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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Sun, 04 Jul 2010 19:41:09 -0600, Arri London >
wrote: > > >Janet Baraclough wrote: >> >> The message > >> from Serene Vannoy > contains these words: >> >> > On 07/04/2010 11:34 AM, 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. >> >> > Just do a great job cooking, and take some classes if you have the >> > desire. Classes might help you become more proficient at the basics, >> > etc., but lots of chefs became successful without cooking school. >> >> True, but they usually did it by starting at the bottom and working >> their way up. Few start at the top. >> >> There is a gigantic difference, between being able to cook well on >> the domestic front for people you know, and being able to organise and >> manage a commercial kitchen team >> which supplies dozens of dishes to order, simultaneously. ( devise >> menus, organise suppliers, order and store the ingredients, balance the >> books, *and* manage a complex team of workers >> in a high pressure environment while keeping ahead of commercial food >> hygiene legislation). Cooking, is only a small part of a chef's >> responsibility. >> >> >> Janet > >Some of those responsibilites can be taken over by the restaurant >manager as such. In a large establishment, the chef wouldn't necessarily >be the accountant or even order the basic supplies. Not every chef has >time to go round the farmer's markets every day and do all the shopping A restaurant manager's responsibility is limited to the front, they have nothing to do with the kitchen. A head chef is more involved with managing the kitchen than in actual cooking... it's more important for a chef to have accountancy/human resource skills than cooking skills. |
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