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  • Inside Oystercatchers: The decisions behind each dish

Inside Oystercatchers: The decisions behind each dish

Before the first ticket prints, Shelby Farrell makes the calls that shape service.
Jenna Delgado March 5, 2026

Chef de cuisine Shelby Farrell begins most mornings at Oystercatchers by checking the variables that will shape the day’s service. She reviews staffing, checks deliveries and evaluates product quality before the first ticket prints.

Restaurant kitchens run on timing and coordination. A late vendor delivery, a missing cook or seafood that arrives slightly off spec can force changes hours before guests arrive. Farrell works through those decisions early, while the dining room is still quiet and the team has time to adjust.

“Being a chef is the ultimate multifaceted job. I’m a cook, therapist, artist, coach and administrative assistant all rolled into one,” Farrell said.

Her schedule reflects that reality. Oystercatchers operates inside tight margins, labor constraints and guest expectations. Farrell moves between cooking and management throughout the day, making operational decisions that determine how smoothly dinner service will run.

Chef de cuisine Shelby Farrell holding a plated dish inside the Oystercatchers kitchen
Chef de cuisine Shelby Farrell presents a dish inside the Oystercatchers kitchen at the Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay.

Before service begins

Farrell oversees the daily operations of the Oystercatchers kitchen, often working shifts that stretch to 12 hours. Her mornings begin with staff check-ins and an inspection of incoming products, where she checks freshness, quantity and delivery timing.

Those early choices shape the rhythm of the kitchen. A delayed shipment can require substitutions, a cook calling out forces changes to prep lists and station coverage and ingredients that arrive short or below standard require immediate decisions about whether to send them back or redesign the night’s specials.

READ: TAMPA BAY BUSINESS NEWS

Farrell handles those calls before the dining room opens because service leaves little room for negotiation once orders start flowing.

The rest of the day alternates between food preparation and operational work. Farrell prepares nightly specials, places orders with vendors, attends internal meetings and manages Oystercatchers’ social media presence. Administrative tasks take up a significant part of her day, even though diners rarely associate them with the chef role.

By the time guests take their seats, Farrell has already made dozens of decisions that will determine how the evening unfolds.

Dinner service tests the system

Dinner service puts those earlier decisions to work. Farrell moves between leadership and execution throughout the kitchen, stepping onto stations when the line needs help and monitoring the overall pace of service.

Each night requires constant adjustments as the team balances speed, quality and labor. Farrell evaluates every dish against the realities of the kitchen. Recipes that require too many steps, cost too much or slow down the line can create problems during a busy service.

Creativity remains part of the work, yet it operates inside operational limits that keep the kitchen running smoothly.

Menu development starts with supply

Menu development at Oystercatchers begins with the relationships Farrell maintains with farmers and vendors. Ingredient availability and price determine which ideas move forward and which remain on hold.

“Rewriting the menu and continuing its development never fails to push me creatively,” Farrell said.

READ: TAMPA BAY REAL ESTATE NEWS

Some concepts stall when ingredients become too expensive or difficult to source. Others wait until the kitchen has enough staff to execute them consistently. Farrell evaluates those ideas through the same operational lens she uses during service.

Restaurants operate in a shifting environment where supply, labor and customer expectations change frequently. Farrell focuses on repeatable systems that enable the kitchen to deliver the same quality meal each night.

Experience across many kitchens

Farrell has worked in 10 kitchens across three properties, gaining experience in settings ranging from banquets and sushi to sports bars and wine bars. She spent nearly 15 years with Hyatt in Orlando before transferring to the Tampa property at the end of 2024.

Her career began in entry-level positions where she learned kitchen operations through daily repetition and increasing responsibility.

“I’ve always been willing to take on any job that would teach me something new,” Farrell said.

READ: TAMPA BAY RAYS NEWS

Her interest in cooking began at home with her family.

“My Nonna inspires me both through her cooking and her tenacity and resilience. Her cooking has always been what brought the family together, and helping her in the kitchen is one of my earliest memories,” she said.

Those early experiences continue to shape how Farrell approaches leadership in the kitchen today.

Rebuilding a Tampa Bay brunch tradition

Farrell is currently leading one of Oystercatchers’ largest operational projects: rebuilding the restaurant’s well-known brunch buffet, which served guests for decades before ending in 2020.

Bringing the buffet back requires far more than recreating recipes. Farrell and her team must evaluate staffing levels, equipment needs and kitchen workflow to ensure the operation can support the volume.

READ: USF NEWS

“It’s a massive production, and years of expectations mean the bar is exceptionally high for our guests,” Farrell said.

The restaurant soft-launched the buffet in late summer and began a weekly rollout in February, allowing the kitchen to test systems before expanding the offering.

The work guests never see

Guests experience Oystercatchers through plated dishes, attentive service and views of Tampa Bay. Farrell experiences the restaurant through a series of operational choices that begin hours before the first order reaches the kitchen.

She decides what ingredients to buy, what dishes to simplify and how to allocate labor across the team. Each decision shapes the flow of service long before a plate reaches the dining room.

For diners, the experience lasts an evening. For Farrell, it represents a full day of planning, preparation and adjustment inside the kitchen.

The final dish arrives at the table as the visible result of work that began hours before the dining room opened.

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