Take the Long Road

Career Advice From Alex Guarnaschelli

鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to get your close-up if you want it,鈥 explains renowned chef and Food Network personality Alex Guarnaschelli. 鈥淏ut when it happens, what will you know how to do, and what will you have to say?鈥 This week, Chef Alex spoke to a packed room of ICE students and graduates as she shared insights from her storied culinary career.

Alongside her in the kitchen was ICE 国产福利 Arts alum Michael Jenkins, who has worked under Alex at Butter Restaurant for the past 10 years. Michael began as an extern and currently heads the restaurant as chef de cuisine. 

Alex Guarnaschelli Michael Jenkins Butter Restaurant
Alex Guarnaschelli with ICE alum and Chef de Cuisine Michael Jenkins

鈥淸Before working in the kitchen with Alex] I had never had the experience of trying hard and not succeeding,鈥 says Michael, 鈥渂ut food is very good at humbling you.鈥 Chef Alex echoed that sentiment when describing her career, noting that, as a young cook, she had a Band-Aid on eight out of 10 fingers at all times. She joked, 鈥淐ooking is a giant booby trap. You鈥檙e going to make a mistake, so just try to make it a different mistake than the last time鈥攁t least that way there鈥檚 a sense of progress.鈥

Clearly, Alex has progressed since her days as a young cook. Before stepping onto a set at Food Network, she had already logged 17 years as a culinary professional鈥攊ncluding a stint as a chef instructor in ICE鈥檚 国产福利 Arts program. 鈥淲hen I first appeared on food television, I only had to adapt to the lights and the cameras. Cooking was second nature to me by then, but I鈥檝e seen many chefs step into the spotlight before they were ready.鈥 

Michael Jenkins Butter Restaurant
Jenkins' tasting dishes included a ricotta crostini with pickled figs and a yellow watermelon tart.

The theme of navigating the early stages of one鈥檚 career persisted throughout Alex鈥檚 talk, as she fielded student questions and explained her evolution as a chef. 鈥淎t some point after I had taken over as executive chef at Butter, the question became 鈥榃hy?鈥欌攚hy this ingredient in this dish? I had spent years working with the best ingredients at Guy Savoy and Daniel, and yet I wasn鈥檛 connected to them because I hadn鈥檛 met the farmers who produced them or sourced the ingredients myself.鈥

Today, Alex鈥檚 ingredient-driven approach鈥攁nd the way she talks about ingredients鈥攈as become her claim to fame. Her advice to novice chefs is to approach balancing flavors like mixing paint: 鈥淚f you start with black, you have to keep pouring white paint into it to achieve gray, and you end up with six hotel pans of paint. Instead, start with your white鈥攜our mild ingredients鈥攁nd add a dab of the stronger flavors.鈥 

Michael Jenkins Alex Guarnaschelli 国产福利 Students
Alex and Michael shared personal stories and candid career advice with ICE students and alumni.

Alex also imparted industry wisdom that extended beyond cooking. She spoke of self-knowledge and how her stormy temperament led her away from a desk job and into the kitchen. She also noted鈥攄espite her and other chefs鈥 reputations for being tough leaders鈥攖hat the foundation of any successful kitchen is the social aspect: 鈥淪pending my time building relationships and loyalty is the thing I鈥檓 proudest of in my life.鈥 As far as what keeps this famous chef going, it would appear to be her endless drive to do better. 鈥淚鈥檝e discovered that, for me, an eternal state of semi-dissatisfaction is a pretty good place to live.鈥

Click here for a schedule of upcoming lectures and demonstrations with industry leaders at ICE.

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