Articles

” Why are chefs so poorly compensated? “

Hans Susser commented :

Dear Gavin, although I agree with a lot you are saying, I must also say that there is a large number of culinary students (and teachers) who are passionate, talented and have what it takes to become a great cook. On the other hand, what you said about the education system is also mostly correct. When education is a business, quality is the least important factor required by the for profit institutions.

M. Gavin Shipman commented:

Been cooking since I was 19 or 20…Can’t remember anymore, but it has been more than 20 years as a professional cook, then a chef. The title is bestowed, in my opinion, not given by a piece of paper.
On to the reason why we are paid so poorly in the states. To me it goes back to the way the culinary education system is organized here. The “education” is run by for profit college systems, therefore even the idiots will graduate. The students that cannot make pate a choux, but make shoe paste will still get the degree because the university wants their dollars.
On the other side, the system is run by guilds that depend more on their reputation of creating qualified cooks to put out in the industry than they do money. If their reputation fails, so does their system and the tradition fails, which they would never allow.
So, the result is, my guess, 40% of American “chefs” who have graduated from culinary schools-even after several years in the industry-are mediocre at best. Add in the dishonest, alcohol & drug-addicted, “I’m just here for a check” or just plain not intuitive cooks and you are looking at a career that keeps a bad reputation. So, they are the ones that keep the compensation so low for those of us capable of more. Until we change the system, it will stay this way.

Give me a “learned on my own”, battle-tested, open-minded cook any day over a know-it-all culinary school grad. And I am prety good judge of character, too.

” Why are chefs so poorly compensated? “

Great inside views by Jonas and Gil.
The sad thing is that the so called “Education Industry” has seemingly
unlimited marketing funds and still pulls in thousands of culinary students
every month all over the country with their illusionary tales about the
wonderful life of a “chef”. Their ads are seen by millions of people daily,
while cautionary comments like ours are seen by a few dozen. While job
opportunities dwindle,the amount of new cooks multiplies. Many very
young, unexperienced or older chefs are forced to take any job available
to them, at any salary, just to survive.

READ MORE HERE

” For Them, a Great Meal Tops Good Intentions ! “

Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

For Them, a Great Meal Tops Good Intentions !
THEY are two of the world’s most acclaimed chefs, each with a raft of awards,
a constellationof stars and schools of kitchen alumni spreading their gospel.
So when the American chef Thomas Keller and Andoni Luis Aduriz of Spain
sat down last week for a joint interview,they were in a position to back each
other up while slicing through some of the profession’s favorite platitudes.
– Supporting local agriculture and food traditions?
Far too narrow a goal, they said.
– Chefs’ obligation to help save the planet?
A lofty idea, they agreed, but the priority is creating great, brilliant food.
“With the relatively small number of people I feed, is it really my responsibility to
worry about carbon footprint?” Mr. Keller asked.
“The world’s governments should be worrying about carbon footprint.”

Excerpt from the New York Times. To read the whole article, click here.

What differentiates a ” Good Chef ” from a ” Bad Chef “

What differentiates a
” Good Chef ” from a ” Bad Chef ” ?

By Chef Hans D. Susser

This is a question which many young cooks have asked me over the years.
Obviously, there can not be one single, complete, all-defining answer to this.
However, over the years it has become clear to me that if a professional wants
me to look up to him / her, there is a number of things which together will
combine to form that special person to which I can relate with respect, admiration
and, sometimes, awe. Here are a number of attributes which, in my opinion,
define a ” Good Chef ” :

– Skills
– Vision
– Fairness
– Experience
– Knowledge
– Compassion
– Decisiveness
– Sense of urgency
– Ability to multy task
– Objective self critique
– Commitment to quality
– Ability and willingness to teach

So then, what makes a ” Bad Chef ” ? A lack of the attributes above, which
unfortunately, is profound in too many so-called chefs of today. However,
there seems to be an emergence of a new type of chefs altogether. Young,
with a sense of professionalism and hunger for quality, with a willingness
to work hard and endure what it takes to become a truly outstanding professional
and individual. Maybe, at the end, not all is lost and there will be a new
guard of chefs who understand and are willing to keep the flame of our beloved
profession alive and strong. To the rest, all I can say is this : The higher you build
without the proper foundation and attitude, the more likely it will be that your house
of achievements will crumble into rubble.
P.S. Interestingly, you can replace the word ” Chef ” with many other words, such as
“Manager”, “Politician”, “General”, “President”, ” Teacher, ” etc.

Long live culinary knowledge and skills

From CC.I Newsletter 10 / 2011

” Speeding Ticket “

” How is Chef Gordon Ramsay perceived by people in the restaurant industry? “

I really have no idea (neither does anybody who does not know him personally)
what he’s level of expertise,professionalism, personality or anything else about
him is. Same goes for emeril, the cake boss, bobby flay or any other of these so
called chefs. The only thing I know for sure about them is that they are business
geniuses,most of them having started relatively humble and having reached
tremendous stardom and wealth marketing them self.
My unrestricted kudos to them for those achievements !
Anybody who thinks most of what you see on these shows is real and not
orchestrated and staged to the ninth is in my humble opinion a complete moron.

Please click here to read the full article  ▼

How is Chef Gordon Ramsay perceived by people in the restaurant industry?

” Foie gras laws causing a flap with California chefs “

Foie gras laws causing a flap with California chefs

Unfortunately,
Idiot’s rule much of the world 😦

” Justice is served “

Klick on link  ▼  🙂

Justice is served !

” Schmucks “

” Accusations of animal abuse! “

By Huff Post

Smithfield Foods, one of the country’s biggest pork producers, is no stranger to accusations of animal abuse.
Animal rights advocates have gotten ahold of videos that seemed to implicated Smithfield pig producers in animal cruelty.
But the criticism reached a fever pitch this year when the Humane Society targeted McDonald’s for using Smithfield pork
in its notorious McRib sandwiches. Since then, Smithfield reported a steep decline in profits
– and announced its plan to eliminate gestation crates by 2017.

Too little, too late?