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Charlie Trotter Found Dead in Home

Posted on 11/5/13 at 6:04 pm
Posted by Thomas Hudson
Dallas
Member since Dec 2006
7309 posts
Posted on 11/5/13 at 6:04 pm
RIP Chef.

LINK
Posted by Gris Gris
OTIS!NO RULES FOR SAUCES ON STEAK!!
Member since Feb 2008
47332 posts
Posted on 11/5/13 at 7:10 pm to
Did so much in his short life. So sad.
Posted by OTIS2
NoLA
Member since Jul 2008
50066 posts
Posted on 11/5/13 at 7:54 pm to
A shame.
This post was edited on 11/5/13 at 8:02 pm
Posted by CC
Western NY
Member since Feb 2004
14861 posts
Posted on 11/5/13 at 9:22 pm to
He suffered for years with an inoperable brain aneurism. That's got to be a tough thing to live with.
Posted by andouille
A table near a waiter.
Member since Dec 2004
10694 posts
Posted on 11/5/13 at 11:40 pm to
Had an unforgettable meal there is 1998. RIP.
Posted by L.A.
The Mojave Desert
Member since Aug 2003
61182 posts
Posted on 11/6/13 at 12:44 am to
Read that today. Didn't know that he never went to culinary school.
Posted by LakeCountryRed
Training for the Kumite
Member since Feb 2013
2223 posts
Posted on 11/6/13 at 6:33 am to
RIP
Posted by BlackenedOut
The Big Sleazy
Member since Feb 2011
5798 posts
Posted on 11/6/13 at 7:25 am to
Many of these top notch American chefs did not go to culinary school, wish same could be said about lawyers.
Posted by Day Wisher
New Orleans
Member since Sep 2010
399 posts
Posted on 11/6/13 at 8:12 am to
Trotter's approach to learning should be the model for all who aspire to cook for a living. Get a bottom rung job at the best restaurant in your home town. Work your way up for a couple of years and make sure you actually want to do the job for a living. Then identify chefs around the country, if not the world, and start applying for bottom rung positions in their kitchens. Whenever you stop learning you move on.

Culinary school will not teach you anything you can't get paid to learn on the job. It's up to the individual candidate to push themselves in their career which often means moving and starting off lower than their last position in a lesser kitchen.

Or you could rack up 40k (and often much more) in loans just to get a $10-12 an hour job that you could have gotten with a year of experience in any halfway decent kitchen anywhere.

Posted by Oenophile Brah
The Edge of Sanity
Member since Jan 2013
7540 posts
Posted on 11/6/13 at 8:39 am to
quote:

Many of these top notch American chefs did not go to culinary school, wish same could be said about lawyers.

Thank god there is no "bar association" or licensing for chefs.

Sad story.
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