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Why So Few Women Are Great Chefs ...


Gifted Gourmet

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I wonder if there are any women reading....who have worked in professional kitchens (in any way, not neccesarily as 'chef')...who would like to share with us the things they liked and/or the things they disliked in the working environment, and what they thought about any eventual prospects that existed within that working world... that they could become a 'great chef'...and of course, why yes or why no....

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Karen, Hi.....

I think we're together on all but one thing and that not a matter of principle, in that I do not think the great meals are all that few and far between. I do, however, wish they were to be encountered even more often and ever less far between.

One of these days (but not now, lord, not now) you and I will get into a discussion about whether there can be a "moral hedonism".

Edited by Daniel Rogov (log)
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hello daniel,

that was from monty python and the holy grail and moopheus just completed the rest of the dialogue. here it is for a chuckle and a chortle. sorry for not being clear.

i wrote a long reply, but decided not to post. interesting thread. thanks.

Lalitha, Hello..

With apologies, I do not know you or your posts well enough to know whether your comment about being oppressed was to be taken as metaphor, sarcasm, full humor or complete seriousness. Thus, forgive me if I am "preaching to the already converted" but many women who are beaten by their husbands accept that as part of their "just role in life".  Those women may not perceive themselves as "oppressed" but ineed they are.  As are the many women working in precisely the same jobs as men and receiving only 60-70% of the same salary.  Etc........

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Here is a link to a similar discussion about women winemakers and the glass ceiling in France.

I seldom get a burr under my saddle, but oh, the straight-faced condescension in the quoted article really got to me. Ouch.

Mr. Rogov, I found your article interesting and insightful. From a journalism standpoint, it would have had a happier ending if you had covered, even briefly, the great strides and accomplishments women have made in the culinary fields. But maybe that's another article? :wink:

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Mary Baker

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I am still curious and deeply interested in hearing from women in professional kitchens, but perhaps phrased my question wrong in asking for intensive discussion.

May I ask if there are any women reading this forum who work in professional kitchens, or who have worked in professional kitchens so at least there is some sort of idea of 'who is out there'?

As the article and the discussion are about women...gaining prominence in this particular workplace....it would be good to see if we are here in any sort of numbers in any way in the first place.

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She may not rank among the world's great chefs, but my boss at my night job is a mainstay of Alberta's fine-dining scene.  We're celebrating 24 years' steady growth this month, certainly many lifetimes for an independantly-owned fine dining restaurant.

And our food is pretty damned good.

Hey, chromedome...would love to hear the name of the restaurant if you feel like posting it...and would also love to hear your opinions on whether there are any differences between working for a woman chef rather than a man chef and also if you feel she had any particular extra hoops to jump in order to accomplish what she has...and if so, how she did that...

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Here's a question...if anyone wants to talk.

If not, then what the heck. My fingers need exercise and a good place to do it is on this keyboard.

We are (or hope to be) discussing why so few women are 'great chefs'.

So far the term 'great chefs' has been defined for use in this discussion.

The next question I have is this:

Is the daily work of being a chef, in the general everyday sense of the word, to be defined as being....

1. A profession

2. A vocation

3. An occupation

4. A job, or

5. A trade

Here are definitions of each of these words, from The American Heritage Dictionary:

'Profession'- An occupation, such as law, medicine, or engineering, that requires considerable training and specialized study.

'Vocation'- A regular occupation, especially one for which a person is particulary suited or qualified.

'Occupation'- An activity that serves as one's regular source of livelihood; a vocation.

'Job'- A regular activity performed in exchange for payment, especially as one's trade, occupation, or profession.

'Trade'- An occupation, especially one requiring skilled labor; craft; i.e.'the building trades including carpentry, masonry, plumbing and electrical installation.'

Which category would you place the work of a chef in? Why?

Has the definition (of either the word itself, or of the cultural standing of the type of work a chef performs) changed over the past thirty years or so? How, and why, if so?

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Carrot Top... I think "cheffing" is both a Profession AND a Vocation using the definitions given. If you don't get the specialized training and study, you are not going to make it as a chef, and you must be suited to it. It's not an easy job.

