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Reluctant Gourmet Offers Students a Way into the Kitchen

April 11th, 2008 by RG in Culinary School

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Reluctant Gourmet Offers Students a Way into the Kitchen

PHILADELPHIA, PA, USA (April 11, 2008) - With education costs on the rise in almost every field and university across the United States, students are turning to outside sources of funding for everything from tuition to cost-of-living expenses. One of the most difficult places in which to find education funding continues to be the culinary field, where investors are few and students are many.

ReluctantGourmet.com, an online resource dedicated to providing information on culinary schools as well as the hospitality and restaurant trade, recently launched a program to take on financial responsibility for future student success in the culinary world.

This opportunity arose through a partnership with Chefs4Students.org, a nonprofit organization responsible for putting students in contact with the funds they need to attend the culinary schools of their choice. Chefs4Students.org has awarded nearly $75,000 in the form of individual $1,000 grants since its inception in 2003.

The Reluctant Gourmet™ became part of the program this year in an effort to strengthen its ties with the culinary educational system. “Encouraging students to attend culinary school is one thing,” says G. Stephen Jones, the home chef entrepreneur behind the Reluctant Gourmet name. “Helping them to actually do it is another.”

The scholarship from Reluctant Gourmet was one of seven awarded this so far this year. The recipient, Ja’Lisa McKeown, is a student of the International Culinary School of Arts in Michigan. In a trade known for its lack of financial supporters as far as grants and educational opportunities go, this funding is highly sought after and a welcome relief to the increasing costly burden of paying for school.

The Reluctant Gourmet’s $1,000 contribution is only the beginning of a long-term grant program. According to Jones, “Contributing to the culinary dream of students is part of the Reluctant Gourmet vision. We want everyone to have access to great cooking skills, and if this means developing funding to get people to that point, we’re happy to do it.”

Although Reluctant Gourmet is a comprehensive resource providing cooking tips, how-to articles, interviews with chefs, and a collection of recipes, it is the site’s lack of discrimination between amateur and professional cooking that makes it unique. Whether visitors are seeking an introduction to being a cook or perusing their professional culinary career options, one underlying theme remains: learning how to cook good, gourmet food is for everyone.

About the Reluctant Gourmet™

ReluctantGourmet.com is consistently ranked by independent Internet traffic monitor Alexa among the top 40,000 most visited web sites. The Reluctant Gourmet has been featured in numerous lifestyle and food publications including the New York Daily News, NetFood Digest, FastCompany and St. Petersburg Times Online.

Content includes: Techniques, Recipes, Cooking Blog, Community Forum, Culinary Arts School Directory, Chef Interviews, and in-depth Ingredient Articles. The site’s “leading man” is The Reluctant Gourmet, also know as RG, who is featured in humorous cartoons depicting the challenges faced by a stay-at-home dad and aspiring home cook.

# # #

Media Contact:
G. Stephen Jones, Principal
The Reluctant Gourmet™.
Email

Web Address: http://www.reluctantgourmet.com


New Kitchen Academy in Seattle Washington

April 8th, 2008 by RG in Culinary School

New Culinary Arts School in the Seattle, WA Area

Kitchen Academy

For those of you thinking of going to culinary school in the Seattle, Washington area, I wanted you to know there is a new culinary arts school to consider by the name of Kitchen Academy.

Kitchen Academy is already a well-established cooking school in Hollywood and Sacramento California and now has a school in the largest city in the Pacific Northwest. The campus is in Tukwila, just 6 short miles south of Seattle where there is an incredible environment for anyone interested in food and cooking.

Nearby you have the Cascade and Olympic Mountains as well as the Puget Sound and San Juan Islands for kayaking and sailing. Did you know that Washington State is now the second largest producer of wine in the United States?

The school offers an Accelerated Training System developed to provide you the skills that you will need to be successful in a professional kitchen. You start off with the basics and steadily learn more advance techniques and aspects of cooking. From day one you will be hands on working with trained professionals so that in just 30 weeks you can have earned a Professional Culinary Arts Diploma and the confidence to enter the restaurant industry.

The two programs available at Kitchen Academy include a Professional Culinary Arts Diploma and a Professional Baking and Pastry Diploma. Both programs boast of small class sizes, experienced instructors with great connections in the industry, financial aide for those who qualify and a six-week externship in a professional kitchen to provide you experience in a real life work situation.

For more information about the new Kitchen Academy in Seattle, please check out Seattle Kitchen Academy on my web site. You will find a link there to contact the school for more information on how to apply and a representative from the school will contact you to answer any questions.

Also, if there are any graduates of Kitchen Academy or current students interested in talking about their experiences, please contact me here.


French Culinary Institute Student Interview

December 12th, 2007 by RG in Culinary School

French Culinary Institute Grant

I just posted a new Novice2Pro interview with Chef Crystal Frazier, a recent graduate of the French Culinary Institute in New York City. If you are thinking of attending the French Culinary Institute or any culinary arts school for that matter, you want to read Crystal’s interview.

I was introduced to Crystal by my friend Chef David Nelson, co founder of Chef4Students.org, a foundation raising money to help current culinary students finance their education. It is a great organization and if you are interested in helping the career of a future chef, you can make contributions at their site.

I’ll be talking more about Chef4Students when I announce the recipient of the Reluctant Gourmet Culinary Grant in April. I’m looking forward to working with Chef Nelson in the decision process in finding someone to receive the grant. If you are a culinary student and interested in their grant process, check out chef4students.org for details.

I’m looking forward to interviewing more grant recipients from Chef4Students.org and share with you some of their culinary education stories.

To learn more about the French Culinary Institute in New York City.


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