Archive for November 24th, 2008

Entering a Culinary Arts School

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Josh Stone asked:


Your kitchen career starts here.

They say cooking is the first art. Before mankind learned to speak, draw, or write, he learned to prepare a meal. And this art is passed down to your generation, in the form of a wide and diverse field of culinary specialties to choose from. A cooking career is limitless; it can take you anywhere, and you can explore it all of your life and never find the end of it.

Applying with a culinary arts program is basically no different than applying to any other program or course at a college or a university. As a standard practice, there is a process that you need to follow and you may need to meet with a career counselor in the department to see which program is right for you, as there are plenty of options available.

Considerations with regards to the school’s reputation, location, tuition, and financial aid programs available are essential in choosing what is best for you. You will be pleased to know that as a general rule, culinary arts courses go for a more reasonable fee than what you would expect for, say, a computer scientist. But the more elite schools tend to be pricey, too. Particularly if they can boast a celebrity chef on Food Network as one of their alumni.

Some small starting places are researching online via their website, or simply request their catalog by mail. These programs will range from general cooking and food safety to highly specialized positions like for pastry chefs.

Many who attend culinary arts college are aiming to become professional chefs or work in the food industry in some capacity, but don’t be surprised to find several students also attend culinary arts colleges to improve their own home cooking. The “cooking renaissance” has produced a growing population of culinary arts colleges and cooking schools in the country, and plenty of interest amongst the population in attending them.

Many varieties of people and companies, even from local restaurants and supermarkets, are setting up cooking classes so that anyone can improve their kitchen crafts. For the aspiring career chef, culinary arts colleges offer the greatest opportunity to landing a great career. Some go for prestige, such as a cruise ship chef or banquet chef to the celebrities, while others are happier with a small, secure position in an institution or restaurant.

Due to this increased popularity, there are now over five hundred programs in the United States that offer top educational courses in the field of culinary arts. Colleges, universities, and private programs all offer these courses.

There will be several things to consider when choosing a culinary arts college. You should consider what avenue you want your career to follow after you have taken the course, such as restaurant managerial work or owning your own private catering company. After deciding on this, you can easily narrow your search down for the right program quite dramatically, since there are many courses set off for those specific fields.

You will need to determine what is important in a college for you. Lengths of the program may be a consideration, and also what qualifications you will need in order to be accepted. Course fees need to be heavily considered, and if you are on a tight budget you will need to find out about student or college financing as well.

This is also a good time to ask yourself if you have the right kind of skills to stick with a culinary career in the long term. A chef will need many attributes to make it. You will need physical stamina, because this is a very demanding job with the need to move fast when the time counts. Cleanliness is one of those things that goes without saying, but only the fastidiously neat need apply. The demanding maneuvers of prepping food require good fine motor dexterity.

Because the repetitiousness of much of the chef career may lead to burn-out, you need to have real enthusiasm for it. In a contrast, you need a strong tendency towards creativity, while also being conformist enough that you have the ability to follow rules and standards of the industry. Last, and this is something that’s often overlooked, but math skills are also important in this job. We can’t have you standing over a stove with a calculator converting milliliters to teaspoonfuls, now, can we?



Nellie
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Cut the Fat: a Taste Test of Culinary Arts Education

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Paul D. Rosevear asked:


Do economics courses leave you craving a bit more crunch? Find yourself wanting to take a bite out of bio? Are your literature courses a bit too sweet, and your poly-sci courses a little too sour? Maybe a traditional liberal arts education isn’t exactly your cup of tea… What is? Culinary study.

The Call of the Kitchen

If you’d rather spend time studying a cookbook than a chem book, you probably know it already – most culinary schools seem to have an inclination toward the kitchen before they graduate high school. What you may not know is that your passion can translate to a very exciting and lucrative culinary career.

“I spent my freshman year at New York University (New York, NY),” say Debbie Shure. “I had a kitchen in my dorm and I would always cook for my friends. It was a great hobby, but I never knew that I wanted to make a career out of it.” Things have since changed, as Debbie recently graduated from Johnson … Wales’ (Providence, RI), a world-renowned culinary school, and now has a successful culinary career at Chocolatier magazine.

The same held true for Nathan Rhodes, who worked in Enterprise Rent-A-Car’s corporate office after high school. “I always had a passion for food, and I picked up on that early on,” says Nathan, now 24 and studying at The Culinary Institute of America (CIA, Hyde Park, NY).”I was working a corporate job, because that’s what I thought I was ’supposed’ to do. Then I saw a television special on WOLFGANG PUCK [a famous chef and restaurant owner]. It inspired me to apply to culinary school, and now I love it to death!” Well – death by chocolate, maybe.

Nathan was able to find just the right recipe for his culinary career dreams. How to start? By finding the right culinary school for you.

