Cooking Up A Path To Success

Hands-on learning paved the way to more opportunity

David Smith, and older man in a black uniform and ball cap, leans over several plates of food in a professional kitchen to check the work of culinary students.
David Smith evaluates boot camp participants’ plates, and example of ADVANCE’s hands-on learning approach. Photo courtesy of ADVANCE.

At the West Shore Café in Homewood, Calif., the eatery doubles as a training site for those dreaming of one day cooking for a living.

In 2016, ADVANCE designed, delivered and refined a culinary boot camp and in 2019, turned it over to Lake Tahoe Community College, which today offers it as a non-credit course, says Brad Deeds, the college’s dean of Workforce Development and Instruction.

“The boot camp prepares participants for entry-level prep cook and cook positions in the local culinary industry and to transition into credit courses and programs,” Deeds says.

“West Shore Café/Homewood Ski Resort currently has multiple culinary apprentices working at the property and participating in the training.”

David Smith, director of food and beverage, West Shore Café/Homewood Ski Resort

ADVANCE also helped secure a $500,000 pre-apprenticeship grant through the California Apprenticeship Initiative. The funding was used to realign curriculum, purchase equipment and provide the support needed to launch an American Culinary Federation 2,000-hour Certified Culinarian Apprenticeship program.

By focusing on the skills and knowledge requirements established by the American Culinary Federation, the apprenticeship program teaches the skills local chefs say are necessary for advancement in the industry. The program currently has eight apprentices working on both sides of the California/Nevada border.

“It’s a unique opportunity for students to get industry-valued training in combination with college credit coursework,” Deeds says.

Program innovations include the opportunity for registered apprentices to earn college credit on the job or to meet on-the-job requirements through college coursework. This can reduce stress, increase enrollments and decrease resistance from supervising chefs and managers.

“West Shore Café/Homewood Ski Resort currently has multiple culinary apprentices working at the property and participating in the training,” says

David Smith, the restaurant’s director of food and beverage.

During an early boot camp, Smith recalls one cynical 20-something-year-old boot camp participant who told him, “I’m just here because I don’t want to be out in the cold. You’re not going to be able to teach me anything.” After Smith demonstrated how to cut a roasted chicken into eight parts to create eight different meals, “the light went on in her head and she said, ‘You mean I can put this with potatoes or rice and a vegetable and have five or six meals for my daughter instead of taking her to McDonald’s?’”

“For the rest of the week,” says Smith, “she asked me every question in the book.”

Deeds credits ADVANCE for not only the boot camp, but for being an invaluable partner to Lake Tahoe Community College and industry partners in the Tahoe basin. He says numerous students have obtained jobs and promotions because of the program.

“They delivered customized, just-in-timing training and support for the adult population in our community,” he says, “and helped hundreds of individuals increase skills, earn a high school credential, connect to college courses, and increase their current and future earning potential.”

For more information, visit www.advance-learnearngrow.org/.

Written by Gail Allyn Short.

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Northern California Careers in Business-Technology

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