As for why there are so few women: it was not until quite recently as these things go that women were accepted to receive the specialized training available in schools. Where school was not an option, they were also not accepted in "kitchen training" restaurants, where they might have worked up from being a dishwasher or so on as men did. As nearly as I can tell from my reading, there was a feeling about women in kitchens being bad luck, as with women on board ships.

There are still some odd prejudices in kitchens these days. We've all (or most of us) heard the canard that women cannot make emulsions during their menses, because for some "reasons" the emulsions will break. Piffle. And that's just ONE of the bits of nonsense floating around.

I suspect that, until we find more role models of successful women chefs (and thanks gods for Julia Child and Alice Waters) we won't see a lot of the great women chefs who actually ARE working these days. They will continue to be invisible, but provide some of the best food on the planet.

Phoenix, by the way, is a great town for female chefs. We have Deborah Knight, who was a Food & Wine Top Chef choice in 2002, Chryssa Kaufman and many others.

Daniel Rogov... thanks for a thought-provoking (or in some cases, just provoking) thread!

"My tongue is smiling." - Abigail Trillin

Ruth Shulman

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Karen, Hi Once Again..

Not all that clear cut, I fear, for the work of the chef can fall into multiples of these categories. How nice though to put aside sex, gender and sex-roles and focus entirely on the role of the chef qua chef. At all levels being a chef is both a job, an occupation and a trade (that is to say, one's employment and certainly one requiring a certain level of skills). At a somewhat higher level, however the role of the chef becomes indeed a profession, one needing no less training, experience and specialized study than that of any other profession. If the professional is lucky, he or she will find the professional to also be a vocation in that the person and the job fit together well. (If anyone reading this is by now thoroughly confused, no fear, so am I)

To compound possible confusion, I fear that we have to add another specific term to the list of options– an avocation (in the sense of a "calling"). And then to debate whether we consider the profession to be the work of an artist or an artisan.

Ye gods…..but isn't that as true of the carpenter, teacher, sculptor, script-writer and critic as well?

As to changes in the roles – indeed yes, for probably starting with the advent of Paul Bocuse was born the notion of the chef as super-star.

On that note, it is now 8:43p.m. in Tel Aviv, I am going to back off, pour a small Armagnac and light a good cigar. And in case anyone is wondering about the advantages of life in Tel Aviv as opposed to that in the USA – we can buy Cuban cigars here quite legally!

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I'm just walking up this path of discussion very slowly, and looking at each pebble of thought as it comes along.

Obviously (or I hope obviously) I have very strong feelings about the fact that there seem to be less women in positions of being either 'great chefs' or even bringing it down a notch, women running professional kitchens whom hold the title of chef.

It seems to me there is no one thing to blame, no one group to blame, no one anything to 'blame.'

But there are causes, and therefore there should be solutions that can be approached with a view towards improving the situation.

It is not enough for me...to be able to look at the excellent examples of successful great women chefs, and to say "They did it, therefore others can", although this is no small feat that they are standing there as examples.

It seems there should be more than just the biographies or the statistics available, however. It seems there should be a cookbook on the subject. A book of recipes and discussion of how this was done. A taking apart of the finished product, breaking it down into which ingredients went into it and the techniques that were used to create this thing, this thing that we could use more of (again, my opinion only), the 'great woman chef'.

I hope this thread will be able to approach that idea in some small way, and that some woman reading it whom wishes ideas or succor will find some small piece of that here...and that anyone else reading it will find upon reading a closer understanding of the subject....and that finally, the thoughts presented will do some one in some way some good.

To my mind, it is a mare's nest that needs untangling.

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StudentChefEclipse...I do agree with your analysis of the situation, but also believe that it is not schools that will create great women chefs, it is the women themselves.

I do believe that even having schools that teach this as a 'profession' will move things forward in a positive manner to be sure. For in the past, many people entering the kitchen of a working restaurant went there for the purpose of simply having a job that would pay the bills, not with any idea of 'career' or profession in mind.

If a woman in the past (let's say at least thirty years ago)(and perhaps even now) were to initially want to consider entering the professional world...with the intent of being considered a 'professional', it is likely that she would look to the more traditional sources that society has considered as professions in the past...i.e. medicine, law, business. The idea of 'chef' would not occur to her, possibly.

