Q & A With Culinary Instructor Colette Christian: Culinary School Evolution, Home Cooks + Her New Online Croissant Class

chef christian.jpg
JGarbee
Colette Christian at the Santa Monica farmers market
Colette Christian, a pastry instructor at the Art Institute of Hollywood (AIH) and formerly of the CSCA/Le Cordon Bleu in Pasadena, has spent years teaching aspiring pastry chefs how to make a buttery-perfect brioche [Disclosure: In 2004/2005, Christian was one of this writer's instructors in Le Cordon Bleu's pastry program]. But when it comes to teaching, Christian says she prefers a kitchen full of home cooks. "Home cooks are my heart," she says.

For professional instructors like Christian, teaching home cooks is not always a financial reality. Amateur cooking outposts like Sur La Table and The Gourmandise School often have very few, if any, full-time teaching positions (many rely on guest instructors who receive modest fees per class). Add in the logistical nightmare of hopping from one class to the next in L.A. traffic, and it's hardly surprising that many instructors like Christian have remained within professional culinary schools walls.

But with the help of the website Craftsy, Christian has launched her first online cooking course. It's not quite the same as a live classroom full of eager home bakers, but for Christian, a step in the right croissant direction (she is hoping it will also give her the opportunity to teach as a guest instructor at more local amateur schools in the future). Get our interview with the chef after the jump.

colettes croissants.jpg
Craftsy.com
Chef Christian's croissants
Squid Ink: You finally did the American Culinary Federation chef certification? The Master Sommelier exam in culinary terms.

Colette Christian: Yes! Chef and I studied for three months for the written exam, but the practical was really what makes it difficult. You're making things you haven't made in years for judges walking around with their clipboards, looking at every little thing you do. I had to take it three times to pass because I lost points on the smallest things. One time I had tape on my knife handles that was from my students, and they took points off because it was unsanitary. Another time they thought my crème anglaise wasn't thick enough, so I didn't pass by 2 points. [Note: "Chef" is Christian's husband, Daniel Rossi, formerly chef at Michel Richard's Citrus.]

SI: Did you think it was thick enough?

CC: Oh yes, it's the same way I've always taught how to make crème anglaise.

SI: Sort of funny, if you think about it. Crème anglaise thickness really is rather subjective. But on to you. You and everyone else seems to have left the CSCA. You're now at the Art Institute of Hollywood?

CC: Yes, it's so different from the CSCA. There, I had to have 16 students just for a class to run; sometimes I'd have as many as 35 students. At AIH, we're still really small, building up, so I've got 4 students in my baking class right now.

SI: That must be pretty nice, to be able to spend more time with each student.

CC: It is, it's so great to be there. But there is this other side, of getting the energy going in the room when you have only 4 people. I also really want to be part of a greater movement to get to the other side of all of this [food] insanity with so many of the students today.

SI: You mean the food television-groomed generation? You're bound to have some students who go to culinary school today thinking they're going to be the next television star.

CC: Yes [smiles]. Things have really changed in the years since I moved here from Vermont, where I'd been baking, and started teaching [in 2004]. It's different from when you were there. People aren't going to culinary school for the same professional reasons they used to; they don't know what they're getting into. Home cooks are where my heart is today. Pre-professional students often have no passion today, they just want to get through a class.

SI: That's interesting to hear you say. Not that different from impatient teenagers. Actually, you do get a lot of teenagers in culinary school.

CC: Exactly. But when you get a group of home cooks together, they really want to be in that class. They really want to learn. It's just so exciting.

SI: So how did you get involved with Craftsy and these online demonstration courses?

CC: I actually was online there as a sewing student, taking one of their vintage sewing classes.

SI: You sew, too? Of course you do. And you're pulling double teachings shifts, working until midnight tonight.

CC: Oh yes, I love to sew. I also had just taught a croissant class at Great News in San Diego. A demonstration-only class. Have you been there? So gorgeous. They have 7 or so large-screen televisions so everyone could see every move I made, and I found that I really enjoyed it. A student there came up to me to tell me about [another chef] who was teaching at Craftsy. Peter Reinhart has a bread class there, too. I'd done a video with my baking club in Hollywood on macaroons, so I sent them a proposal. After several months, it worked out, and I just finished my first online class on croissants.

SI: That's great. How does that work, as far as teaching? It's not interactive, like a podcast?


My Voice Nation Help
0 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest

Now Trending

From the Vault

 

©2013 LA Weekly, LP, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Los Angeles

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city