Jae Gruber-Price

Jae Gruber-PriceCHEP

About me

Jae Gruber-Price instructed more than a dozen classes in culinary technique and hospitality education. She served as a member of the Academic Leadership Team for Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Atlanta for 13 years and completed her service to the organization as Interim Director of Education. Her responsibilities included: conducting bi-annual employee evaluations; faculty observations; classroom, syllabus, rubrics and student customer service quality control; curriculum development and enforcement of syllabus standards; student worker management; payroll responsibilities; coordinator of faculty development activities; talent acquisition; retention initiatives; records management; accreditation preparation; regulatory compliance; scheduling for an average of forty instructors during four shift periods for over 70 classes.

Additional experience includes the role of Executive Chef for several fine dining restaurants, as well as an extensive background in high-end exclusive catering, kosher catering, a personal chef, and the opportunity to cook at the James Beard House. She worked as a restaurant consultant in Atlanta and Central America, specializing in menu and wine list development, training, and sanitation improvement.  Jae is currently the owner of Life Cuisine, a Personal Chef and private home culinary and wine instruction service.  She is also a professor at Underwood University, for the Bachelor of Hotel Management degree program.

Jae was the recipient of the 2016 Distinguished Educator of the Year award for Academic Leadership from Career Education Corporation. She has earned several professional certifications, such as CCE, FMP, and CHEP. Jae is a Culinary, Hospitality, and Events Specialist evaluator for ACICS and ACCSET.

Jae was previously the host for the Le Cordon Bleu Radio Show and later, her own culinary talk radio show. She contributed articles to Le Cordon Bleu publications, has had recipes published in Dine Out Atlanta and Lisa Boalt Richardson’s Book, The World in your Tea Cup, and she has also had a stint as an online syndicated food columnist.  She is also the author of the online MaxKnowledge course:  Introduction to Culinary Instruction.

Activity

John, Thank you for sharing this best practice. This is very creative way to get students really thinking. I love it. Jae Gruber
Paul, I find that people that do mystery basket or competition judging definitely can increase their awareness of small details. I often emphasize to students that in a competition or certification process, you are judged as much by how you got to the end product, as the final product itself and that sanitation infractions alone can cause disqualification. Jae Gruber
Brian, I do think plating visuals are extremely important. It is one think to explain plating, but some students do not have a frame of reference if they have never dined at a location where plate presentation is important. Jae Gruber
Shannon, This is an excellent best practice. It is one thing to be able to identify an item, but quite another to explore the item in depth and share it with classmates. Great idea! Jae Gruber
Brian, I had to laugh at your comment about the students initials reaction of offal. That certainly does seem to be pretty standard. It is true though, that if they at least try a bite they are usually surprised by how much they enjoy it. Jae Gruber
david, It is definitely a good idea to explain why you are plating items a certain way during a demo. Even if the students do not have the opportunity to do plating in an Intro class, they are at least getting an explanation along with the visual aid of your plate. Jae Gruber
Kimberly, I have witnessed some extremely creative group presentations for foodbourne illness...even puppet shows, costumes, sculptures and more. What may seem like a dry topic can be a source of fun! Jae Gruber
Shannon, Some students do have challenges grasping the concept of liquid measures vs. dry measures. Visuals make a difference! Jae Gruber
David, What an interesting approach! A bit of reverse psychology, if you will. Thank you for sharing! Jae Gruber
Brian, Culinary instruction is indeed about the technique and sometimes it is hard to change the mindset of students who came in focused on recipes to the actual procedure. Saute, braise, roast, poach...whatever the technique, it is the same process, regardless of the product. Jae Gruber

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