Culinary Schools: Not Your Average Classroom

You may have a knack for whipping up late-night mac n’ cheese or adding just the right amount of cream and sugar in your morning coffee, but culinary school will probably be a bit more demanding.

“CIA’s associate’s program is about 85 percent hands-on learning,” says Nathan. “The day starts with a lecture that reviews recipes and answers questions, and for the next five hours you’re in the kitchen. Then there’s a lecture to close the day.”

But the hard work pays off. “The thing about culinary school is you get out what you put in,” says Debbie. “If you work hard, you’ll learn a ton. Your instructors are completely willing to help you as long as you’re motivated.”

The Real (Culinary) World

As the recent reality show, “The Restaurant” showed, the day-to-day operations of a culinary career – particularly within a popular eatery – are frantic, fast-paced, demanding, and most importantly, exciting. Most culinary schools have some kind of externship program, where you work on site, to help give you a taste of what a culinary career is like.

“CIA’s externship lasts 21 weeks and you can go to any of the 1,700 approved sites,” explains Nathan. “It’s sort of like a job application, where the restaurants are looking to hire students. You apply, go on an interview, and then hopefully get the position.” For students embarking on such study, finding a culinary school that places great value on in-the-kitchen experience is vital to your future culinary career.

A Culinary Career Smorgasbord

Perhaps the most important thing to know about earning a culinary degree at culinary school is that it won’t limit you to the kitchen. “The food industry is experiencing a huge boom right now, and there are many more jobs than there used to be,” says Colleen Pontes, a CIA graduate and former Chocolatier food writer. “The popularity of MARTHA STEWART opened the door for food media and food TV, and the industry in general is generating so much excitement and interest at the moment.”

“We want to show people the culinary career opportunities that are out there,” says Kathy Shaw, sales and marketing director at Le Cordon Bleu (Ottawa, Ontario), and graduate of the school’s culinary school programs in Paris. “I started out wanting to be a chef, now I do the school’s marketing. There are many ways to make this passion a career.”

“There are countless culinary careers beyond being a chef like catering, food TV, food writing, food art, event planning, food critic positions,” agrees Nathan. “Even research and development at major food companies like Hershey’s or Campbell’s – all of the sauces, candies, soups and flavors those mega companies put out are designed by people with culinary abilities.”

And you’ll never be stuck in one place. “When I first started, I wanted to be in the kitchen making desserts for people,” says Debbie. “Now I realize I want to be a food writer, which will be great. I can combine all of my food knowledge with my writing skills and help Americans understand what good food is all about!”

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Kimberly
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Culinary Academy’s Sugar Craft a Dying Art

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Culinary Academy Of India asked:


Sculpture is something of a ‘dying art, with very few chefs having the skills and the patience necessary for blowing and pulling sugar into elaborate and decorative master pieces. And masterpieces they are , Attractively complimenting patisserie displays, or standing as table centerpieces in the dining room, making a delicious introduction for the feast to follow. Lately, I have been thinking a lot about the heights I want to reach in the Culinary world. I’m finding that the more I work with sugar, the more I want nothing else! But sugar craft seems to be taken less seriously these days, and in many cases completely overlooked. It takes years of dedication and perseverance to  master this art, not to mention “a few burns” along the way. Since childhood, I have had this embedded in my mind that, perfection- in all that I do & make is my forte! And it is this quality of mine, which has helped me to take up this profession which requires a lot of artistic ability& innovativeness. A glimpse of how the sugar is prepared will show the technical artistry involved in sugar work.. good quality sugar in granulated form is boiled with water  and glucose to a caramel. It is at this stage that tartaric acid and food colors are added. The sugar is then cooled a little and with this hot mass of sugar, the artist goes to work molding, pulling and blowing the sugar into the shapes he requires.

A part from this, pastillage & nougatine are also popular sugar works. Pastillage is made using icing sugar, egg white, gelatin & lemon juice, which is pliable enough to be molded & made into beautiful & intricate center pieces. Nougatine is easier to work with as its basic ingredients being sugar & almonds, it can be made & cut into a template & then brought together using royal icing. Royal icing is used to dainty & delicate filigrees which impart a sense of beauty and finesse in every centerpiece.  

Unfortunately, it seems the art of pastry is quickly becoming a lost art form. This is because it requires a lot of initial investment in setting up, with equipments which have to be imported from abroad at exorbitant prices. Also, there is a lot of hard work that goes in making a sugar sculpture, by putting in time, money & labor. Being  a pastry freak. I find this to be quite disturbing, & I along with my team are making efforts to bring back this dying art, through the curriculum we impart to students in the Culinary Academy of India, which aims at creating individuals who are creative, inventive & discoverers.   



Greg
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