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

Dory Ford's chef de cuisine, Esteban "E. J." Jimenez, recalls that about six years ago, he badgered Ford to become his mentor after being a member of Ford's team during a chef's collaborative at Disney Animation Studios.

Ford's team lost the competition that day, but in the process, Ford taught Jimenez to make a proper "pate sucree," or pastry crust—it took the young cook five tries to get it right.

Jimenez worked for years in various kitchens before coming under Ford's tutelage, and attended the California School of Culinary Arts in Pasadena while simultaneously working for Ford at the Huntington Beach Hotel. Like his mentor, he recommends that anyone thinking about going into cooking work in a kitchen first.

"Wash dishes and work your way up to prep cook. If you still have the desire, get on the sauté line. If you still have passion after that, then consider going to school," Jimenez says. "You really can get beat up on the sauté line, and if you're working that line and you can't picture yourself doing anything else, that's when it lies true."

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

Dear Chef Peter Hofstetter

I got so much respect for you word! ;)

I'm in Australia doing my apprenticeship. Yes there are fulltime bollockings. Yes the pays arent as good. (wait staff gets paid more!)

anyways. if you got the passion and just stay focused i know oneday not so long after you'll get there. ;)

STAY STRONG!

JK @ Apr 09, 2009 07:49:33 AM

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