Contessa18 wrote:I am interested in entering the Culinary Industry and my area of interest is Catering/Specialty Food Store owner. I was wondering if there is someone who can tell me their experience in this area. Pros/Cons.
Amy
First, while I generally don't send people to that "other" board, I will say that they have had several good threads on the pros and cons of cooking schools.
When I entered the industry, there were relatively few cooking schools. Most of the people I worked with had a LOT of kitchen experience in restaurants and or the military. For ten years, I ran the kitchens of a number of hospitals - patient food, cafeteria, catering, vending - the whole works. Then I moved on to another profession to better provide for my family.
My first piece of advice is to get a lot of experience BEFORE applying to any cooking school. You need to work in a busy commercial kitchen for at least a year to determine whether you can work in that environment. Most kitchens that I have worked in are a cool mix of artists, ex-cons, ex-sailors, with a sprinkling of malcontents and truly good people to make it interesting. You learn to deal with the people who come in high, who curse in 20-30 different languages and the like. In other words, you better be able to deal with a number of different people from diverse backgrounds. I spent three years of my career before I ever managed a caucasian employee. No kidding. And if you work in Chicago, you letter learn Spanish.
My experience before graduating from college and getting my first professional position was working four years as a carhop at a Frisch's Big Boy (here I come on the run with a burger on a bun). I replaced a Johnston and Wales graduate who was completely overwhelmed in a large kitchen. Here the guy spends four years studying to get into the industry and doesn't last six months. Last time I heard he went back to New England and was selling insurance.
I am a CPA by trade and I tend to think a little bit differently than when I was younger. Personally, I see too many people dumping $25-40k or more at a "1st rate" to get a $15 an hour job. And when I have helped my other CPA friends who manage country clubs locate young chefs, that seems to be about the going rate in Chicagoland. (In all fairness, I wouldn't spend $75-100k to get a law degree to make $40 in a public defender's office, either).
To put it simply, you better know what you are getting into before you make a huge investment of time or effort. Personally, I would prefer to see a person work a few jobs with a decent chef to make sure they have a constitution that will allow them to thive in the industry.
There is a whole lot of difference between preparing a chicken at the culinary program at the Art Institute of Chicago (and spending an HOUR on a single bird) and doing the preparing a chicken breast dish for 700 people in a banquet.
I don't want to appear negative about the industry. It financed seven years of college education with no student loans. Every time I post on this subject, I get a couple of nasty e-mails. However, I want you to have a realistic view of what you are getting into.