Why would this be so? Because the idea of a 'profession' holds a sort of innate promise of a safe, well-mannered, educated workingplace....with controls in place to protect those who work there both financially and emotionally. Good pay leading to excellent pay would also be a criteria. Health insurance and other benefits would also be another criteria.

These do not exist in many of the professional kitchens that exist, even today.

As a matter of fact, when trying to think of a comparative position to the actual work that requires doing in many kitchens, the closest I could come was 'firefighter'.

For that is what you end up going home feeling like.(And often looking like, too...)

So here we have a profession...that does not hold some real, measurable benefits to one who would undertake it. Male or female, though at the moment we are talking about women.

My personal experience is that I entered a professional kitchen as a completely self-taught cook, looking for a job that interested me, in 1978...those days when women were not often there. Fifteen years later I decided to leave the business...for my own personal reasons....but in that time I managed to attain the title of Executive Chef overseeing multiple facilities of different levels of food and service, some of those facilities geared to be 'run-of-mill' and some geared to be fine food.

I successfully managed a staff of 150 employees and a nine million dollar budget annually and to my great joy have many 'thank you for a wonderful meal' letters in my portfolio from people whom society would consider 'heavy hitters'.

It is not schools that will make women chefs, though they will help. It is not how society has changed and will continue to change that will make women chefs, though that will help.

It is a fire in the belly that will make women chefs. It is a solid determination to cut through the crap and get out there and do it. It is being fearless in the face of tons of bullshit. It is facing up to the fact internally that it is a ton of bullshit you will face, and that you will just get out there and put your blinders on and do it. It is looking the big questions straight in the face and having good solid answers to them, for anyone that may ask.

And having gotten to that point, there is nothing to worry about but the work.

Worrying about how to fit in the other parts of a womans life is no small task. But let's face it...there are no guarantees in life for anything. You can place your bets as best you will, then wait to see what happens.

And never...ever...let anyone tell you what you can or can't do, or how you should do it. Not even me, ha ha...!

Edited by Carrot Top (log)
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QUOTING KAREN (CARROT TOP).....

It is not schools that will make women chefs, though they will help. It is not how society has changed and will continue to change that will make women chefs, though that will help.

It is a fire in the belly that will make women chefs. It is a solid determination to cut through the crap and get out there and do it. It is being fearless in the face of tons of bullshit. It is facing up to the fact internally that it is a ton of bullshit you will face, and that you will just get out there and put your blinders on and do it. It is looking the big questions straight in the face and having good solid answers to them, for anyone that may ask.

And having gotten to that point, there is nothing to worry about but the work.

Worrying about how to fit in the other parts of a womans life is no small task. But let's face it...there are no guarantees in life for anything. You can place your bets as best you will, then wait to see what happens.

And never...ever...let anyone tell you what you can or can't do, or how you should do it. Not even me, ha ha...!

THANKYOU KAREN! This is precisely what I was trying to say, why I felt insulted by Daniel's article. As I said to him, if it was just I who felt there was a paternalistic attitude, then I apologise, but I'm sick of so many people using society's ideas and attitudes as an excuse to fail in their endeavours.

Congratulations on your success in the kitchen, and I hope that your professional or other endeavours since that time have also been successful and (hopefully) made you happy.

cheers!

Edited by arielle (log)

Forget the house, forget the children. I want custody of the red and access to the port once a month.

KEVIN CHILDS.

Doesn't play well with others.

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Daniel, I checked a bit my data.

In Italy, there seem to be three Michelin *** rated kitchens lead by female chefs: Sorriso, Pescatore, Pinchiorri. That's unique, I think. And it has a tradition, as I tried to demonstrate.

I've no idea when the last French female chef had a three star rating, but I believe that woman is dead long time ago.

Further, I checked some random choosen Michelin one star establishment with my Gambero Rosso, and about 20% are clearly indicated with female chefs. With others, there's written "family", which in Italy mostly means that the mama is in the kitchen.

