The World is Hungry for Cooks and Chefs

There will always be a need for those who can prepare meals that are pleasing to the palate. After all, no matter what else is going on in the world, people have to eat!

Cooks and chefs are those hard-working professionals who prepare meals in all kinds of settings -- from fast food restaurants to fancy establishments with fine white linens.

Typically, a cook is a lower-level position, while a chef has more responsibilities and is often a graduate of a recognized cooking program.

But anyone can call themselves a chef. The traditional lines of distinction have faded away. What matters more than the job title is the ability to prepare meals that appeal to customers.

John Ash started a highly successful restaurant in California called John Ash & Company, has hosted two TV shows on the Food Network, and currently teaches at the Culinary Institute of America.

"When I think back about it, the seed was probably planted in me by my grandmother," says Ash. "I grew up with my grandparents on a cattle ranch in Colorado, so even as a little kid among my chores was to cook to feed the ranch hands (the ranch employees) and all that stuff, and I can just remember that being such a magical accomplishment.

"She was just a great, intuitive cook, and things would seem to just magically happen," says Ash. "So I think I probably carried that unconsciously with me. I graduated as an undergraduate from college in fine arts, as a painter. And... somewhere along the line I discovered that everything I ever wanted to do was paint on a canvas like I do with food on a plate."

Cooking shows abound on TV these days. This draws many people to the profession. But be warned -- it's probably not like what you see on TV. Cooking is not a route to money and fame for most people.

"I think too many people are going into the (cooking) field because they've watched Cupcake Wars or [other TV shows]," says pastry chef Ann Amernick. This can give a false impression of what cooking is all about, she says.

"When I started in this profession it was something you did because you had a talent for it, or your father and your grandfather did it," says Amernick. "You understood that the hours were hard and grueling and the work was endless, but that was not an issue."

Amernick's hard work led to a highly successful career as a pastry chef. She has owned a restaurant, has won many prizes for her work, and currently teaches baking and pastry classes in Baltimore. Amernick even worked for a short time in the White House!

"I was just an independent contractor but I ended up working every single day, and finally they ended up giving me a permanent pass [and] I was able to get my top security clearance, because I had to go sometimes into the family quarters," says Amernick.

The reality for most cooks and chefs is long hours, low pay and very hard work. Competition for jobs can be fierce, especially at the finer restaurants.

"It's such a tough field now," says Amernick. "It didn't used to be that way. There are just so many people out there, all vying for those few positions. Restaurants are opening and closing all the time."

There isn't just one path into the cooking profession. Formal training can give you some security, but many chefs have built successful careers by simply finding mentors and working their way up.

In the industry there's something called "staging." For an aspiring chef seeking an internship, the "stage" is often the step following the interview. It involves a cook or chef working for free for a short time in a kitchen to learn new techniques and recipes. A stage lets the restaurant assess how well the cook or chef can adapt to their kitchen.

"A stage is an investment of your time," says chef and cookbook author Matt Binkley. "You go and work for a chef that... you want to learn from, and you work for free, and even in some of the really high-end restaurants, the pay is peanuts. To get into some really prestigious restaurants you almost have to work for six months to a year for free just to get a paid job."

Aspiring cooks and chefs can find formal training in a variety of settings. These include community colleges, technical schools, culinary arts schools and colleges offering degrees in hospitality.

On-the-job mentoring is a common alternative to formal schooling. In addition, there are apprenticeship programs sponsored by industry associations, professional culinary institutes and trade unions. Apprenticeships are typically two years in duration and combine classroom instruction with work experience.

"It's always a dilemma for me when young people ask the question, 'Should I go to school or should I go out and work?'" says Ash. "And I think some formal, cerebral training is absolutely important."

"It could be through community college programs, many of which are just absolutely fabulous," Ash says. "But ultimately, I tell people that it's very expensive to go someplace like the CIA (Culinary Institute of America), and you come out perhaps owing a lot of money.

"If you find that you don't have those bucks, then find a chef you admire and go to work for them, even if it means you work for nothing at the beginning, just to be there, to show your interest," says Ash.

There will always be opportunities for cooks and chefs who combine a love of cooking with a lot of persistence. At the end of the day, this is the recipe for success.

"That's the thing about this industry -- it's a ton of work and it's grueling at the beginning, but if you [stick with] it then doors really start to open," says Binkley.

Links

American Culinary Federation
Articles and information on cooking, education and certification

National Restaurant Association
Articles, news and information on the restaurant business, jobs and education

Back to Career Cluster

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

Support