Geoffrey Zakarian speaks to students at ICE.

Geoffrey Zakarian鈥檚 国产福利 Career Advice

The chef, restaurateur and 鈥淐hopped鈥 judge visited our New York campus to speak to culinary and management students.

Geoffrey Zakarian didn鈥檛 realize he wanted to be a chef until age 21. The economics major traveled to France on his summer break from college and discovered the Michelin Guide. He chose a one-star restaurant for lunch each Friday until a game of roulette in Monte Carlo afforded him three-star meals.

Geoffrey Zakarian
Eric Vitale Photography

鈥淚 watched this drama, this theater. I felt like I was royalty,鈥 Chef Geoffrey recalled of his first fine-dining experiences. 鈥淚t was that combination of hospitality, the treatment, the food 鈥 Right then I said I want to be in a restaurant, I want to be a chef. I didn鈥檛 have the experience from the kitchen side, I had it from the entertainment side. Then I was hooked.鈥

He returned to the U.S. with a journal detailing his Michelin-starred meals, which he used to negotiate a spot at the 国产福利 Institute of America, then went on to work at Le Cirque, 21 Club, 44 at the Royalton Hotel and Blue Door at The Delano Hotel, Miami, before opening his own restaurants in New York and Miami.

Today, Chef Geoffrey has cruise ship concepts, two cookbooks, 10 years of television and radio appearances and noteworthy acclaim, including a Michelin star, a James Beard Award and three consecutive three-star reviews in The New York Times.

Last week, The Lambs Club chef/partner shared career advice with ICE culinary students, including these highlights.

On success:

You need to get out there and fail. Forget about being successful. I鈥檓 really good at failing, and I鈥檒l show you how to fail up because it鈥檚 really important you fail up. You鈥檙e going to make some huge errors, and you need to really understand that those errors are okay. There are only two things that are really bad in life: not trying, not giving 100 percent, and getting sick, physically sick. Everything else is going to work itself out. You should compare yourself to who you were yesterday and say, 鈥淭oday, I鈥檓 going to be a little bit better.鈥

On Instagram envy:

It鈥檚 very dangerous to go after someone else鈥檚 success or vision because it defeats your vision. Find something you can really, really do well, even if it鈥檚 one thing. Focus on what you know, what you are, what you really like. Focus on that and be an expert at that. The world today is about specialization.

On first jobs:

Go work for the best of the best. Go to the very best and take a very low entry job and just kill it. I mean kill it, seven days, delay gratification. Work and do whatever that person wants for a year or two and they will give you all the knowledge 鈥 and they might pay you, too.

Dream big. If you鈥檙e not frightened to death of the person you want to work for then you鈥檙e not dreaming big enough. That person was where you are at one time. They dreamt big. Think of it as a continuum. Then once you get in there, that person becomes a human being. Put your head down and go to work. It doesn鈥檛 take long to identify talent.

Geoffrey Zakarian poses with students at ICE.
Geoffrey Zakarian stopped by ICE's New York campus to offer students career advice.

On kitchen promotions:

I never thought about a paycheck at Le Cirque. I went from assistant pastry chef to pastry sous, then I went on the line with Rick Moonen as a sauce cook, then I went as a meat cook, then I went to the sous chef, then I went to executive sous and then I was chef de cuisine in five years. First American chef ever to do that. Not ever did I talk about money or goals, I just worked.

I was not ready to be a sous chef, and I got promoted. I would do anything Chef Alain Sailhac told me to do, and he watched me closely. I had to really work smarter not harder. I had to lead people, and that鈥檚 a very different skillset. The next level of sous: now you鈥檙e talking to the chef, now you鈥檙e ordering food, now you鈥檙e making specials. If someone鈥檚 out, you鈥檝e got to cover their station and you have to get payroll, you have to train someone and bring the commis in, it鈥檚 a lot of work. I outworked everybody and tried to be fair to everybody. When you work harder than someone else, they will do anything for you. You have to show up before they come and be there after they leave.

On balance:

Work really hard, try to focus on what you love and make yourself the best you can be. You will figure the rest out through taking initiatives on your own: take care of yourself, eat healthy, sleep a lot when you can. Lay off booze; lay off drugs; exercise.

I just make myself the best that I can with what I have, and I keep my life in a way that is simple. I have my children, my family and my work. Is there a balance? No. Is there burnout? If you drink too much, eat too much, don鈥檛 take care of yourself. A lot of people burnout, most because of substance abuse, which is big, big, big in our industry. I鈥檝e never had balance in my life. I try to keep contentment as close as possible.

On opportunity:

Knowledge is anywhere you want it at any time. When you鈥檙e not busy working, you can study. When you鈥檙e not studying, you can work. When you鈥檙e not working or studying, you can travel, very easily today. The United States has the greatest restaurants in the world right now, right here.

Start your own culinary story in ICE鈥檚 career programs, and see more upcoming guest lectures on campus.

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