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no major difference in training between Europe and America
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[[File:White House chefs 1981.jpg|thumb|right|White House chefs in 1981, directed by Executive Chef [[Henry Haller]], preparing a state dinner honoring Australian Prime Minister [[Malcolm Fraser]]]]
[[File:White House chefs 1981.jpg|thumb|right|White House chefs in 1981, directed by Executive Chef [[Henry Haller]], preparing a state dinner honoring Australian Prime Minister [[Malcolm Fraser]]]]


===United States and Canadian training===
Culinary education is available from many institutions offering diploma, associate, and bachelor degree programs in culinary arts. Depending on the level of education, this can take one to four years. An internship is often part of the curriculum. Regardless of the education received, most professional kitchens follow the apprenticeship system, and most new cooks will start at a lower-level 2nd or 1st cook position and work their way up.
Culinary education is available from many institutions offering diploma, associate, and bachelor degree programs in culinary arts. Depending on the level of education, this can take one to four years. An internship is often part of the curriculum. Regardless of the education received, most professional kitchens follow the apprenticeship system, and most new cooks will start at a lower-level 2nd or 1st cook position and work their way up.


===European training===
The training period for a chef is generally four years as an apprentice. A newly qualified chef is advanced or more commonly a torquecommis-chef, consisting of first-year ''commis'', second-year ''commis'', and so on. The rate of pay is usually in accordance with the training status. ''Commis'' chefs, like all other chefs except the executive-chef, are placed in sections of the kitchen (e.g., the starter ([[Hors d'œuvre|appetizer]]) or [[entrée]] sections) under the guidance of a ''demi-chef de partie'' and are given relatively basic tasks. Ideally, over time, a ''commis'' will spend a certain period in each section of the kitchen to learn the basics. Unaided, a ''commis'' may work on the vegetable station of a kitchen.<ref>[http://www.learndirect-advice.co.uk/helpwithyourcareer/jobprofiles/profiles/profile151/ learndirect.co.uk] - chef training options</ref>
The training period for a chef is generally four years as an apprentice. A newly qualified chef is advanced or more commonly a torquecommis-chef, consisting of first-year ''commis'', second-year ''commis'', and so on. The rate of pay is usually in accordance with the training status. ''Commis'' chefs, like all other chefs except the executive-chef, are placed in sections of the kitchen (e.g., the starter ([[Hors d'œuvre|appetizer]]) or [[entrée]] sections) under the guidance of a ''demi-chef de partie'' and are given relatively basic tasks. Ideally, over time, a ''commis'' will spend a certain period in each section of the kitchen to learn the basics. Unaided, a ''commis'' may work on the vegetable station of a kitchen.<ref>[http://www.learndirect-advice.co.uk/helpwithyourcareer/jobprofiles/profiles/profile151/ learndirect.co.uk] - chef training options</ref>



Revision as of 16:02, 23 July 2013

Chef
Culinary arts
Description
Education required
Catering college; see European training
White House chefs preparing the official dinner for the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall
.

A chef is a person who cooks professionally for other people. Traditionally it refers to a highly skilled professional cook who is proficient in all aspects of food preparation.

Master Pastry Chef O´Sullivan Culinary, Costa Rica.

Etymology

The word "chef" is adopted (and shortened) from the term chef de cuisine (French pronunciation:

culinary profession originated in the haute cuisine of the 19th century. Today it is often used to refer to any professional cook, regardless of rank, though in most classically defined kitchens, it refers to the head chef; others, in North American parlance, are "cooks."[citation needed
]

Titles

A chef working with a tandoor oven, a cylindrical clay oven used in cooking and baking

Below are various titles given to those working in a professional kitchen and each can be considered a title for a type of chef. Many of the titles are based on the brigade de cuisine (or brigade system) documented by Auguste Escoffier, while others have a more general meaning depending on the individual kitchen.

Chef de Cuisine, Executive Chef, Chef Manager and Head Chef

Master Executive Chef O´Sullivan Culinary, Costa Rica.

This person is in charge of all things related to the kitchen, which usually includes menu creation, management of kitchen staff, ordering and purchasing of inventory, and plating design. Chef de cuisine is the traditional French term from which the English word chef is derived. Head chef is often used to designate someone with the same duties as an executive chef, but there is usually someone in charge of them, possibly making the larger executive decisions such as direction of menu, final authority in staff management decisions, etc. This is often the case for chefs with multiple restaurants.

Sous-chef

The Sous-Chef de Cuisine (under-chef of the kitchen) is the second-in-command and direct assistant of the Chef de Cuisine. This person may be responsible for scheduling the kitchen staff, and substituting when the head chef is off-duty; he/she will also fill-in for or assist the Chef de Partie (line cook) when needed. This person is accountable for the kitchen's inventory, cleanliness, organization, and the ongoing training of its entire staff. A sous-chef's duties can also include carrying out the head chef's directives, conducting line checks, and overseeing the timely rotation of all food product. Smaller operations may not have a sous-chef, while larger operations may have more than one.[1]

Chef de partie

A chef de partie, also known as a "station chef" or "line cook,"[2] is in charge of a particular area of production. In large kitchens, each station chef might have several cooks and/or assistants. In most kitchens, however, the station chef is the only worker in that department. Line cooks are often divided into a hierarchy of their own, starting with "first cook," then "second cook," and so on as needed.

