find you strawberry ice-cream, check the expiration eggs ... . The 'common sense' that you require MUST be trained as every family's 'common sense' expectations differ. You could have simply told her to go to another shop.

I don't expect my helper to know everything I would do as I'm Type A and I think a mile a minute ahead of even my own spouse. My helper is a helper for a good reason. Cut the poor woman a little slack please. You're two grown-ups in a household who can't seem to 'manage' a helper. A good helper requires a lot of help from us. Given time, they become excellent helpers. We've gone through our fair share and have learnt that employers play a crucial role too in assisting good people achieve their potential.

Unless she outrightly refuses to improve herself to suit your family's needs, then I'd say, fair enough, she needs to look for a new employer. But sounds like she simply needs further training. So give that a go instead of pondering whether or not to fire her because she can't cook/clean the way you don't have time to train her. It just doesn't sound like the fair thing to do.

My helper who has been with us for two months, cannot
- cook the meals we like the way we like it to save her life, she can however cook great Filipino and Chinese food (which is not a norm in household) so we have that instead
- organise my cabinets they way I like it
- clean my home they way I like it

But I'm not going to fire her as I recognise that I am at fault for not having the time to train her except for an introduction every so often when I have a spare moment on Saturdays (and even then, I'd rather be spending time with the kids than train her). Sometimes, a helper is just used to a certain way of doing things and takes a long time to break a habit. Just like you like your dumplings made a certain way. It doesn't mean that she is not a good cook. She simply is currently not able to cook they way you like it. One of our old helpers took awhile to manage a two week menu plan. How bad was it, try 10 times to get French Toast right.

For us, as long as the house is cleanish, did not burn down, she didn't lose our children, the kids seem happy with her, didn't steal, we don't fire our helpers because I know how much harder it is to cook and clean for my children after work.
 
Mazamarie - really? I will look next time for sure.

Quasimother - some fair points there. I don't agree with all, but I do appreciate your taking the time to post. This "managing a helper" is different from "managing business staff" so it is good to have some perspective.
 
I do agree that what may be a common sense for one, might not be common sense for other. I don't know how long she has been working for you, but probably she just need time to know you and know what your expectation is.

And about your example about your helper calling to tell you that there was no Haagan Dazs strawberry ice cream on Parkn'Shop... what is wrong with calling and asking "Ma'm, there is not strawberry ice cream, do you want another flavour???"
 
I'm really on the fence about my helper. She is an excellent cleaner, no complaints at all.

BUT she is a horrible cook. I do admit I have high expectations as I am a good cook and I love cooking, but all in all, she can only cook a few basic dishes which my husband and I are sick of. I have to give her a recipe and watch her closely to make sure things are being done right. She does not have a cook's intuition and often lacks common sense - for example, she once almost put 4 bars of chocolate in a recipe which called for 4 ounces. The thing that grates me is that she always give me a blank look whenever something like this happens.

I see my other friends that have helpers have fantastic Chinese and Western food on the table every night and just think that I will be able to find someone who is good at both cooking and cleaning.

At the same time I do feel bad for terminating her. I did offer to send her to cooking classes but she was insulted. She told me she could cook but I told her she could not, not up to our standards. She has been trying, but I've concluded she will never be a decent cook.

What would you do in my situation? Wait out the contract (another 18 months?) or terminate and find a new one? It's also a bit tricky as she is live out.

If you've hired a helper to cook and clean only and childcare isn't an issue, I'd just wait it out 18 months. The likelihood you're going to find the exact person you're looking for is slim. Not everyone is a good cook and if you have particularly high standards then you may not be impressed with what others might think is just fine or even good.

As far as sending her to the class--that is the only thing I would have an issue with. In my job, I have to do a lot of professional development courses. I can't just say to my boss, "Oh, no thank you, I already know how to do that" or "I'm insulted! How dare you want me to be better at my job!" I'd lose my job. That is where I would draw the line.

I would tell her, "You need to improve your cooking skills or I'm going to fire you. I will send you to the class and you need to learn something from it. If in ______ months you do not show a big improvement, you'll need to find new employment."

Her attitude is the problem but it also could definitely be an ability issue. Our first helper couldn't cook to save her life but she cleaned like a dream. Did you, by chance, hire the one we let go? :P
 
The other issue is that she can be defensive and insists she is right (even in the face of common sense). Sometimes the lack of common sense is just something I don't want to deal with (particularly when I have a busy day). For example, when she buys eggs I ask her to write down the expiration date since she throws the container away and puts everything in the egg holder on the side. The other day I noticed she wrote the eggs we have now expire at the end of October. I explained to her that it must be wrong as eggs do not last for that long but she was adamant that the container did say October.

