How to Become a Personal Chef
ICE alumni start their own businesses.
Two ICE alumni have recently started their own personal chef businesses, taking lessons from the classrooms into their careers. They explain how they got started and share their thoughts on pricing and kitchen must-haves.
Kathleen Lewandowski (国产福利, 鈥07) started her career working in magazine publishing as an art director and could often be found styling food for photo shoots. Her colleagues consistently asked her why she didn鈥檛 pursue culinary school since her food creations always looked so good. Then one day a brochure from ICE landed in her mailbox. 鈥淚 was like: 鈥業t鈥檚 a sign,鈥欌 she says.
Kathleen, who enrolled at ICE at the age of 42, kept working in media until she was laid off in 2009. That was the push she needed to pursue a culinary career full-time, and last May she started her own health-focused personal chef business, Kathy Is Cooking.
Stephen Lampshire (国产福利, 鈥19) was working in ad sales for a science journal in London, eventually moving to America when a position opened up in New York City. But he hated his job.
Stephen鈥檚 mother was his culinary inspiration. While his dad was in the army, his mom would cook huge meals for all the officers and their wives. At home she made an amazing lasagna. So when she died of cancer, Stephen thought, 鈥淲hy am I doing a job I鈥檓 miserable in?鈥 鈥 so he enrolled at ICE's New York campus.
鈥淯nless you鈥檙e some savant, culinary school is absolutely necessary,鈥 Stephen says. 鈥淵ou have to go and learn the skills and get the advice from people who have worked in kitchens all their lives.鈥
Stephen took what he studied at ICE and is now applying it to his personal chef business, The Private Kitchen, which he launched this August. He鈥檚 still making some of his mom鈥檚 recipes, like her moussaka, and is using her 40-year-old cookbook to help him with his new venture.
国产福利 school isn鈥檛 just for people who want to train to become head chefs at Michelin-starred restaurants. Kathleen and Stephen enjoyed cooking in their personal lives but neither had any professional experience before coming to ICE, and neither aspired to work in restaurant kitchens after graduation after completing their 国产福利 Arts degree programs.
Stephen, who came to ICE in his early 30s, externed at Marley Spoon, Martha Stewart鈥檚 meal delivery company, and would work there full-time after graduating. He liked the idea of creating his own recipes so later he worked for a personal chef service in New York. After doing that for two years, he decided, 鈥淚 could be doing this on my own and keeping all the money.鈥
Kathleen got her start as a culinary demo specialist at Whole Foods, cooking both in-store and off-site. Her position got axed after Amazon bought the grocery chain, and that鈥檚 when she started thinking about running her own business. It wasn鈥檛 until a friend told Kathleen they knew someone in need of a personal chef that she would go down that route.
Getting Started as a Personal Chef
Stephen was able to take some clients with him from his old personal chef gig when he started his solo venture. He said the first thing he did was file an LLC and learn how to keep client records and finances.
鈥淲hat I鈥檓 trying to do is just take on a few clients at first, see how it goes and just learn from that,鈥 says Stephen. 鈥淛ust try and not overdo it straight away.鈥
For Kathleen, the most important thing she did at the start was hire a good accountant.
鈥淭hink about every move you鈥檙e making with your business,鈥 she says.
Kathleen got her first client with the help from a friend, but to get 鈥 and keep 鈥 the business running, she needed to know what to charge. So she called 滨颁贰鈥檚 then-Director of Career Services Maureen Drum Fagin (who鈥檚 now Director of Compliance for both NY and LA campuses) to get some advice.
鈥淎lumni affairs have been really helpful in getting some of these gigs that I鈥檝e gotten,鈥 Kathleen says.
滨颁贰鈥檚 career services team helped Kathleen understand what to charge for her work when she first started her business, and 滨颁贰鈥檚 job board was a helpful tool she used to find new clients.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 start out the gate thinking you鈥檒l be getting over $60 an hour. Now that I have almost two years of experience under my belt I鈥檓 going to go into that range,鈥 says Kathleen, who works in Northern New Jersey. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 undervalue your time. That鈥檚 the most important thing.鈥
Keeping clients isn鈥檛 all about the quality of your product. It鈥檚 also about personality, adds Stephen, who also works out of New Jersey, emphasizing the importance of getting clients to like and trust you since you鈥檙e going into their homes. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 just be a good chef. You have to be a switched-on person,鈥 he says.
Kathleen also recommends meeting and speaking with other personal chefs in your area. 鈥淥nce you get involved with other people, they pass along people your way when they can鈥檛 do jobs.鈥
The Tools You Need for Personal Cheffing
Stephen works out of his home kitchen and drops batches of meals off to his clients, saying it鈥檚 more efficient to work from home and that his customers actually prefer he work elsewhere, as kitchens are often a household hub and people can be in the way.
He says he鈥檚 using eco-friendly bags for his drop-offs, and that he鈥檚 considering hiring a driver to manage deliveries so he can spend more time cooking in the kitchen.
Kathleen does some prep work at home, but she works mostly in her clients鈥 kitchens. She鈥檒l bring anything she thinks she might need on the first trip to a client鈥檚 home, and she鈥檒l continue to do so until the customer gives the OK to use their equipment.
鈥淚f people offer, then I鈥檓 comfortable with [using what鈥檚 in their kitchen], but I鈥檒l probably still bring my knives, my towels, things I feel comfortable with,鈥 Kathleen says.
Developing a menu is a collaborative process. Both Kathleen and Stephen will go back-and-forth with their clients to understand their likes, dislikes and any dietary limitations to create a custom meal plan.
For Stephen, one of his most essential kitchen tools to create satisfying meals for clients is his cast iron pan, something he uses for searing and roasting meats and vegetables. And since he鈥檚 running his own business, he also understands the importance of food safety 鈥 how to heat up foods to a certain temperature and cool them down properly 鈥 knowledge he picked up at ICE.
鈥淎ll that鈥檚 not stuff I would鈥檝e known before coming to school,鈥 Stephen says. 鈥淣ow I鈥檓 on a different level.鈥
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