I don't insist in my 50% number, but I'm willing to bet a bottle of fine wine (preferably consumed in my kitchen :biggrin: ) that when choosen a statistically reasonable sample of Italian "better" restaurants ("Michelin starred"), we get a number at around 30% at least. How's that compared with France? What's the reason? (BTW, we find a female chef as on of the leading chefs in Austria, and in Switzerland there are not many, but at least several females among the best cooks)

Then I'd like to remember that in France at the time before Bocuse et. al. (and the mediatisation of the Restaurant Haute Cuisine, as opposed to the Hotel Haute Cuisine), we had several great female chefs in France. George Blanc (whose mother was a famous cook) together with Coco Jobard edited a recipe book about the famous French "Mères" (the mères Adrienne, Allard, Barale, Blanc, Brazier, Bourgeois, Castaing, Crouzier, Léa, Poulard, all between ca. 1920-1960). I don't know how many Michelin stars the mères had all together, but as I mentioned, mère Brazier alone had 6 (litteraly: six!).

Now why did the French women stop with great cuisine? Is it only a sum of individual decisions? Ot are there more complex reasons for this out-revolvement of the females out of the kitchen of the best restaurants? (capital intensive, risky haute cuisine, media contacts, network, mostly male gastro critique writers?)

Frankly, about the last thing I'd consider to examinate is a "systemic difference" in the quality of the food produced by male or female chefs.

And in the end, it's not so much the question of "arrival" of the great female chef, but more of the reinvention of the great (French) female chef.

Edited by Boris_A (log)

Make it as simple as possible, but not simpler.

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Arielle...I am not so sure that Rogov's words were meant to be read with any sort of paternalistic essence...as a matter of fact, I believe the opposite.

But we do have a problem here. Nobody wants to really get down and dirty and talk about this stuff, because we are all entrenched in it simply because of the fact that we are men or we are women. There is an 'us' and there is a 'them'. And one can get very touchy about this fact when personal liberties and choice (not to mention how one gets through simple daily life with dignity) are at stake.

And there is a flip-side to everything. If we do not allow men to express their feelings (not talking about Rogov here, but talking more about men who disdain or dislike the changes they see with how women and the balances of power(s) are shifting) it will be kept inside simmering and very angry. And that gets nobody anywhere, for then there is a quiet war, a silent war there is no way to move through.

Should it be that there is an 'us' and there is a 'them'? In many ways, no. We should all be one people. But if we were all one people, we would all be the same and much of the thrill of the essence of living would be gone.

Besides, there would be nobody anyone had an urge to kiss.

(Obviously, we are talking as if the world were entirely heterosexual, which it is not...please take these words as just a simple joke, people...)

For a man to sit down and try to write about women empowering themselves is not only brave but it must be difficult. For the first question is ..."Is it his to talk about?". One could say no. But I say, anyone who has the guts to talk about it has had the guts to start a discussion which is sorely needed.

He is a man and because of that, the way we read him as women is tinged with our own past experiences, histories, and thoughts.

At the same time...if a woman had started this discussion, it would be regarded as being simply self-serving.

So I thank Rogov. And I thank anyone who cares. The way we say things, the languages we speak, are all different. The point is to begin talking and keep thinking...for "dialogue is the oxygen of change", it seems to me..... :smile:

and hopefully there will be something that will give good thought and maybe something new learned, to each of us upon reading and writing about things that matter.

Edited by Carrot Top (log)
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And I also must add, after editing the last post about four times for sheer clarity first and then futhermore to be sure nothing I said would truly offend anyone (which is almost impossible in life whether you open your mouth to speak or even if you do not) that attempting to communicate, particularly in writing....where you can not see a person's face to guess better at what their intent is...is mindboggling. It is amazing we manage to understand each other at all...it is really a small miracle.

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My writing time is very limited due to work responsiblities. Quickly I wanted to say I think the "reasons" have been posted here. I could/should qoute several paragraphs already written, but lack time.

I believe the essence is: that women want balance in their lifes. They don't want to give up relationships or maternity for a career. To be truely well known/established as a "great chef" it requires a very narrow and intense focus on your work so much so that it causes a VERY unbalanced personal life. I think many women see that there is more to life and more they want to experience in life then a career.

I think alot of female chefs don't feel the need to be seen as achievers in public arenas. They are happy pursueing their work quitely. Personal satisfaction and happiness doesn't come with a title or fan fair, we're mature enough to not need the spot light focused on us.

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It is not schools that will make women chefs, though they will help. It is not how society has changed and will continue to change that will make women chefs, though that will help.

