Cooking up chefs
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HE IS
Teaching students the science behind the cooking
RELAYING HIS EXPERTISE
Through classes with 18 to 24 students, Costa Mesa resident
Jeffrey Riggs shows aspiring cooks how to cook seafood, use knives
and understand sauces, and explains a plethora of other
cooking-related topics.
Now working as the executive sous chef at the Pacific Club in
Newport Beach, Riggs has added three teaching jobs to his plate and
is still looking to expand into yet another market: personal cooking
classes at students’ homes.
Riggs began as a teaching assistant at the Pacific Club about
eight years ago and has since turned his assistant position into that
of a full-fledged teaching chef.
Teaching different types of classes at the club, Riggs also began
teaching classes at Sur La Table culinary school in Newport Beach
about three years ago and recently took an additional teaching
position at Can Do Chefs in Yorba Linda.
“After the first class at Sur La Table, I was so excited. It’s
hard to understand why,” he said. “I knew I loved to teach after that
first class.”
BELIEVING IN OTHERS
While some students are easier to teach than others, Riggs
believes that as long as they have the patience and willingness to
learn and understand the science of cooking, they can learn the
craft.
“I like to take the time not just to teach them what to do, but
why we do it,” he said. “I see a lot of people enlightened by it.”
People reach that sense of enlightenment, however, only after
getting rid of some of their hindering misconceptions.
The biggest misconception is the idea “that you can just follow a
recipe and you’re cooking,” Riggs said. “You have to know how to
blend and balance flavors, ... take a recipe and mold it.”
OTHER CHALLENGES
And while that’s one of the challenges Riggs faces when teaching,
it’s not the hardest one.
In fact, the hardest challenge that he faces when teaching doesn’t
have as much to do with the process of teaching people how to cook
but more with his love for it.
“I stray off so much because people ask me questions,” he said. “I
could babble on for hours about one butter sauce.”
WORKING HIS WAY UP
Riggs, who started his culinary education at Orange Coast College,
began his career at the Pacific Club 15 years ago as a roundsmen
training under chefs in various stations.
As a result, he developed a broad-based knowledge of cooking,
which has enabled him to expand his understanding and love of all
food.
“When people ask me what my specialty is, I tell them ‘food’
because I love food,” said Riggs, who remembers being drawn to
cooking since he was young and watched his mother cook. “I specialize
in food ... and I love teaching people that are really interested in
food.”
-- Story by Christine Carrillo; Photo by Don Leach
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