Although a high school diploma is not required for beginning jobs, it is recommended for those planning a career as a cook or chef. High school or vocational school courses in business arithmetic and business administration are particularly helpful. Many school districts, in cooperation with State departments of education, provide on-the-job training and summer workshops for cafeteria kitchen workers with aspirations of becoming cooks. Large corporations in the food service and hotel industries also offer paid internships and summer jobs, which can provide valuable experience.
To achieve the level of skill required of an executive chef or cook in a fine restaurant, many years of training and experience are necessary. An increasing number of chefs and cooks obtain their training through high school, post-high school vocational programs, or 2- or 4-year colleges. Chefs and cooks also may be trained in apprenticeship programs offered by professional culinary institutes, industry associations, and trade unions.
An example is the 3-year apprenticeship program administered by local chapters of the American Culinary Federation in cooperation with local employers and junior colleges or vocational education institutions. In addition, some large hotels and restaurants operate their own training programs for cooks and chefs. People who have had courses in commercial food preparation may be able to start in a cook or chef job without having to spend time in a lower skilled kitchen job. Their education may give them an advantage when looking for jobs in better restaurants and hotels, where hiring standards often are high.
Although some vocational programs in high schools offer training, employers usually prefer training given by trade schools, vocational centers, colleges, professional associations, or trade unions. Postsecondary courses range from a few months to 2 years or more and are open, in some cases, only to high school graduates. About 8 to 15 years as a cook is required to become a fully qualified chef. Those who gain experience, including in a supervisory capacity, may become executive chefs with responsibility for more than one kitchen. The U.S. Armed Forces also are a good source of training and experience.
Although curricula may vary, students in these programs usually spend most of their time learning to prepare food through actual practice. They learn to bake, broil, and otherwise prepare food, and to use and care for kitchen equipment. Training programs often include courses in menu planning, determination of portion size, food cost control, purchasing food supplies in quantity, selection and storage of food, and use of leftover food to minimize waste. Students also learn hotel and restaurant sanitation and public health rules for handling food.
Training in supervisory and management skills sometimes is emphasized in courses offered by private vocational schools, professional associations, and university programs. Across the Nation , a number of schools offer culinary courses. The American Culinary Federation has accredited over 100 training programs and a offers a number of apprenticeship programs around the country. Typical apprenticeships last three years and combine classroom and work experience. Accreditation is an indication that a culinary program meets recognized standards regarding course content, facilities, and quality of instruction.
The American Culinary Federation also certifies pastry professionals, culinary educators, and chefs and cooks at the levels of cook, working chef, executive chef, and master chef. Certification standards are based primarily on experience and formal training. Important characteristics for chefs, cooks, and food preparation workers include the ability to work as part of a team, a keen sense of taste and smell, and personal cleanliness. Most States require health certificates indicating that workers are free from communicable diseases. Advancement opportunities for chefs and cooks are better than for most other food and beverage preparation and service occupations. Many chefs and cooks acquire high-paying positions and new cooking skills by moving from one job to another.
Besides culinary skills, advancement also depends on ability to supervise less skilled workers and limit food costs by minimizing waste and accurately anticipating the amount of perishable supplies needed. Some chefs and cooks go into business as caterers or restaurant owners, while others become instructors in vocational programs in high schools, community colleges, or other academic institutions.
A number of cooks and chefs advance to executive chef positions or supervisory or management positions, particularly in hotels, clubs, and larger, more elegant restaurants.
Love of food, willingness to try. Lots of experience. Contrary to much popular belief you do not need a degree to be a top notch chef, it is all about your passion. Culinary school may help, but if your heart is not in it, you will never be a chef. It is not a job, it is a passion. It may pay you down the road, but without heart this business will wring you out and hang you up to dry.
a chef's quilifications are they need be able to cook and they need to go to school for 2-4 years. a chef needs a high school diploma. any person becoming a chef needs to have at least a bachlorss degree in cooking a chef's quilifications are they need be able to cook and they need to go to school for 2-4 years. a chef needs a high school diploma. any person becoming a chef needs to have at least a bachlorss degree in cooking
Knowing how to cook..duhhh..jeeze ppl these days
You need to know about every thing surrounding the preparation of food. how to run a kitchen a restaurant food hygiene. employee relations kitchen accounts and much more.
B-tech hospitality, food and hygiene, health and safety.
You need 5 years of training.
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You need an Associate's degree to work in apartment managements. A degree in the field of accounting or sociology also helps, and one must also know a second language, preferably Spanish.
chefs get their stars by being examined by master chefs with 5 stars and by their preformance if they do well enough hey get a star
Pastry chefs don't necessarily 'love' baking. Some pastry chefs hate their jobs...
There are certainly chefs who work outdoors, but by and large, most chefs work indoors...in the kitchen.
I think the people chefs have to cook for is about 5,000
there is always a need for chefs of any kind
for professionalism and sanitation purposes
chefs always say there is no need for a PC in cooking
Pastry chefs do need to take chemistry classes. These classes will help them to understand the chemistry of baking and the meaning of how ingredients react with each other.
Sous chefs are usually fully-schooled chefs who are then taken on as apprentices by a recognized Master Chef.
You need an Associate's degree to work in apartment managements. A degree in the field of accounting or sociology also helps, and one must also know a second language, preferably Spanish.
coz they need stoves
What ever ingredients they need and a producer and a director
it is a conclave
A truck, chefs, and advertising.
Executive chefs usually make the highest salary. Head chefs generally make somewhat less than executive chefs. Sous chefs usually make the least.
yes chefs do need a certain certificate or liscense to do there job right and be able to have a good job.