50-Minute Classroom: The Rest of the Science
Combined with last month’s article from Chef Weiner on the basic science behind critical processes in the kitchen that all culinary students should understand, the following 10 precepts truly sum up any student’s “necessary science.”
By Adam Weiner, CFSE
Two months ago I raised the debate about teaching cooking science to students. Last month I wrote part one of what I personally think are the principles of science that should be taught to beginning culinary students. Here is part two:
As educators, we cannot not ignore what consumers of education seek. So why do many in education assume that teaching and training are mutually exclusive?
Career technical education (CTE) programs such as the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation’s ProStart give students the skills and experience they need to achieve rewarding, long-term careers in the high-growth restaurant sector.
A sea bass, a chicken and a mousse—that’s the menu that sealed the third straight ProStart state championship for the culinary team from Technology Center of DuPage (TCD) in Addison, Ill. The team competed Feb. 8 at the 13th Annual Illinois ProStart® Student Invitational for high-school culinarians, hosted by the Illinois Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (IRAEF) at Kendall College in Chicago.
The January 20, 2014, issue of Forbes magazine honored the best up-and-comers in a wide range of fields. In its annual “30 Under 30” list, four graduates of The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) were named in the area of food and beverage. That’s more than any other college or university.
CAFÉ’s second-annual Deans and Directors Retreat in February introduced a stellar line-up of thought leaders to passionate educators wishing to grow and strengthen their culinary-arts programs amid sweeping societal evolution.
A simple concept conceived by the School of Culinary Arts at Kendall College turned out to be a powerful tool with which to teach culinary-arts students how to achieve impeccable flavor in every dish.
Hand pies are the latest incarnation in the mini-dessert trend, crêpes add adventure to diners’ repertoires, and nuts, dessert butters and spoonables are big.
Mark Ladner, executive chef of Del Posto in New York, tells CIA grads to always be students and remain curious.