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Culinary Arts and Management is a degree category that consists of the following common degrees:

  • Baking and Pastry Arts

    Satisfaction:

    N/A

    Avg Grad Salary:

    $53k

    Baking and Pastry Arts
  • Culinary Arts

    Satisfaction:

    N/A

    Avg Grad Salary:

    $53k

    Culinary Arts

    Culinary arts are the arts of preparing, cooking, and presenting food. Food that is as pleasing to the eyes as it is to the taste buds is the goal of the culinary artist. Degree programs in the field prepare students for a variety of roles within the food and hospitality arenas. The typical curriculum covers the following:

    • Professional cooking techniques
    • Cuisines from around the world (classic, modern, ethnic)
    • How to balance flavors and tastes
    • Menu planning
    • Catering
    • Food aesthetics, styling, presentation, and plating
    • Food science and components – proteins, carbohydrates, fats, water
    • Food and safety standards
    • Hospitality business management – how to run a kitchen, how to run a restaurant, inventory, budgeting
    • Food media – food branding and marketing, freelance food writing

    As the above program components suggest, culinary arts graduates have a fairly broad spectrum of both specializations, workplaces, and career options from which to choose. There is, of course, one element that characterizes every segment of the discipline: a passion for food.

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  • Culinary Management

    Satisfaction:

    N/A

    Avg Grad Salary:

    $50k

    Culinary Management
  • Food Service Management

    Satisfaction:

    N/A

    Avg Grad Salary:

    $52k

    Food Service Management

    Food service managers oversee the operation of restaurants and other venues that serve food and beverages. Degrees in the field are targeted at individuals who wish to combine their passion for food with an interest in managing a food-related business.

    The typical curriculum consists of instruction in developing a profitable food service concept, writing a business plan, and marketing a venture to a target audience. Students learn how to troubleshoot restaurant and bar management issues concerning operations and staffing, how to analyze trends, and how to make changes to keep a food service business profitable.

    Many programs focus exclusively on the business aspects of food service management. Others incorporate classes in the culinary arts – the arts of preparing, cooking, and presenting food to make it as pleasing to the eyes as it is to the taste buds.

    Read more about Food Service Management