it's been a loooooooooong time since i visited this thread. and a lot of things has happened since then. it also took me awhile to read the things written here form page 1 and i think i had an info overload. both useful and not. LOL.
WARNING! LONG POST AHEAD!
i did notice a lot of people has been asking about where to study where. don't you guys think we should create a topic or better yet a sticky regarding where they can find schools. that way we don't have to keep on answering the same question over and over again. as well as make it easier for other people interested
someone mentioned about using part butter and part oil and yes i do that too:P
as for baking pans used i still prefer metal. better yet non-stick ones. glass and silicone prevents your goodies from browning. unless u want it that way then it's good.
i didn't know about the eggs being easier to peel if cooked that way. i gotta try that the next time i make birthday misua
i would also like to add that i have done my ojt in marriott last year and i did learn a lot. was able to get lots of recipes unfortunately i left my notebook in marriott and didn't go back for it. also lack a few more hours of my OJT and was unable to go back due to some reason
and now i don't want to go back. don't have the face to show them anymore. sigh.... anyway that doesn't matter. recipes are just recipes we can always make our own. what's important is the lesson learned.
something important that i think other chef hopefuls would want to know especially those thinking of going into culinary school. i guess i was living in a bubble and doing my OJT there burst it. i think everyone needs a reality check. there are so many that i don't know wher eto begin
- hotels in Philippines are usually hiring contractuals
- you can work in the hotel for years (heard of someone working for over 3 yrs and still a contractual)
- if you're a contractual u earn mininmum wage. receiving about 6k net a month and that is working for hrs/day 6 days a week.
- contractuals are not entitled to service charge like regular employees are
- know of a culinary school graduate who worked as a kitchen helper and is a contractual and earning a min wage.
- no benefits if you're contractual
cold hard fact is not everyone makes it. and it's also no guarantee that u can go abroad. though makes chances here. so anyway i believe you just have to weigh everything. i believe it is just most worth it if you are not expecting anything in return and especially when u want ur own restaurant. otherwise worst case scenario is working for a hotel here and getting paid minimum wage of about 6k/mo. even at that rate it will take u about 5yrs to earn back the 300k you paid your culinary school for 2 years. and does not include the computation for inflation.
seriously they have cooks there who has been with them for about 10yrs whose basic pay are about the basic pay of the tellers of banks who's been working there for about 3 yrs
the only reason they survive that long is because of the service charge wherein it's usually at least 11k and can sometimes reach 20k when sales is good.
also another realization i made is that i don't want to work as a kitchen helper. i cant peel and chop vegetables for the rest of my life. ok that is an exaggeration i can probably survive 3 months of that but what i can't survive is always following someone's oders! and most of all not really being able to do my own thing. id rather work in my own kitchen and be my own boss and do whatever i want with the food. if it's palpak i can feed it to the dog or throw and nobody will care