OPEN CONVERSATION

Teaching fresh pasta making in Uganda

There’s something wonderful in the power of culinary arts. No one knows that better than Open Gate International’s Global Executive Chef, Cinthia Worsey. Growing up in South America in a home where food was passion, Chef Cinthia has many childhood memories that start with her mom and grandmother in the kitchen. She soaked in every moment, and when it was time to choose a career, food was the obvious path. Chef Cinthia graduated from Le Cordon Bleu California School of Culinary Arts and has worked in renowned restaurants such as L’Orangerie in West Hollywood, Restaurant Bastide on Melrose Place, One Sunset Restaurant, in the Backroom Wine Lounge at Morry’s of Naples as well as been a personal chef for high-profile clients. As Open Gate International’s Global Executive Chef, she runs the culinary program in Orange County, creates meals for fundraising events, oversees the global programs in different parts of the world and develops all the menus and manuals that are used in the kitchen.

Let’s get to know a little bit more about Chef Cinthia!

OGI: What is the most significant lesson you have learned in your work with Open Gate International?

CC: You get to meet and teach people that come from all different parts of the globe, who have been through horrendous things, and they still have such an amazing attitude. Even with everything they’ve gone through, even if they come without anything, they are so grateful. They give what little they have.

Here at OGI, we can give people a little push and see how they blossom. I’m so lucky to be able to be doing what I’m doing right now. Everything that I’ve learned and experienced has trained me to be able to do what I’m doing right now. I am better equipped to work alongside our students with a little extra patience and compassion to make a difference in their lives.

Thanks to OGI, I have learned so much about being loving and compassionate no matter what. That’s one of the most impactful things that I hope to always take with me. In addition to this, traveling with Deidre (Pujols) has really opened my eyes to the issues happening around the world, including such devastating crimes like human trafficking.

OGI: What is your favorite kitchen memory?

CC: In addition to happy times spent in the kitchen as a child, the first job that I had in the United States was in a kitchen. It was at L’Orangerie, and I begged to work in the kitchen right after school as an internship. They didn’t really need an intern per say, but I just kept calling for weeks until they offered me the position – I just really wanted to work there. Every day I came to work, worked six days a week from two o’clock in the afternoon to one o’clock in the morning just for the experience.

Not only was this my first kitchen experience, but also my favorite kitchen memory because I prepped the “family” dinners, which took place at five o’clock and all staff gathered outside and ate together. I was always asked to cook the meal, so most of the time the entire staff was eating the food I created. It’s a sense of satisfaction when you can see people enjoying your food. It’s our own language that allows people to connect on different levels.

OGI: What do you wish people knew about cooking?

CC: How to use salt. People are afraid to season and use spices and herbs to enhance the meal, but salt is the beginning of everything. It allows you to taste more of everything. If you don’t have salt in your food you can’t taste sweet, you can’t taste acid, you can’t taste bitter. You may be able to taste a little, but salt adds depth. Salt opens our palate to experience additional flavors, and it’s actually in our DNA.

Tip from Chef Cinthia: Rather than table salt, try adding flavors like Himalayan salt and lava salt to really bring out added flavors.

OGI: What is your favorite piece of cooking advice?

CC: Use all of your senses. You can elevate your palate just by using all of your senses. I always tell my kids that chefs are the most unique because we use all of our senses. A painter uses touch and sight, but doesn’t taste, smell or hear things. A chef is an artist that uses all five senses. When I’m in the kitchen I can see, taste, touch, smell and hear. I can hear when the potatoes are ready. I can hear – not smell – hear when something is burning. There are a lot of different aspects in the kitchen that I think people can miss because no one has shown them. Pay attention to the details. It can be healing for a lot of people. It can be a way of mediation.

Thank you so much to Chef Cinthia for sitting down with us and taking time to share her thoughts and experiences about Open Gate International and the art of cooking. We’re so thrilled that she’s part of our team and grateful for her leadership in the kitchen. Be sure to follow along with us to see Chef Cinthia’s creations in the kitchen first-hand.

Training Students at Open Gate International

Getting OGI Culinary Students Ready for What’s Next

Despite a global health crisis that moved students out of the Open Gate International classroom and kitchen and straight into Zoom training at home, we are preparing OGI Culinary Program students for success.

With the opening of Open Gate Kitchen, our foodservice social venture in Costa Mesa, several graduates are working alongside Chef Cinthia as paid employees to gain real-world experience. They’re dicing, chopping, steaming, grilling and mixing the fresh ingredients that go into the delicious, internationally inspired menu. To ensure that graduates didn’t miss a beat during Zoom training, Chef Cinthia is revisiting key areas of coursework with them, including knife skills, sautéing and more.

In addition to refining culinary skills, students are supported by OGI Executive Director and Life Skills Coach Judy Lamborn, who helps OGI students put her life lessons into on-the-job practice. As Judy directs kitchen traffic and ensures food safety, quality and accuracy, she makes sure the basics of maintaining a positive attitude, teamwork and energy are upheld by all Kitchen staff and current OGI students.

OGI students also receive coaching in resume writing and interview prep, along with job placement assistance throughout our network of food industry and hospitality connections. We are in close contact with these partners as they approach reopening and assess their hiring needs. Until then, we’ll share a couple of notes from our current students:

“Judy has been, for me, a motivation. She’s given me a lot of security through her classes and has helped me to boost my self-esteem when I start to feel weak. I look at myself and say, ‘I can do it!’ and I keep going. All I need is to have a little more security in myself because I don’t think I can work on something like cooking or pastry. I feel like I’m missing a lot more. Thank you very much, Judy, for the opportunity and your teachings. You are a very kind person.”

– Martha, 2020 OGI Culinary Arts Student

“I am a participant in the Open Gate International Program. My experience in the class has been very constructive. I have learned a variety of techniques for food preparation, thanks to Chef Cinthia, whose experience and patience teaches us a variety of international dishes. She invites us to use the senses of taste, smell and textures, and to experiment with different spices, vegetables, meats and fruits. I feel much safer to start a new stage in my life. Thanks, OGI team, for giving me this opportunity!”

– Veronica, 2020 OGI Culinary Arts Student

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