Rahul Sharma (Editor)

French Pastry School

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Type
  
Private

Nickname
  
FPS

Phone
  
+1 312-726-2419

Established
  
1995

Website
  
frenchpastryschool.com

Founded
  
1995

Academic staff
  
Jacquy Pfeiffer (Dean of Student Affairs) Sébastien Canonne, M.O.F. (Dean of Faculty and Programs)

Location
  
226 W. Jackson Blvd. Chicago, IL 60606

Address
  
226 W Jackson Blvd # 103, Chicago, IL 60606, USA

Similar
  
Kendall College, Le Cordon Bleu College o, La Fournette, The Chopping Block, Vanille Patisserie

Profiles

The French Pastry School of Kennedy-King College at City Colleges of Chicago (FPS) is a vocational secondary school located in Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. Its courses cover pastry, baking and confectionery arts. The French Pastry School is a for-profit school, and the only culinary school in the United States dedicated exclusively to teaching pastry.

Contents

History

The school was founded in 1995 by master pastry chefs Jacquy Pfeiffer and Sébastien Canonne, M.O.F. Pfeiffer and Canonne met in Chicago in 1992, where they discussed the lack of a serious pastry school in the US. They formed the school in order to teach traditional French pastry making, based on the European master-apprentice model.

At the outset, Pfeiffer and Canonne offered professional continuing education classes out of a small studio on Grand Avenue in Chicago. Enrollment grew, and in 1999, Mayor Richard J. Daley helped the school become affiliated with City Colleges of Chicago and the school moved into a state-of-the-art facility in the City Colleges building at 226 West Jackson Boulevard. The affiliation with City Colleges allowed the school to provide financial aid to students. In 2009, they began an 11,000 square-foot renovation, adding kitchen space in the expansion.

Courses

The French Pastry School offers three certificates: L'Art de la Pâtisserie, a 24-week professional pastry and baking program; L'Art du Gâteau, a 16-week professional cake baking and decorating program; and L'Art de la Boulangerie, an 8-week artisanal bread baking course.

L'Art de la Pâtisserie was launched in 1999 and includes six months of pastry education. In the 24-week accredited program, students are taught classic French pastry methods, with subjects including baking theory and science, food sanitation, breads and breakfast pastries, cakes and tarts, and chocolate and sugar decoration.

In 2010, L'Art du Gâteau was added for students to specialize in the art of cake baking and decorating. The 16-week accredited program focuses on all aspects of creating wedding, celebration and specialty cakes. The students learn cake baking and construction, mini pastries and party favors, gumpaste and pastillage, rolled fondant, sugar and chocolate decorating, airbrushing, mold-making methods, and cake business planning.

L'Art de la Boulangerie debuted in 2011, designed for students wishing to specialize in the art of bread baking. The 8-week course includes fundamentals of French breads, pre-ferments, techniques and applications for levains and starters, specialty whole grains and organic breads, advanced breakfast pastries and viennoiseries, and specialty breads.

The school emphasizes discipline, following instructions precisely, being thorough and detail-oriented, and learning from mistakes by being persistent if a recipe does not work properly at first. Class size is limited to 18, allowing students to work one-on-one with master pastry chefs. The students are given on-going career counseling and placement assistance from the school after they graduate. The school also offers 3-to-5-day, hands-on continuing education courses to both professionals and amateurs. These courses are taught year-round and on a variety of subjects. The school also invites international experts like Pierre Hermé, Oriole Balaguer and Jean-Pierre Wybauw to teach special courses.

Founders

As early as 1998, the school was known for having a faculty made up of some the best pastry chefs in the world, including its founders, Sébastien Canonne and Jacquy Pfeiffer. Canonne is a native of France and one of the only pastry chefs in the United States to be awarded the Meilleurs Ouvriers de France, which is the French Ministry of Labor's highest honor for craftsmen. Pfeiffer was born and raised in Marlenheim, a small Alsatian village in France, to a family of bakers. His pursuit of the Meilleurs Ouvriers de France commendation is the subject of the 2010 documentary Kings of Pastry, directed by Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker. Pfeiffer co-wrote the 2013 cookbook The Art of French Pastry with Martha Rose Shulman, which won the 2014 James Beard Book Award for Baking and Dessert.

References

French Pastry School Wikipedia