Cooking prodigy
At 17 she seems to have all the right ingredients for success, it’s a
recipe she knows well and it has it has earned her the opportunity to
compete in the finals in New York City on May 17 for the title of
Best Teen Chef in America.
Cooking is a passion of Allyson Ames of Corona del Mar, and
winning the Regional Semifinals in The Art Institutes’ Best Teen Chef
in America in March at The Art Institute of Southern California has
changed her life.
“I read an article in the food section of a newspaper about the
competition,” Ames said. “I called the school and they told me how to
enter and that I needed a portfolio. I came in for an orientation on
the recipes, guidelines and expected judging with Chef Lauderdale.”
He gave the hopefuls tips and Ames went home and started
practicing, explaining that over the three weeks before the
competition she had to get familiar with the recipes, practicing
making the courses several times and putting together prep cards as
reminders.
“I wasn’t nervous when I was practicing,” Ames said. “When I got
there I saw it was so big and got butterflies, but when I started
cooking I got into this perfect zone.”
But this competition wasn’t Ames initial interest, she knew by age
10 that she has wanted to pursue a career in cooking.
“I am passionate about cooking, baking and creating in the
kitchen,” Ames said. “Since age 10 I have been cooking, watching the
“Food Network,” and collecting hundreds of cookbooks to learn as much
as possible about food, ingredients and recipes.”
Because her parents never cooked she decided that she would be the
chef in the family and that’s been the main source of her culinary
education. She also started her own catering company called Paradise
Chocolate Shoppe.
Like most graduating seniors her future was uncertain until this
competition pointed her in a path she is looking forward to pursuing.
She graduates next week from high school and applied at the Art
Institute in Orange County.
“Hopefully I’ll start in July in the Culinary Arts Program,” Ames
said. “Before the contest, I wasn’t enrolled anywhere and kind of all
of a sudden I get this great opportunity. I figured it was so
perfect, and what I want to do.”
She said she feels lucky to have this chance to compete in this
competition -- it will be her first time in New York, but she
stressed it is not for leisure but to work.
Ames has been practicing diligently for the finals for a few weeks
now.
“I’ve been going to the Art Institute every Tuesday and Thursday
meeting with Chef Lauderdale and Chef Gilligan to learn what is to be
expected,” Ames said. “They are totally preparing me.”
She is looking forward to the competition and explained that there
are 17 winners from the Art Institutes from across the country that
won the regional semifinals, which will be competing in the finals.
“I’m excited to meet everyone because we share the same
interests,” Ames said. “And I had such a great time competing at the
semifinals.”
The winner at the national finals at The Art Institute of New York
City will receive a full-tuition scholarship worth more than $30,000.
Ames already received a $5,000 tuition scholarship and will hopefully
win more of the $190,000 in scholarships that the institute is
awarding through this competition.
One of her trainers, Chef Martin Gilligan, who used to be
executive chef for the Plaza Hotel in New York and with the Four
Seasons Resort, said he is amazed with Ames talent.
“I’ve been around the block a few times and have been in this
industry for almost 30 years,” Gilligan said. “Through my experience,
I’ve never found someone with such raw talent and natural ability to
remember recipes, ingredients and to be able to not only duplicate it
-- but be able to out do me. She’ll be the next girl on the Food
Network.”
He couldn’t believe that she was just 17 and has so much ahead of
her.
“She has been coming in with stuff that I wouldn’t have thought
of,” Gilligan said. “She’s amazing -- her style, flair and comfort
and her incredible manipulation of food has never been done before.
It looked like I went to Le Cirque in New York.”
Ames of course aspires to be Best Teen Chef in America and after
that she hopes to go to the institute to become a pastry chef.
“I want to open my own place anywhere in Orange County that serves
pastries, desserts and drinks late night and after dinner,” Ames
said. “They don’t have that here but they do in New York and
Chicago.”
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