Commis (Chef)

A commis is a basic chef in larger kitchens who works under a chef de partie to learn the station's responsibilities and operation.[3] This may be a chef who has recently completed formal culinary training or is still undergoing training.[4]

Station-chef titles which are part of the brigade system include:[5]

English French
IPA
Description
sauté chef saucier [sosje] Responsible for all sautéed items and their sauce. This is usually the highest stratified position of all the stations.
fish chef poissonnier [pwasoɲe] Prepares fish dishes and often does all fish butchering as well as appropriate sauces. This station may be combined with the saucier position.
roast chef
rôtisseur
[ʁotisœʁ] Prepares roasted and braised meats and their appropriate sauce.
grill chef grillardin [ɡʁijaʁdɛ̃] Prepares all grilled foods; this position may be combined with the rotisseur.
fry chef friturier [fʁityʁje] Prepares all fried items; this position may be combined with the rotisseur position.
vegetable chef entremetier [ɑ̃tʁəmetje] Prepares hot
appetizers and often prepares the soups, vegetables, pastas and starches. In a full brigade system a potager would prepare soups and a legumier would prepare vegetables
.
roundsman tournant [tuʁnɑ̃] Also referred to as a swing cook, fills in as needed on stations in the kitchen.
pantry chef garde manger [ɡaʁd mɑ̃ʒe] Responsible for preparing cold foods, including
appetizers, pâtés and other charcuterie
items.
butcher boucher [buʃe] Butchers meats, poultry and sometimes fish. May also be responsible for breading meats and fish.
pastry chef pâtissier [patisje] Makes baked goods such as pastries, cakes, breads and desserts. In larger establishments, the pastry chef often supervises a separate team in their own kitchen.

Kitchen assistants

Kitchen assistants are of two types, kitchen-hands and stewards. Kitchen-hands assist with basic food preparation tasks under the chef's direction. They carry out relatively unskilled tasks such as peeling potatoes and washing salad. Stewards are involved in the scullery, washing up and general cleaning duties. In a smaller kitchen, these duties may be incorporated.

A communard is in charge of preparing the meal for the staff during a shift. This meal is often referred to as the staff or family meal.[3]

The escuelerie (from 15th century French and a cognate of the English "scullery"), or the more modern plongeur or dishwasher, is the keeper of dishes, having charge of dishes and keeping the kitchen clean. A common humorous title for this role in some modern kitchens is "chef de plonge" or "head dishwasher".[6]

Culinary education

White House chefs in 1981, directed by Executive Chef Henry Haller, preparing a state dinner honoring Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser

Culinary education is available from many institutions offering diploma, associate, and bachelor degree programs in culinary arts. Depending on the level of education, this can take one to four years. An internship is often part of the curriculum. Regardless of the education received, most professional kitchens follow the apprenticeship system, and most new cooks will start at a lower-level 2nd or 1st cook position and work their way up.

The training period for a chef is generally four years as an apprentice. A newly qualified chef is advanced or more commonly a torquecommis-chef, consisting of first-year commis, second-year commis, and so on. The rate of pay is usually in accordance with the training status. Commis chefs, like all other chefs except the executive-chef, are placed in sections of the kitchen (e.g., the starter (

appetizer) or entrée sections) under the guidance of a demi-chef de partie and are given relatively basic tasks. Ideally, over time, a commis will spend a certain period in each section of the kitchen to learn the basics. Unaided, a commis may work on the vegetable station of a kitchen.[7]

The usual formal training period for a chef is two to four years in catering college. They often spend the summer in work placements. In some cases this is modified to 'day-release' courses; a chef will work full-time in a kitchen as an apprentice and then would have allocated days off to attend catering college. These courses can last between one to three years.

Uniform

Chefs in Mexico wearing standard uniform.
A chef preparing Peking duck

The standard uniform for a chef includes a hat, necktie, double-breasted jacket, apron and shoes with steel or plastic toe-caps. A chef's hat was originally designed as a tall rippled hat called a Dodin Bouffant or more commonly a toque. The Dodin Bouffant had 101 ripples that represent the 101 ways that the chef could prepare eggs. The modern chef's hat is tall to allow for the circulation of air above the head and also provides an outlet for heat. The hat helps to prevent sweat from dripping down the face. Neckties were originally worn to allow for the mopping of sweat from the face, but as this is now against health regulations, they are largely decorative. The chef's neck tie was originally worn on the inside of the jacket to stop sweat running from the face and neck down the body.[8] The jacket is usually white to show off the chef's cleanliness and repel heat, and is double-breasted to prevent serious injuries from burns and scalds. The double breast also serves to conceal stains on the jacket as one side can be rebuttoned over the other.

French chef painted by Théodule Ribot (1823–1891)

An apron is worn to just below knee-length, also to assist in the prevention of burns because of spillage. If hot liquid is spilled onto it, the apron can be quickly removed to minimize burns and scalds. Shoes and clogs are hard-wearing and with a steel-top cap to prevent injury from falling objects or knives. According to some hygiene regulations, jewelry is not allowed apart from wedding bands and religious jewelry. If wound dressings are required they should be blue—an unusual colour for foodstuffs—so that they are noticeable if they fall into food. Facial hair and longer hair are often required to be netted, or trimmed, for food safety.

latex gloves
.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ McBride (2006). p. 8.
  2. ^ Sophie Brickman (September 12, 2010). "How French Laundry's chefs reach for the stars". San Francisco Chronicle.
  3. ^ a b McBride (2006). p. 9.
  4. ^ Staff writer (undated). "Becoming a Chef". BBC. Retrieved January 8, 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ McBride (2006). pp. 8–9.
  6. ^ Amanda Afiya (4 August 2011). "Chef Revelations – Kevin Gratton". Caterer & Hotelkeeper. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
  7. ^ learndirect.co.uk - chef training options
  8. ^ Sockrider, Guy D. (July 27, 2005). "History of the Chefs Uniform". Chefolio. Pflugerville, Texas: Escoffier Media. Retrieved June 29, 2009. {{cite web}}: External link in |work= (help)
  9. ^ "My First Blue Band-Aid". January 15, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.

References

External links