It is a fire in the belly that will make women chefs. It is a solid determination to cut through the crap and get out there and do it. It is being fearless in the face of tons of bullshit. It is facing up to the fact internally that it is a ton of bullshit you will face, and that you will just get out there and put your blinders on and do it. It is looking the big questions straight in the face and having good solid answers to them, for anyone that may ask.

If this is true -- and I am perfectly willing to accept it -- it actually brings us back to the original question. It is a fact that there are relatively few top chefs who are women?

Do they not have "the fire in the belly?" or is there some exogenous factor that is preventing them from rising to the top? If it's the former, it would be interesting to explore the idea that there's something innate in gender or society that makes one more eager to cook professionally than the other (that thread will be a fun one) And, if it's the latter, why aren't Rogov's suggestions a pretty good jumping off point for discussion without his getting mau-mau'd for his alleged paternalism? Kind of gets us away from the original, pretty good, question.

Just for the hell of it I ran through Washingtonian's "100 Best list" to see what the gender breakdown of the "top toques: was. Of 12 3-star restaurants, eight were men, two were women and two I couldn't figure out (note to Washingtonian: why are the two "ethnic" -- Thai and Indian -- restaurants on your 3-star list the only two whose chefs don't get a mention in the review?). All eight 4-star restaurants were run by men.

I'm on the pavement

Thinking about the government.

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Busboy, you do like to jump into the middle of a potentially passionate debate, and I love that!

Your questions are really good ones. Really good ones.

For my own part, I want to think better of how to respond to them..I hope someone else jumps in before I get back though....yes, this could be fun :blink::smile::wink:

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My writing time is very limited due to work responsiblities. Quickly I wanted to say I think the "reasons" have been posted here. I could/should qoute several paragraphs already written, but lack time.

I believe the essence is: that women want balance in their lifes. They don't want to give up relationships or maternity for a career. To be truely well known/established as a "great chef" it requires a very narrow and intense focus on your work so much so that it causes a VERY unbalanced personal life. I think many women see that there is more to life and more they want to experience in life then a career.

I think alot of female chefs don't feel the need to be seen as achievers in public arenas. They are happy pursueing their work quitely. Personal satisfaction and happiness doesn't come with a title or fan fair, we're mature enough to not need the spot light focused on us.

Balance...can be as difficult a thing to attain in a person's life (or I should say some person's lives) as becoming a 'great woman chef'.

It can be as elusive and possibly even moreso.

Balance in life is a question of constantly fine-tuning. And if you want or need to bring other people into the equation, it becomes that much more difficult to fine-tune.

I really do not want to keep having to use myself as an example, but there is no other way I can find to make this point as clear as possible.

There is nothing that I have ever wanted more than a 'balanced' life...the idea of family, community, tradition.

Yet it is not a life I was born into (some people do not come equipped with either families or capable parents to care for them) and much as I try, it keeps flip-flopping on me.

Obviously my particular skill set is not in this area, though I hope to change this within this particular generation so that my children might have a better chance at it.

My skill set seems to work best out in the world, doing stuff that takes 'narrow and intense focus' on my work. It is the only place I can say I have been fully successful. And to be successful is a good thing in life, for it creates joy within one which can then be given outwardly to others.

So as a woman who is built this way, I would like to see some difficulties and barriers removed for other women who are built this way.

For beyond the task of even doing the work in an atmosphere that often is not supportive...there is the fact that in real life, if you are this sort of person...beyond being admired momentarily when you land in an magazine article or whatever...you will not be generally 'liked'. Men will be taken aback and even women will look askance, when faced by this thing up close and personal.

It would just be nice if the road were clearer for any woman who wants to succeed at a top level in this (or any) field of endeavor.

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If this is true -- and I am perfectly willing to accept it -- it actually brings us back to the original question.  It is a fact that there are relatively few top chefs who are women?

Do they not have "the fire in the belly?"  or is there some exogenous factor that is preventing them from rising to the top?  If it's the former, it would be interesting to explore the idea that there's something innate in gender or society that makes one more eager to cook professionally than the other (that thread will be a fun one) And, if it's the latter, why aren't Rogov's suggestions a pretty good jumping off point for discussion without his getting mau-mau'd for his alleged paternalism? Kind of gets us away from the original, pretty good, question.

