For Hong Kong’s next generation of chefs, people skills are as important as knife skills
- Hospitality school instructors voice concern about students’ lack of basic food knowledge and of application, and difficulty communicating
As another semester begins, Hong Kong’s hospitality and culinary schools are getting ready to welcome a new cohort of students.
It is a complicated time for the sector – restaurants continue to struggle to make money, while the demand for qualified cooks and servers is as high as ever. So how exactly are instructors preparing students for the realities of the hospitality industry?
At Polytechnic University’s School of Hotel and Tourism Management, Samantha Tam instructs first-year students on “back of house” basic kitchen skills, from general hygiene to knife safety techniques. The premise she operates from is that with most of her students she is starting with a blank slate.
“We assume they do not have much knowledge about cooking, so we start from scratch. Nowadays, some youngsters cannot even tell apart vegetables, like choi sum from gai lan, or parsley from cilantro [also known as coriander].”