“The goal of the project is, first, to prove that it is possible, and second, to inspire others to make whatever incremental change they can toward supporting local farming,” says Cox, a 2005 culinary graduate of Kendall College who earned her bachelor’s degree from Dominican University. She also operates a successful personal-chef business, Old Stove LLC. “This knowledge will be shared with my students and the general public via my blog, the book and every day in my classroom as we discuss sourcing, purchasing and marketing foodstuffs.”
Tai Sellers, a culinary-arts instructor at George Washington High School at 3535 E. 114th Street, was honored in the high-school division of the grant program. Sellers will apply her $1,500 grant toward a weeklong culinary immersion in Italy this summer, where she’ll visit food producers and markets and attend cooking classes and scheduled tastings in Rome, Naples and Sorrento.
“I plan to journal, take photos and film my experiences, not only to influence my lesson plans, but also to share Italian cooking techniques with my students,” says Sellers, a graduate of Johnson & Wales University’s College of Culinary Arts in Providence, R.I., whose career includes cooking stints at New York City’s The Spotted Pig (credited as the first gastropub in the United States), Chicago’s Green Zebra and China Grill restaurants, and the Novotel London West in the U.K. “Many of my students have never traveled beyond the north side of Chicago from the southeast side. They deserve to see a global view of food, even if only through my eyes and experiences for now.”
Chefs of Tomorrow™ grant recipients include chef instructors Laurette Stefani (2010) of Robert Morris University and Laura Vaughn (2009) and Lee Jamison (2008), both of Washburne Culinary Institute. Olson Communications will announce the 2012 Chefs of Tomorrow grant program next winter.
Olson Communications has committed to offering up to $20,000 in new grants to the greater Chicago area’s high-school and college-level culinary educators through the company’s Chefs of Tomorrow™ program. In all cases, the professional-development award must ultimately benefit student learning. Additional grants will be made to Chicago community-based programs that endeavor to improve education on food and nutrition.