Chef 101: How to Get a High-Paying Job in the Kitchen

Forget culinary school. Get a restaurant gig first, say veterans

By Mary Duan

Posted: August 6, 2008

On a recent routine visit, a purveyor walked into Jesse Cool's Flea St. Cafe in Menlo Park, Calif., and told the restaurateur he was thinking of leaving a job on his family's organic farm to attend cooking school. Cool, a 33-year industry veteran, gently advised him first to see if he could live on a fraction of his wages for three years.

"I told him he had two choices, that he could go to school and spend a lot and learn a lot, or that instead of going to school, he could spend three years getting paid low wages and just work in kitchens and learn," Cool says. "If you walk into a kitchen and say, 'I want to spend six months here as a prep cook. I want to work hard and learn,' those of us in the business are grateful."

Cool, who also runs the Cool Cafe at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University, and the JZ Cool Eatery & Wine Bar, also in Menlo Park, adds that if you're investing the time to learn and if you choose well, you can learn the basics by working.

To school, or not to school, is no small debate in the industry. "If you want to be a doctor or a lawyer, you kind of have to go to school, but cooking is a trade. I'm sorry, but it's a blue-collar job," says Dory Ford, executive chef for the Portola Restaurant and Cafe and in-house catering service at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

According to a survey of 1,730 kitchen professionals released in May by the industry insider website StarChefs.com, the average starting salary for a line cook in 2007 was $13.07 an hour, while the average salary for an executive chef was $77,611.

In 2007, executive sous chefs earned an average of $55,679, sous chefs $42,104, and pastry chefs $53,017, according to the survey. Executive chefs at country clubs or private dining operations earned the most of those in the categories surveyed (an average of $87,068 a year), followed by hotel executive chefs ($86,066), fine dining executive chefs ($78,348), and upscale casual executive chefs ($69,708).

Longevity is the key to bringing in those top salaries. Of those surveyed, chefs averaged between 15 and 20 years in the industry, while executive chefs earning six figures had more than 24 years of experience.

Will school or working on the job help you reach that level?

"When I think about modern cooking school education, I've got young kids getting out of school carrying $60,000 in debt and they come into my office and I tell them, '$9.50 to $10 an hour to start.' And they're being told by cooking schools they'll start out making $15 an hour," Ford says.

Ford says he was expelled from cooking school because he worked too many hours at an outside job. He is now pursuing his master's certification from the Culinary Institute of America.

Ford says he has talked some people out of going to cooking school for reasons similar to Jesse Cool's and recommends that anyone who wants to get a culinary school education, to work in the industry first.

If school isn't your thing, you can still obtain knowledge by taking specific classes in sauces, charcuterie, pastry, or the like, he says.

"I have had [culinary] students who have done well and those who didn't do well, and I've had employees with no experience do well. It's all about individual personality," Ford says "I look for passion, whether they've gone to school or not, because then I know they will pay attention, that their answer will always be, 'yes, chef.' "

At the School of Culinary Arts of Kendall College in Chicago, Dean Christopher Koetke acknowledges that culinary education is an expensive investment. Tuition for full-time study runs about $7,000 a quarter. Bachelor of arts students with at least a 2.5 GPA receive a $1,500 scholarship each quarter for their third and fourth years of study.

"Doing culinary education correctly is an expensive proposition, and we believe you have to put in significant time. You can't shorten the cycle," Koetke says. "We have classes that purposefully put the student under a fair amount of stress and comprehensive exams that are very serious.

"If anyone has a misconception about this business—because what you see on TV is not necessarily representative of the business—we tell them when they get here that there are three words they need: passion, discipline, and intensity," Koetke says. "Nobody finishes Kendall and doesn't understand what the industry is about. At the same time, the employment prospects are incredible. The food service business is expanding, and more and more jobs are needed."

Pa. Chef

Its not about the money. Its about the food. Its always about the food, and the energy, and the intensity and the rush. Its the controlled chaos and kitchen comradery. So, Mr. BULL TRYPE peel these carrots and when your done with that clean my station and when your done with that fetch me a beer, make that 2 beers, one for me and one for my non-english speaking, immigrant sous chef whos making good money now and who got promoted over you, the english speaking american guy that cant see past the f&%#ing pay check and cant cook his way out of a wet paper bag.

Ed of PA @ Jan 08, 2010 05:20:07 AM

Wondering how to get a cooking job?

http://www.chefcrossing.com is a good source of jobs because it only shows you jobs from employer websites and every other job board out there. The site has more jobs than any other website. This is a good way to track down jobs because these jobs are often not advertised. The jobs showing include private chef jobs, chef jobs abroad, cook jobs and sous chef jobs.

http://www.chefcrossing.com

Check it out!

Joe of MI @ Jul 08, 2009 19:45:13 PM

Bull trype

I love cooking, doing it for a living is absolutely terribly. Even on the high-end dining side of it your working with all immagrants and people that are coming and going constantly cause the pay sucks and the work is very hard and demanding. Never try to persue outside goals as a line cook. A- you dont make enough money B- you meet tons of other people in your life that seem to make waaaaaay more money than you working 8am to 4pm answering phone. Culinary School is a waste of time, as soon as you finish you get a job at place were the guy next to you doesn't speak english, didn't go to culinary school, and cuts a million coners per second to make his own job easier and gets away with it. All i'm saying is, for example if you want to work 1 job and make enough money to live fine while working stable hours DO NOT COOK OR DO ANYTHING RELATED TO A RESTARAUNT HOTEL OR ANY PLACE THAT SERVES FOOD.

I speak from 6 years of experience

Norman of MA @ Jul 02, 2009 16:08:53 PM

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