Just for the hell of it I ran through Washingtonian's "100 Best list" to see what the gender breakdown of the "top toques: was. Of 12 3-star restaurants, eight were men, two were women and two I couldn't figure out (note to Washingtonian: why are the two "ethnic" -- Thai and Indian -- restaurants on your 3-star list the only two whose chefs don't get a mention in the review?).  All eight 4-star restaurants were run by men.

I won't argue numbers, Busboy...yours sound accurate enough from my own general view. I don't really ever think about these things till someone brings it up in a fashion I can not ignore, as Gifted Gourmet did with this thread and with Rogov's article.

No, again, Rogov should not be mau-mau'd. But again, this is really touchy stuff we are entering into discussing here, and understanding each other is not always easy, even when we speak the same language about simple things, and this is not a simple thing.

About the 'fire in the belly'. Any person needs this to be 'successful' in the way we are talking about. Man or woman. There are other ways to be successful, this is only one. But to go out into the world of high stakes (in terms of money, egos, survival of businesses and people's livelihoods) and sort of aim for the top of the heap takes a fire in the belly.

It is simply and extremely competitive. It may be clothed in the form of an iron fist in a velvet glove and fancied up pretty but it is jungle-like and it is warfare of a sort to see who wins the game. Lots of people want to win the game. Again, for the money, for the prestige, for the pride, for whatever. Some, just for the purpose of winning.

When this game is in the form of a woman wishing to head a professional kitchen (and let us imagine that the intent of the woman is good and pure...let us assume she has a calling to do this sort of work), a kitchen with mostly men working in it, a kitchen where some of those men may have been working at their jobs close to the amount of years that she has been alive...she will need a bigger fire in the belly perhaps than a man walking into a similar game. She will be resented, questioned, tested, subtly tormented for having even assumed she could try this thing, and tripped up till she can prove herself. Some of these things could and do happen with a man who wants to aim to run a kitchen, too...but then again, he is one of the guys....and it is likely he will find a mentor...here or there, sooner or later.

There is the physical aspect of the work that requires a bigger fire in the belly than it would for an average man, unless the woman is built like a man in terms of size and upper-body strength. In my case, I am 5'2 and sort of uh...delicately built. So there is this aspect to meet somehow....and I can assure you that when that thirty gallon mixer bowl needs to be poured into something else, the guys will be watching closely half-hoping you won't be able to do it.

Is this nice? No. Is this life? Yes.

That is why I say women need a fire in the belly if they want this.

Is it fair to ask that they have a bigger fire than a guy, just to succeed?

I don't think so.

Well...that was in part an answer to your question as to whether there is an exogeneous factor. That is it, or part of it, in my view.

The other exogeneous factor(s) would have to do with the ideas of a chef being considered a trade more than a profession in past years, and the lack of schools that would offer a woman the 'credentials' she might be made to feel she needed before she even walked in the door of a kitchen (whereas a man might have not been asked for equal credentials).

Your next question....do women have less of this fire in the belly than men do?

Sigh.

Again, let me come back later for this one. This is a really tough one, isn't it.

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It is not schools that will make women chefs, though they will help. It is not how society has changed and will continue to change that will make women chefs, though that will help.

It is a fire in the belly that will make women chefs. It is a solid determination to cut through the crap and get out there and do it. It is being fearless in the face of tons of bullshit. It is facing up to the fact internally that it is a ton of bullshit you will face, and that you will just get out there and put your blinders on and do it. It is looking the big questions straight in the face and having good solid answers to them, for anyone that may ask.

Carrot Top, what you've said is magnificent and absolutely inspiring to me as an aspiring chef!

I've been out of college for a little over a year and completed one brief stage at a very high-end French restaurant in NYC during college and am now a stage at an Italian restaurant in NJ. Needless to say that I knew I wanted to cook when I left that very nice French kitchen after my first day of work.

I wrote an unpublished piece posing this exact question to five or so female chef/restaurant owners and culinary icon-types. Ann Cooper, who was formerly the head of Women Chefs and Restaurateurs, said (and I'm simplifying and condensing here) that the whole brigade system, since its conception, has been wholly male-dominated and embedded with military, male macho-ism. The coats, she notes, are modelled after Turkish army uniforms.

