Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 4, 2:34*pm, Peter > wrote:
> Hi, > > I am not sure if this is the appropriate newsgroup to which I should > post, so please excuse me if it is not. > > My question is simply whether one has to go to "cooking school" to > become a cook in a restaurant. I ask this question because I am > considering making a career change. I am a middle age mathematician > and I have the opportunity to cook at a small establishment a friend > of mine is opening. I am a good cook, very passionate about food, and > love to cook. He knows it, and is willing to put me on. Done the road > though, I would like to perhaps move on and I am wondering if anyone > will hire me without a proper degree? I don't have any pretensions of > trying to become a great chef or of being at a fancy French > restaurant: I mostly like to cook simple food well using fresh > ingredients. > > TIA, > Peter So go and cook. Look at the menu, talk to him about what's expected and do your thing. Be prepared to bust your ****ing ass though. If you're not working 'hot' then either the manager has too much staff on hand, or it's not busy enough. If you want to work a high end hotel later on, you should get some paper work; a cook's diploma/trade certificate etc. High end hotel work is where it's at. As far as I'm concerned that's the show. Restaurant work even at such high end places as 'The Fat Duck' is nowhere's ville. When I was an apprentice at a high end Toronto Hotel, the chef put me (and every other apprentice) in the coffee shop first. He separated wheat from chaff. The chaff blew and the wheat remained. The coffee shop was pure hell. Brutal. But I liked it. When I got onto banquets (lunch time small banquets) it was just as crazy. Two guys putting out banquets, 6 banquets and more at lunch. All different. All having to go out at roughly the same time. And not much time to get everything prepped. However it was somewhat prestigeous. I'm a machinist now, for the money. I went for the money, but cooking was a much more satisfying trade. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
TURN Your OWN Kitchen INTO a CULINARY School® | Baking | |||
Anyone knows a good culinary school??? | General Cooking | |||
school for culinary arts, culinary arts usa, culinary arts schools,culinary arts recipe | General Cooking | |||
"So You Want To Go To Culinary School..." | General Cooking | |||
Culinary school opinions | General Cooking |