Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Sharper Your Knife, The Less You Cry by Kathleen Flinn

Have you ever considered a radical career change? Sometimes I dream about what I might have done in an "alternate life". I think that I could have become an executive assistant to an important and busy person, making their life functional and organised. Sometimes I think I could have been a technical writer; maybe a science correspondent for a newspaper. Other times I think I could have set up a bed and breakfast by a lake.


I have never wanted to a be a full time chef, though. I have now read a couple of books about people who threw in the towel at their "ordinary" (non-cooking) jobs and went to culinary school. These brave souls are willing to give up their stability and life's work to date to retrain as a restaurant chef. I love cooking; I do! And perhaps you do, too. But would you want to train as a cook? Or work full time as a chef?

Kathleen Flinn, the author of February's Kitchen Reader book, left her "regular" job to take courses at the Le Cordon Bleu Culinary Arts School in Paris. She learned how to prepare all the French classic recipes on the syllabus, including mirepoix (diced vegetables for stock), quail, sweetbreads, all the classic sauces, and lots of meat stuffed with meat. Her memoir, The Sharper Your Knife, The Less You Cry details the cranky chefs, competitive classmates, and knife/life skills she learned along the way.

Flinn talks a lot about the recipes she learned to prepare. Though the culinary school recipes all seemed to finicky for me to be genuinely interested in them, I found myself enjoying the food and life connections. Flinn's love of cooking means she can use it as a refuge when homesick, angry, or confused. When the chefs picked on her, she wrote, "He ignored me. I took out my frustrations on the guinea fowl."

Flinn's encountered a chef whose food she thought was inventive, Christian Le Squer, at his restaurant, Le Doyen. During their conversation, she mentioned that her favourite dish was the amuse-bouche, the tiny pre-appretiser dish of beet sorbet on top of smoky fish. He was excited and explained that he tried to think of ingredients that don't work together, and then find a way that they could. I was really inspired by this idea - and I feel like it's my usual "what's in the fridge for dinner?" conundrum!

"Taste, taste, taste!" is the mantra Flinn took away from Le Cordon Bleu. She wrote that this was advice for cooking and for life. I'm sure her culinary tastes changed dramatically through her time at culinary school. Her whole life changed after her move to culinary school.

Have you ever considered (or executed) a dramatic change in your life?

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Comments (6)

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Though I'm pretty sure I don't want to be a restaurant chef (one of the few things I know I don't want to do haha), didn't this book make you want to go to culinary school? It sounds so fun and I would love to elevate my cooking skills!
1 reply · active 631 weeks ago
Iris, yes, a little. I would love to learn how to cook "properly" but I think I would prefer to do it in a friendlier and less stressful setting.
I wouldn't want to be a restaurant chef either. Long hours and it's too hot in the kitchen. Will keep watching food tv from the comfort of the TV instead. This looks like a good read. Will look for it.
My recent post Taste of Spanish Sunshine at Zorita’s Kitchen
1 reply · active 631 weeks ago
Ah, yes, there are some great food TV shows, but I think I actually prefer books. Good thing I'm in this book club. :) Which shows do you like to watch?
I used to be a Nuclear Electrician but grew tired and disillusioned, quit, and found myself working in a kitchen. Now 7 years later, a culinary school grad, and making ice cream for a living I have never been happier. The professional kitchen isn't the right place for most people and culinary school won't get you a good job, but it worked out for me. Great blog and topic. Thanks.
My recent post Chocolate Deserts by Pierre Hermé pt2
1 reply · active 631 weeks ago
Hi KandD, thanks for your comment. (I love conversation!) That sounds like a big career change. I'm so glad it worked out well for you. Doing a job you like can make it easier to get over other things, I'm sure, like stress. I know that's true for me in my (completely non-cooking) day job.

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