I know it seems awful but irradiated eggs from the US DO last that long! No joke! I've seen expiry dates that were 10-12 weeks away from the date of purchase.
Another example is that she called me from Park n Shop where I asked her to buy Haagan Dazs strawberry ice cream. She said there was none. Fine, I asked her to tell me which brand had strawberry ice cream. She said no brands had strawberry ice cream. Now, that seemed strange to me but I had to believe her. So I asked her to go to Wellcome that was 2 minutes away and get it there. It was there. Common sense would dictate that you go to another supermarket or 7-11, right? I mean they are all on the same street (Robinson Rd). Now it may not sound like a big deal but if you get a bunch of these things every day it starts being annoying.

Nope. You think that your helper thinks like you do and she doesn't. This doesn't make her devoid of "common sense" or "stupid." This means that she is in a position as a servant. And servants aren't generally paid or trained to "think outside the box."

My psychology professor in university said something memorable my first week in his class. He said, "If you don't remember anything at all from this class, please remember that in life, the people who make the decisions, make the money. If you want to make money, you need to be making the decisions in your life."

In your position, you are the one who "calls the shots." You run your own business from home. You know about "thinking outside the box" and problem solving. That's why you're not working for $3,580 (or so) HKD/month to cook and clean and live in a home that's not your own away from your children. I'm not saying that all domestic helpers aren't good at making decisions but they are trained to be subservient and wait for YOUR COMMAND. To think on their own, in some ways, is like stepping outside their assigned role. Not saying this is the way it should be, but this is the way it is. Go to Mainland China and you'll find the same thing among employees. No one does anything unless they are specifically instructed to do so. Not a lot of autonomy, but also not a lot of risk--they don't have to run the risk of trying something (problem solving), it not working and then getting blamed. This is the way of thinking and the mindset. I just have to say that the reason why our helper is so amazing in our family is that she is very administrative but that is not the norm for helpers. But, my helper also worked outside her home back in the Philippines and was up for management in the company she worked for but because she didn't have a high enough degree she couldn't get into management. She still has those skills, though.

She can cook basic Chinese but I need a make dumplings from scratch level cook and to be fair to her, this was not obvious in the beginning.

Chinese dumplings are not easy to make "the right way." I've been trying for years to do it right and have yet to succeed. Cut her some slack!

We are a couple, no kids, husband travels a lot but when he is here I like to make healthy dishes that taste really good as he spends a lot of time in hotels and restaurants eating food that is too rich and greasy. The problem comes up when I travel (I'm gone for 2-5 weeks at a time) and he does not like her cooking so he will go out and eat at the noodle shop and Tsui Wah and all these other places that are not good for him. So it's frustrating because what good is it to have a helper when you can't even enjoy her cooking?

2-5 weeks out of 52 in a year isn't bad. I think he won't die from that. Cut him some slack too!
 
Thanka2 - your posts made me crack up. I definitely have a tendency to be Type A and my husband tells me that I need to stop expecting so much from our helper.

Thank you ladies for giving me some perspective on this, it's made me appreciate out helper's cleaning (making bed perfectly with assorted blankets, duvet, shams), laundry (not one item ruined in these 6 months), and gardening skills (she resurrects orchids).

I've decided to spend some more time training her on key dishes we want her to make, and to take it slowly and not expect her to get it the way I like it until after a few tries. I think if I can get her to the point where she can make about 10-20 of the dishes we like, then we will be good.

Everyone's advice was much appreciated.
 
Jgny, good on ya!

Just to add, this is one of the best advice I got as far as cooking training is concerned. Requires effort but well worth it. Organise a two week menu. Teach it. After the first two weeks, supervise her doing it. Correct her along the way. After the next two weeks, ask her to do it on her own. Whatever she can, you no longer need to supervise, but whatever she cannot, re-teach and supervise. You keep repeating it until she can cook for two weeks with no drama. After she can, change one of the week's menu and start over (if you wish).

I hope it works out. I do know how it feels like to be unhappy about some things as I have a helper who is just not keen on general housework. I have trouble locating my work clothes in the morning! But she is excellent in so many other ways that are also important.

Good Luck! Focus on her positive and work on her negative. Before you know it, the 18 months will go by and you'd have someone who might be able to cook the way you want.
 
Jgny -- I'm in exactly the same boat you're in!
Today I made my first little "meal schedule". I never did this before. Like you, I enjoy cooking and feel at home in the kitchen, and I'm used to winging it.
I wrote down some simple dishes for tonight and tomorrow's dinner.
Then I wrote down what I'd like packed for lunch on Thursday and Friday, when I have to be at work.
And then I wrote a grocery list with the foods those meals would need. (Boy... training takes alot of work).
She is going to watch me assemble these meals -- and they are very simple. Rice, stir-fry, omelet, salad, grilled fish, etc. I'm going to make her use a little notebook to take down notes.
All of us ladies have stresses in our lives, and I think all of us are reasonably educated professionals. So our "common sense" is different from some other people's.
I think the big question is whether you helper is trying her best, but just not a good cook and needs patience / training.
Or if she's really lazy / has a bad attitude and is refusing to learn or listen to you.
It sounds like the former, so it's nice you're giving her another chance. :)
 
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