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Every day I have to work from two in the morning to four at night.

I have to chop six pounds of onions, six pounds of garlic, and six pounds of parsley every day.

When I first started cooking school I hated every day of it. Getting paid so little compared to the rest of the staff, the daily pressures like when you finish cooking a perfectly browned piece of sirloin steak with creamy MASH potatoes, green and yellow beans and a spinach pastry roll and plate the food on a beautiful plate, and five minutes later the waiter comes back with the plate stating that the customer asked for his stake medium rare and the stake is too dry!

I know when the stake is to dry but I had to cook up another stake.

Being a chef takes long periods of time to find your weaknesses and strengths while you are cooking.

It drives me nuts when I have to get the sous chefs to stop goofing around when they should be cooking.

I would like to spend more time with my family but I am always busy.

Creating a new menu with new flavours and tastes can be very stressful.

The dishes must be executed in a timely manner in order for the food to stay warm when customer is served and is ready to eat.

When I am working the staff and I have to be very careful not to burn ourselves because we are working in such high temperature ovens.

Cooking is one of my favourite things to do in life and I am very glad that I chose this profession.

Being around food all day is amazing.

I get to learn from other chefs who cook different cuisines it brings different ideas to the restaurant when I am thinking of new ideas for the menu.

While I was at cooking school I found it very tough during my three years of cooking school.

All the other chefs want to be a chef and graduate just as much as you want to so I had to prove to then that I not only deserved the spot but I have the talent just as much as they do.

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Q: What is the stress level of being an executive chef?
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Which hotels in New York are currently hiring for executive chef positions?

Executive chef positions are currently being advertised for at the Rosewood Hotels and Resorts, the Woodcliff hotel and spa, the Widewaters hotel and the Highgate hotel. There is also a position at the Hyatt for an Executive Sous chef.


How do you get promoted from being a sous chef to being an executive chef?

Two Ways: Get a Masters in Business and schmooze the echelon of the company you work for. and / or One normally inheirits it when the Executive Chef retires or quits providing one has the business sense to do so. Some soux chefs actually step down from Executive Chef position to have more hands on control of the kitchen and to give someone else (usually their soux chef) a chance to make a name for themselves.


How much do an executive chef make an hour?

Executive Chefs are normally not hourly, they are salary. The average income is about 95k- 150k a year. The salary of an Executive Chef is very dependant upon the area in which the chef is working. The actual average salary for an Executive Chef is not that high. The average salary of 95k-150k would be for a Corporate Executive Chef. An Executive Chef average salary is only about 50k-85k a year.


What is a chef tournant?

A Chef de Tournade is a Senior Chef that can take-over the duties of any number of Chef positions including: Executive Sous Chef, Chef de Cuisine or Head Chef. Establishments such as large hotel with several restaurants and outlets may have this type of Chef. In the org. chart his position is under any Chef with "Executive" in their title and level or above all other Chefs in the brigade.


What happens when you get promoted being a chef?

you will move up a rank in the kitchen e.g basic ranking is APPRENTICE>COMMIS>1ST COMMIS>2ND>3RD>DEMI CHEF DE-PARTIE> CHEF DE-PARTIE>SENIOR CHEF DE-PARTIE>JUNIOR SOUS CHEF>SOUS CHEF>SENIOR SOUS CHEF>EXECUTIVE SOUS CHEF> CHEF DE CUISINE>HEAD CHEF>EXECUTIVE HEAD CHEF


What is the difference between a sous chef and a executive sous chef?

