Food & Home Entertaining

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

act


In the heart of Cape Town’s CBD, on


the third floor of a stark building, a


remarkable culinary school inspires


young South Africans to rise above their


circumstances and reach new heights


BYNATALIE BORUVKAPHOTOGRAPHSSUPPLIED

A


remarkable concept, Infinity
Culinary Training (ICT) school
accepts up to 80 students
peryear–eachonafull
bursary.Since2009,ICThas
celebrated 434 graduates, of
which 80% are holding down
jobs and building careers.

The fact that ICT was co-founded by Barry Berman, an
Americanscreenwriter,who–byhisownadmission–
was wholly unqualified to pursue such a venture,
makes the school’s story all the more extraordinary.
In2009,ononeofBarry’svisitstoSouthAfrica,he
struckupaconversationwithafriend.“Webothfelt
strongly about the dire unemployment situation in SA,
andthat’swhenwecameupwiththeideaofstarting
a cooking school that would train people from the
townships,” he remembers. After receiving a donation
from the Gavin Relly Educational Trust, and rustling
up 11 students, the school was started in a refugee
building in Cape Town’s District Six. Even though the
firstclasswasasuccess,Barryrecallsthathedidn’t
have any grand plans for the school. “For me, it was a
wayoflearningmoreabouttheSouthAfricanculture,”
he says candidly.

Afterthethirdclass,difficultiesarosethat seemed
destined to end the school. “At that point, I wrote
emails thanking every person who had been
involved; but I couldn’t bring myself to hit the send
button. I knew the school had to carry on,” he shares.
“Today, prospective students must complete a
questionnaire after which every applicant is invited
to an interview. No one is turned away because of
a lack of education or skill; instead, what is required
of each candidate is the desire to try something new
and embrace that with confidence,” Barry continues.
The 24-week full-time course is held four times per
year. The first eight weeks comprise intense kitchen
practice and theory classes during which students
are prepared for the challenges of working in a
professional kitchen. “Many of our students are dealing
with the personal shame of failure, but we teach them
thatmakingamistakeisablessing–it offers the
opportunity to fix that mistake,” Barry says.
After the initial eight weeks, students fulfil a four-
week unpaid internship at a Cape Town-based hotel
or restaurant before completing 12 weeks of paid
employment. The school assists with the placements,
and its formidable reputation means its students are
highly sought after.
It is such a momentous event, then, that the school
is celebrating its 10th anniversary as well as its 500th
graduate in September this year. “I’ve discovered that
it’s never too late to make a change, and that – even
intheplaceofthedeepestdespair–lays the
opportunity to make a difference,” Barry concludes.

HOWYOUCANHELP
Donations and tuition sponsorships are welcome and
canbe made out to:
Infinity Culinary Training
Standard Bank
Account number: 071054227
Branch code: 051001

34 ADDERLEY STREET, THIRD FLOOR, CAPE TOWN; [email protected]; ICTCHEFS.ORG

ACLASS


LEFT AND RIGHT: ICT STUDENTS PLATING FOOD DURING LESSONS
AT THE SCHOOL. CENTRE: ICT TEACHERS YONELA MBOMBO AND
ZANELE MDOKWANA, ICT CO-FOUNDER, BARRY BERMAN, AND
TEACHERS NOLUSINDISO ROSI AND NCEBA NYOKA

ORGANISATION OF THE MONTH

Free download pdf