Institute
of the South for Hospitality and Culinary
Arts
Sara Welch
Sara will graduated with her Associate
Degree in Culinary Management in Summer
Term 2007. She recently won two recipe
contests, the prize for one being a
trip to France.
Sara Welch didn’t
start her college career with an eye
on the culinary field; she had planned
to be a music teacher. Growing up in
Las Vegas, Sara sang and played piano
throughout school. But in her junior
year at University of Nevada Las Vegas
Sara developed a hearing problem while
studying elementary music education. “When
I couldn’t hear, I couldn’t
sing; when I couldn’t sing, I
confused the kids when I tried to teach
them a tune,” she says. Devastated,
she dropped out of school completely.
After
several years working as an administrative
assistant, the company she was working
for offered to transfer her to Miami,
Orlando or Jacksonville. “Though
I had never seen Jacksonville, it just
sounded better than the other options,
so I moved here sight unseen,” she
says.
Sara decided to go back to college,
and chose FCCJ’s Culinary Institute
of the South for its emphasis not only
on culinary fundamentals, but on the
management, marketing and business
side of the food industry as well. “The
best thing about FCCJ is our chef-instructors,” she
says. “Each instructor brings
years of experience, passion, seemingly
endless patience and a great sense
of humor. We (students) count ourselves
privileged to study under them.”
Sara’s enthusiasm for the program
is evidenced by her accomplishments.
She was recently profiled in the Florida
Times-Union for winning a contest sponsored
by The Office of Champagne USA. Sara
won the main dish category with her
recipe “Roasted
Lamb with Port-Cherry Sauce paired
with Vintage Rosé.” Her
entry into the dessert category, Lavender-Lime
Soufflés, came in third. The
prize was a trip to the Champagne region
of France this February, where Welch
and her husband toured wineries to
learn about the region’s soil,
climate and what makes Champagne unique.
And in January she won a $1,000 scholarship
for her recipe “Tuna and Black
Bean Salad Wraps,” entered in
the Steel Institute’s “Inspiration
in a Can” contest.
Sara graduated with her Associate
Degree in Culinary Management. She
plans to eventually become certified
by the American Culinary Federation
as a Pastry Chef. Beyond that? “My own
restaurant or bakery may lie in the distant future; I need to collect some years
of experience before taking that step.” In the meantime, Sara plans to
continue writing recipes and entering contests, just for fun. “This contest
winning thing is quite addictive!” she says.
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