Hey ladies! On todays episode of The Food Seen, Michael Harlan Turkell is joined by food writer Charlotte Druckman, author of Skirt Steak: Women Chefs on Standing the Heat and Staying in the Kitchen. In a book, full of interviews and POVs, Charlotte looks to survey an industry once dominated by her gender counterparts. Has the perception of these roles changed, or just come to heel? Ponder that and more on an insightful and gender themed episode of The Food Seen. This program was sponsored by Rolling Press. I wanted to approach the topic [of women chefs] in a different way. It tends to get the same treatment every time and its kind of like banging your head against the wall. Its time to stop looking at it as a biological argument. Everybody cooks differently - thats what makes food interesting! [03:06] Its an incredibly complicated time to be a professional cook in any sense. Its gone from being a micro craft to a lifestyle concept. [04:48] People tend to assume when women say that theyre chefs that theyre home cooks. On the other hand, women in that industry often feel uncomfortable taking the title chef because they associate it with something chauvinistic or old fashioned. [10:23] --food writer Charlotte Druckman on The Food Seen
Hey ladies! On today’s episode of The Food Seen, Michael Harlan Turkell is joined by food writer Charlotte Druckman, author of Skirt Steak: Women Chefs on Standing the Heat and Staying in the Kitchen. In a book, full of interviews and POVs, Charlotte looks to survey an industry once dominated by her gender counterparts. Has the perception of these roles changed, or just come to heel? Ponder that and more on an insightful and gender themed episode of The Food Seen. This program was sponsored by Rolling Press.
“It’s an incredibly complicated time to be a professional cook in any sense. It’s gone from being a micro craft to a lifestyle concept.” [04:48]
“People tend to assume when women say that they’re chefs that they’re home cooks. On the other hand, women in that industry often feel uncomfortable taking the title ‘chef’ because they associate it with something chauvinistic or old fashioned.” [10:23]
–food writer Charlotte Druckman on The Food Seen