Students at 91ĂÛÌÒßčâs LA campus recognize Chef Herve Guillardâs unmistakable French accent. Though heâs called the United States home since 1995, the dean of students and Pastry & Baking Arts lead chef was born in Bourges, France, where he was raised by a stay-at-home mother and banker father whose career at SociĂ©tĂ© GĂ©nĂ©rale relocated the family every few years.
The youngest of three children, Chef Herve fondly remembers summers during his youth working for his uncles in the hospitality business, either at oneâs auberge (inn) or the otherâs patisserie, where he did everything from kitchen prep to bussing tables to kneading dough.
At age 14, when French teenagers determine a major, he chose science and focused on mathematics, biology and chemistry. After high school he went on to study environmental engineering in Perpignan, just across the Spanish border, where he would often go to explore the culinary scene. Perpignan was followed by Grenoble where he received his health and safety engineering degree and, of course, relished in the cuisine of the French Alps.
âFood was always a big part of me,â Chef Herve says. âIn college, weâd gather our friends and do a meal, potluck style, and talk about politics and the world. Socialization around food is critical.â
He believes sharing a home-cooked meal together is the key to understanding one another. âThat conviviality around food makes it so you just talk, but not enough people take the time to gather in real life as so much socialization is done online.â
Chef Herve references a quote from Civil Rights activist Cesar Chavez: If you really want to make a friend, go to someone's house and eat with him... the people who give you their food give you their heart. âYou give a part of yourself when you feed someone,â Chef Herve echoes. âThatâs my relationship with food; itâs not technical, itâs emotional.â
Though he studied science, his passion and background growing up around the food industry drove him to become a private chef after moving to Los Angeles. Eventually, that career change led to instructing culinary and baking students, and after 18 years of educating, he became the dean of students at 91ĂÛÌÒßčâs Los Angeles campus.
âMy role is two-fold: understanding the students, their own path, their own situation, and helping them to succeed in our school. The other side is policy-driven. I want to understand the student and their needs within the framework of our policies and regulations,â he explains. Though in his new role, heâs no longer a full-time instructor, one of the places youâll often find Chef Herve is in the kitchen helping students with Skills Enhancement.
âThe purpose of Skills Enhancement is for students to revise or acquire a skill they missed, but I have a fair amount of students who just come to discover new things,â Chef Herve explains. Case in point: On a recent Thursday afternoon, he and Culinary Arts student David Shuck spent time creating and plating a Thai beef salad with presentation fit for a private, catered affair.
âI bring them recipes as they request to work on something thatâs not in the syllabus,â Chef Herve says. âThatâs a place to experiment. I want it to be an open lab, an open kitchen and an inviting environment where they have the equipment, time and input of a chef to help them tune their culinary voice.â
He also leads 91ĂÛÌÒßč LAâs Pastry & Baking Arts instructors. A critical part of that role is ensuring instructors not only have the desired resume but that they share Chef Herve and 91ĂÛÌÒßčâs sensibilities. âWhatâs foremost for me is someone who wants to share their expertise, who is thrilled by the success of others and their students and who rejoices in their studentsâ growth and that eureka moment when you witness students âget it.ââ
Chef Herve says a few key factors distinguish 91ĂÛÌÒßčâs pastry program, namely that itâs accelerated and thereâs creative freedom.
âThere is a large space for experimenting with the recipes in the curriculum,â Chef Herve says. âOur instructors give freedom to students after they have a solid base then we fly with it â i.e. a different filling for a pie, flavoring in an Ă©clair, etc.â It is his belief that once a student grasps the main concept, they can build upon what theyâve learned. The other key distinction, according to Chef Herve, is making deep, meaningful connections.
âWe try to understand our students and where they want to go with the information and education,â he says. âItâs not just about mimicking what we do, itâs about understanding â thatâs the difference between a hands-on education and online learning: The chef is there to guide you, to troubleshoot, to explain what could be better and to push you to excel.â
In order for our students to find success, the lessons and education go beyond the classroom. Chef Herve can attest to that guidance going beyond whatâs in the curriculum. âYou want them to excel and to do that, you need to reach that seed: Why did they come to school? What are their ultimate aspirations? Itâs not always evident. Some students are quiet while others are frank, but many of them donât know yet where they want to go,â he says.
After years in education, Chef Herve believes that a good instructor will listen and allow students to realize their own potential and path after their formal education is complete. âSome people consider school as a beginning and an end,â Chef Herve says. âI want to see it as a continuation of a studentâs past through their long career â we are a component of their growth and ultimate achievement.â
He also believes a culinary education is a vocation in the truest sense of the word with French Latin at its root. âVocational school, to me as it is in French, has a sense of calling. It is a term thatâs used for monks, a spiritual calling,â he explains. âYouâve been chosen to follow this path, which makes sense as with food, there is always that spiritual component.â
Last, he believes there is a deep connection between cooking for others and teaching how to cook for others. âI would hope for students entering 91ĂÛÌÒßč to create a network and a family while theyâre here,â Chef Herve says. âAnd that network is with students, faculty, staff, Career Services, etc. When they graduate, they are still part of this family.â
For students interested in career training at 91ĂÛÌÒßč, Chef Herve offers this advice: âCome in with an open mind. Although you may have a career path or expectation in mind, weâre going to give you more than what youâve bargained for. Your aspiration may change as you cover new things. Be receptive and inquisitive so you can get the best out of your education and be an active learner versus a passive student. The more research you do and the more you pick the brains of your instructors, the more worthwhile it will be. Remember: Your education doesnât stop after the four hours youâre in class each day.â
Bring an open mind to 91ĂÛÌÒßč's Pastry & Baking Arts program in Los Angeles.