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Culinary Career Center > Industry Overview
Industry Overview
A reputation for serving good food is essential to the success of
any restaurant or hotel, whether it offers exotic cuisine or hamburgers.
Chefs, cooks, and food preparation workers are largely responsible
for establishing and maintaining this reputation. Chefs and cooks
do this by preparing meals, while other food preparation workers
assist them by cleaning surfaces, peeling vegetables, and performing
other duties.
In general, chefs and cooks measure, mix, and cook ingredients
according to recipes. In the course of their work they use a variety
of pots, pans, cutlery, and other equipment, including ovens, broilers,
grills, slicers, grinders, and blenders. Chefs and head cooks often
are responsible for directing the work of other kitchen workers,
estimating food requirements, and ordering food supplies. Some chefs
and head cooks also help plan meals and develop menus.
Large eating places tend to have varied menus and kitchen staffs
often include several chefs and cooks, sometimes called assistant
or apprentice chefs and cooks, along with other less skilled kitchen
workers. Each chef or cook usually has a special assignment and
often a special job title—vegetable, fry, or sauce cook, for
example. Executive chefs and head cooks coordinate the work of the
kitchen staff and often direct the preparation of certain foods.
They decide the size of servings, plan menus, and buy food supplies.
Although the terms chef and cook still are used interchangeably,
chefs tend to be more highly skilled and better trained than most
cooks.
The specific responsibilities of most cooks are determined by a
number of factors, including the type of restaurant in which they
work. Institution and cafeteria cooks, for example, work in the
kitchens of schools, cafeterias, businesses, hospitals, and other
institutions. For each meal, they prepare a large quantity of a
limited number of entrees, vegetables, and desserts. Restaurant
cooks usually prepare a wider selection of dishes, cooking most
orders individually. Short-order cooks prepare foods in restaurants
and coffee shops that emphasize fast service. They grill and garnish
hamburgers, prepare sandwiches, fry eggs, and cook french fries,
often working on several orders at the same time. Fast food cooks
prepare a limited selection of menu items in fast-food restaurants.
They cook and package batches of food, such as hamburgers and fried
chicken, which are prepared to order or kept warm until sold. Private
household cooks plan and prepare meals, clean the kitchen, order
groceries and supplies, and also may serve meals.
Other food preparation workers, under the direction of chefs and
cooks, perform tasks requiring less skill. They weigh and measure
ingredients, retrieve pots and pans, and stir and strain soups and
sauces. These workers also clean, peel, and slice vegetables and
fruits and make salads. They may cut and grind meats, poultry, and
seafood in preparation for cooking. Their responsibilities also
include cleaning work areas, equipment, utensils, dishes, and silverware.
Working Conditions
Many restaurant and institutional kitchens have modern equipment,
convenient work areas, and air conditioning, but many kitchens in
older and smaller eating places are not as well equipped. Working
conditions depend on the type and quantity of food being prepared
and the local laws governing food service operations. Workers usually
must withstand the pressure and strain of working in close quarters,
standing for hours at a time, lifting heavy pots and kettles, and
working near hot ovens and grills. Job hazards include slips and
falls, cuts, and burns, but injuries are seldom serious.
Work hours in restaurants may include early mornings, late evenings,
holidays, and weekends. Work schedules of chefs, cooks and other
kitchen workers in factory and school cafeterias may be more regular.
The wide range in dining hours creates work opportunities attractive
to homemakers, students, and other individuals seeking supplemental
income.
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