Army Apprentice Chef wins major battle
Army Apprentice Chef wins major battle at New
Zealand’s culinary awards
to
All
that army training that taught him to remain calm under
pressure must have helped up-coming chef Nicholas Todd to
emerge victorious as the winner of the prestigious ServiceIQ
Champion Apprentice Chef 2017 competition, held at the NZ
Hospitality Championships in Auckland last Sunday.
The battle didn’t go according to plan for the young Apprentice Chef and member of the New Zealand Defence Force from Burnham Camp in Christchurch.
When he arrived at
the competition kitchen in Auckland and unpacked the
ingredients from his kit bag, he discovered that he’d left
his prize venison back in the fridge at base.
With
his secret weapon jettisoned, Nicholas’s dish could have
turned out to be a ration pack of hard tack. But luckily,
the Auckland Food Show was in full swing next door and he
could switch out his menu with a fresh lamb rump as a
replacement at the last minute. No pressure.
After a
ninety-minute cook-off against seven other apprentice chefs,
he plated his triumphant main dish. Nicholas describes the
creation as “lamb forest”.
The glory of winning the title is also the glamorous prize. Next year, the young soldier will travel to Australia to spend a week at the world-famous Melbourne Food & Wine Festival, worth around $3,000. He’ll also become a member of the NZ Chefs’ Association. It’s the perfect entrée to a successful career.
Another battle he’s setting his sights on is representing New Zealand against the best apprentice chefs on the planet at the WorldSkills competition in Abu Dhabi during October this year.
Interestingly, he is following in the footsteps of the world’s most famous chef, Auguste Escoffier, also known as the ‘King of Chefs’ or ‘Chef of Kings’, who served in the French army as Chef de Cuisine during the Franco Prussian war.
They say that an army marches on its stomach, so choosing to become a chef for the force is probably a very good career move with very appreciative diners. Maybe Nicholas will treat his Burnham customers to a recreation of his winning dish.
As a child, Nicholas loved watching cooking shows on television and this is where his passion began.
His first job in hospitality was as a waiter. This took him into the kitchen first as a dish hand and then a kitchen hand, at his local tavern.
One of the most exciting things about being an apprentice chef is learning different cooking methods and new ways to create dishes that he’d never imagined were possible.
One early
skill was learning how to make hollandaise sauce and it
continues to serve him well.
An absolute favourite
ingredient is fresh basil. For this chef, the fragrant herb
can be used in all kinds of dishes and always brings a
beautiful flavour to the table.
Nicholas’s greatest ambition as a chef is to one day own his own restaurant.
ServiceIQ CEO Dean Minchington says congratulations to Nicholas, who will soon complete his three-year ServiceIQ Cookery Apprenticeship.
“He’s a great example of an apprentice chef who has honed his craft on the job. He has undoubtedly got an outstanding career ahead of him and I salute his achievement,” says Dean.
Each competitor for the glittering award is carving out a chef’s career by training on-job at a great restaurant using ServiceIQ’s New Zealand Cookery Apprenticeship programme.
Dean Minchington, says the award recognises the outstanding achievement of aspiring chefs “who learn and earn in a real, commercial kitchen with all the demands and pressures for high standards that that fast-paced environment brings”.
He adds that apprenticeships are a ready-made recipe for New Zealand’s chef shortage.
“More and more young people are gaining the vital skills on-job with an apprenticeship and this can help alleviate New Zealand’s shortage of professional chefs by growing the talent pool,” says Dean.
Currently, almost 500 trainee chefs are using ServiceIQ cookery programmes and apprenticeships to develop their culinary skills on the job in great restaurants and cafés around the country. These include: multi-award winning Wellington restaurants Logan Brown, and Charley Noble, nationally renowned Ruth Pretty Catering, Auckland’s Soul Bar & Bistro in Viaduct Harbour, Mission Estate Winery in Napier, Hamilton’s Victoria St Bistro, awarded ‘two hats’ by Cuisine magazine, Queenstown’s Botswana Butchery, Eichardt’s The Grille, and Millbrook Resort, Dunedin’s Emmerson’s Brewery, and the celebrated New Zealand eatery Fleur’s Place, at Moeraki.
“The best way to get an education, experience and earn at the same time is with an apprenticeship,” says Dean. “New Zealand’s urgent need for professional chefs with the experience to serve a booming industry that shows no signs of slowing, calls for more people with proven skills and experience. Today’s great apprentice chefs will be the success of tomorrow’s hospitality industry.”
ENDS
ServiceIQ is the industry training organisation (ITO) for the aviation, hospitality, retail and retail supply chain, travel, tourism and museums sectors.
We’re all about empowering and motivating
people to provide great service. This helps businesses
remain competitive and New Zealand to be internationally
recognised as a great place to live or visit. It also gives
people working in our industries valuable skills and
knowledge along with nationally recognised
qualifications.
www.ServiceIQ.org.nz