Posted on Apr 6, 2017
My daughter wants to be a baker (civilian career choice) and wants to enlist. Which branch offers better options for this role long term?
21.7K
63
70
7
7
0
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 54
Surprised not much Navy input yet. Here's the real skinny. Ships and submarines have people who bake. That's because you don't have contractors aboard and you can't store Wonder Bread in a freezer that would take up half the ship. The food has to be concentrated, which means flour. So a certain body count of people who bake must be maintained for the fleet. On shore rotations, you'll see them on land side galleys. It's probably why you see a mix of civilian and military mess types working together. Now for promotion in rate, you have to know more than baking. That doesn't mean you can't excel more in one area than another. If other services have units and mission that means you must have bakers, so be it. However, I think the Navy has the larger need for them.
(9)
(0)
I had a friend that started as a culinary specialist at the missile field and then he went on to be the pastry chef at the executive dining room at the pentagon. Before he was accepted to OCS he was offered to be a Flight Steward on Air Force one (Steward, aide, and chef).
http://www.afimsc.af.mil/News/ArticleDisplay/tabid/5171/Article/630999/air-force-chefs-learn-from-the-best.aspx
http://www.afimsc.af.mil/News/ArticleDisplay/tabid/5171/Article/630999/air-force-chefs-learn-from-the-best.aspx
Air Force chefs learn from the best
Fourteen Air Force, Air National Guard and Air Force Reserves chefs gained invaluable culinary training during the 2015 Armed Forces Forum for Culinary Excellence at the Culinary Institute of America
(8)
(0)
SSG Christopher Parrish
Great article, thanks. She is looking to go to the Culinary Institute of America, so if she can make this happen it would obviously be the best of both Worlds. Not to mention the boot camp location is more amicable for a girl who grew up in Texas :-)
(1)
(0)
I think they all have great opportunities in culinary arts BUT they also all go to Fort Lee for their training? Just saying.
Much depends upon how much she wants to take away from her training because I had the opportunity to work with a Chef from the Army and he was truly World class...or she could be pouring out cans of corn into a pot?
Much depends upon how much she wants to take away from her training because I had the opportunity to work with a Chef from the Army and he was truly World class...or she could be pouring out cans of corn into a pot?
(7)
(0)
(1)
(0)
PO3 (Join to see)
Coast guard has their own culinary training school and are very open to sending cooks out to colleges like the culinary institute of America and New England culinary institute...really fast moving rate
(0)
(0)
SPC Dane DeGrace
PO3 (Join to see) - Hi Nathanael, do you have any further information, or perhaps a point of contact with the Coast Guard Culinary Program in regards to the Coast Guard sending cooks to culinary institutions?
(0)
(0)
PO3 (Join to see)
Sorry haven’t been on here in a while, I would recommend talking with a recruiter, i don’t really have any point of contacts right now for that...I know it’s a billet that you have to at least be e-5 or e-6 to be selected for it. Something I’m really trying to get to
(0)
(0)
Read This Next