She also said that at the James Beard Awards over 10 years ago, the chefs who were cooking for the event were presenting their food, with the women chefs in can-can outfits and the men in toques and chefs' coats. This, she told me, is what angered author Barbara Tropp to the point that she went home that night and wrote up a draft of the charter for what would become WCR.

In discussions with the other women, one said that being a woman mattered, but that the key was never to admit that it mattered. She said that when she was starting out, she would try to beat the men at their own game, lifting the heaviest things in the kitchen and returning to the line right after getting cut or burned. Another woman described an internship in France as sheer hell and said that the French chefs she met (all male) did not want a woman working in their kitchen. Yet another said that when she first started out she would never wear a trace of makeup or jewelery and would tie her hair back in a very tight bun so as not to look overly feminine.

What interested me the most, however, was what one female chef/owner of a very renowned restaurant in the Bay Area said: If you don't make a big deal out of being a woman, no one around you will. She said that she had to work harder than the other cooks but that she didn't regret it.

Now, this is a very idealistic thing to say. You can't change how other people think just because of what you believe.

Or can you? I think that what Carrot Top and this Bay Area chef are saying is essentially the same--you may have to work harder, stay longer, be more perfect--all the time; you know you're going to have to put up with the comments, leering, lack of support, etc.; but if you can accept this and move ahead with your blinders on, then you can do it. You can move up. If you don't think you're different, no one else will.

In order to put up with all of what comes with being a woman in a kitchen, you need to have a rock-hard spirit, passion, confidence, and determination. Essentially, if you can show whoever may be doubting you that you don't need anymore help than John or Adam and that you believe in yourself, then they'll start to believe that you can do it too--and are as capable as the next guy on the line.

I fear that I sound too idealistic and naive here...And I also fear that what I've said condones or accepts the fact that women will not be treated as equals, that our mistakes will put us two steps back rather than one

"After all, these are supposed to be gutsy spuds, not white tablecloth social climbers."

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Okay, here is where I got to in thinking about the question you posed,about women having equal 'fire in the belly' as men when it comes to using it to 'rise to the top', Busboy.

You can look far back in history in the attempt to trace sources and uses of energies. Everyone knows the concept of yin/yang which has existed for tens of thousands of years...which in very general terms defines hot 'fire in the belly' sort of energy as masculine.... and cool, receiving, calming energy as feminine.

And superfically (and perhaps sometimes not so superfically) the reasons for defining these energies into these separate sexed categories is obvious.

What is important to remember though is that each of these energies resides within each of us. A man can love his children in a nurturing contented way...and a woman can have the urge to get out and do active not passive sorts of things.

When I look at the idea of 'fire in the belly' I come up with four major places it can come from.

1. Testosterone. This is the most common place I see fire in the belly come from. It can be completely undirected, but it simply exists and affects whatever comes before it in time and place. Obviously men have more testosterone than women.

2. A fire in the belly that is taught. When I look at children (which I do a lot) I see some children that feel they can do not very much...or that they only can perform to a certain level. And usually if you look at their parents, you will hear their parents telling them this, in both big and small ways. So that is what they end up doing...exactly what is expected of them. On the other hand, I see children who are encouraged, who are given a sort of mythic idea that they CAN accomplish, that they CAN do whatever it is they want...and I see these children having fire in the belly. I see them growing big, and big inside. Note: This sort of thing is not the same as pushing a child. It somehow initializes itself differently and carries through differently. It is not pushing from the outside...it is encouraging from the inside.

3. It seems to me that fire in the belly in some ways must have a neurologic base also. It would not surprise me to learn that people who have fire in the belly have extra activity in some brain cell. ( :laugh: That does not mean they have any other brain cells at all that work, but just that THAT brain cell is working overtime... :blink: )

4. Fire in the belly...if it is not found in these ways in someone...can be grown. It can be self-grown. It starts with a seed of desire to do something well...to do something excellently and surpassingly...and then it needs to be self-tended by self-narrative.

If it is true...that women do not have equal fire in the belly, for whatever reason...I think it can change if the desire is there to do so for a good personal reason. Just as it is possible for a man with a huge fire in his belly to tame it, for a good personal reason.

That's all I can come up with, on this one.

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