A "Sous Chef" answers directly to and assists the Head Chef or Executive Chef of a usually smaller restaurant. When you start getting into large hotels, resorts and what have you, there can easily be upwards of 5, 7, 10 restaurants on the premises. Each restaurant might possibly have there own "Chef de Cuisine" who in turn would have a "Sous Chef" under them specific for that restaurant. Depending on the amount of volume a hotel or resort may have, there could only be a "Sous Chef" under the Executive Chef to run an individual restaurant. Now.... The Difference between the "Executive Sous Chef" and a regular "Sous Chef" Is when there is a huge hotel or resort with say, 6 restaurants on site, There will only be ONE HOTEL Executive Chef who is in charge of all food operations underneath the Food and Beverage Director. The Hotel/Resort Executive Chef Will have an "Executive Sous Chef" as his DIRECT assistant. He does not answer to Restaurant Executive Chefs but they may take orders from him and so on down the chain of command. "Sous Chef" will take orders from........ Food and Beverage Director>Hotel/Resort Executive Chef>Executive Sous Chef>Restaurant Executive Chef (Chef de Cuisine)>Sous Chef>Kitchen Lead/Manager>Cook 1>2>3.... ect. Hope this makes sense to everyone!!!


What is the difference between a sous chef and executive sous chef?

A "Sous Chef" answers directly to and assists the Head Chef or Executive Chef of a usually smaller restaurant. When you start getting into large hotels, resorts and what have you, there can easily be upwards of 5, 7, 10 restaurants on the premises. Each restaurant might possibly have there own "Chef de Cuisine" who in turn would have a "Sous Chef" under them specific for that restaurant. Depending on the amount of volume a hotel or resort may have, there could only be a "Sous Chef" under the Executive Chef to run an individual restaurant. Now.... The Difference between the "Executive Sous Chef" and a regular "Sous Chef" Is when there is a huge hotel or resort with say, 6 restaurants on site, There will only be ONE HOTEL Executive Chef who is in charge of all food operations underneath the Food and Beverage Director. The Hotel/Resort Executive Chef Will have an "Executive Sous Chef" as his DIRECT assistant. He does not answer to Restaurant Executive Chefs but they may take orders from him and so on down the chain of command. "Sous Chef" will take orders from........ Food and Beverage Director>Hotel/Resort Executive Chef>Executive Sous Chef>Restaurant Executive Chef (Chef de Cuisine)>Sous Chef>Kitchen Lead/Manager>Cook 1>2>3.... ect. Hope this makes sense to everyone!!!


What is a master chef?

A master chef is the person who is in charge of the other chefs and who oversees the general work flow. This position is not to be confused with that of the executive chef. ANSWER I would consider a master chef to be near the top of their game. They would probably be either head chef or executive chef or might not even be cheffing as a job. But they would be one of the best in their speciality, either in their country or in the world. Executive chef spends most of the time, either doing management side of things, writing menu's or food ordering. They spend a little time in the kitchen. Their orders come first. Head Chef will be either the main chef if there is no executive chef or the main chef in the kitchen. if the executive chef is not there, the head chef will be in charge. Does spend some time out of kitchen too. Sous chef means second in charge. When the head chef isn't there and there isn't a executive chef, the sous chef is in charge. The master chef is in charge of all chefs...


Are there any risks being a chef?

there are many risk with becoming a chef .. cuts, burns, slips, falls, lack of sleep, stress, fires, customer complaints ...and so on


What are Chef the different Chef positions?

There's an Executive Chef, Head Chef, Sous Chef, Pastry Chef, Chef de Partie (Station Chef), and Garde Manger (pantry chef).


Is an executive chef the same as a head chef?

No. A head chef is usually the chef in charge of a single operation and is a "hands on" chef. An executive chef is a chef over multiple operations and works more in an office style capacity leading other head chefs or chef de cuisine. You will usually not find an executive chef on the line during the Saturday night rush...you better find the head chef on there though. Some operations will title a head chef as an "executive chef", but this is just dressing up the title.One is the same as the other just different ways of saying it. Executive chef is a term used in hotels with large kitchens that have many different chefs employed. Different answer I have answered this on an alternate question. See http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_a_master_chef


What chef has the second most michelin stars?

The second chef is more commonly known as the Sous Chef, french for second chef. Basically, the Sous Chef is second in charge of the kitchen brigade of chefs and apprentices. The Head or Executive Chef is the person in charge. A kitchen can have more than one Sous Chef; in larger restaurants, there could be 5 or more Sous Chefs, in which case there could be an Executive Sous Chef. This position would be responsible for managing the Sous Chefs. The Executive Sous Chef is also answerable to the Executive or Head Chef of the Restaurant.