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The Culinary “Food Chain”: Private and Personal Chefs Negotiate Identity and Status in the Culinary Profession

Gender and Food: From Production to Consumption and After

ISBN: 978-1-78635-054-1, eISBN: 978-1-78635-053-4

Publication date: 22 August 2016

Abstract

Purpose

Gender, race, and class-based meanings inform longstanding divisions and status hierarchies within the culinary profession, such as those between public and private and amateur and professional cooking. Private and personal chefs’ work in homes disrupts these divisions and hierarchies. Given their precarious position, how do these chefs negotiate their standing within the profession?

Methodology/approach

This chapter draws on interviews with 41 private/personal chefs. Eight were primarily private household employees, while all others were primarily self-employed.

Findings

The chefs negotiated their status by making distinctions between themselves and commercial chefs, along with other private/personal chefs. The chefs both challenge and reinforce the dichotomies and criteria shaping status evaluations within the culinary profession. Similarly, they both contest and reinforce gender, race, and class hierarchies.

Social implications

The chefs’ conceptual distinctions can potentially (re)produce or challenge material inequalities. Moreover, while the fields of private/personal cheffing create opportunities for more adults to cook for a living, the traditional status hierarchies remain largely the same. It is likely that as long as those hierarchies persist, the chefs’ conceptual distinctions will continue to challenge and reinforce them.

Originality/value

Research on private/personal chefs has been minimal, so this chapter fills this gap. It also adds to scholarship connecting workers’ status struggles and gender, race, and class inequalities. The case of private and personal chefs sheds new light on how gender, race, and class intersect to inform status evaluations within the culinary profession.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

The author would like to thank the chefs who participated in this research, as well as the United States Personal Chef Association for their cooperation. She also is thankful for the feedback provided by Maria Charles, Kimberly Nettles-Barcelón, John Mohr, Denise Segura, Heather Hurwitz, and the editors of this volume.

Citation

Hendley, A. (2016), "The Culinary “Food Chain”: Private and Personal Chefs Negotiate Identity and Status in the Culinary Profession", Gender and Food: From Production to Consumption and After (Advances in Gender Research, Vol. 22), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 219-241. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-212620160000022020

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016 Emerald Group Publishing Limited