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People
of The Institute
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Instructor
Profiles |
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Erica
Wides |
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Growing
up on Long Island, Chef Erica Wides stocked her
dollhouse with miniature foods and dishes she had
carefully sculpted from colored crayons, an early
expression of both her passion for food and her
artistic talents. Wides initially pursued a career
in photography, attending the School of Visual Arts
in New York and working as a photo editor and researcher.
But she found herself increasingly drawn to images
of food, images that made their way into her art.
"I created tableaus and sculptural representations
with food," remembers Wides. "I was fascinated
by the sociological and political undercurrents
surrounding food." At age 25 she decided to
make a career move and work with food full-time.
Wides describes her culinary education as "old-school,"
saying that she relied heavily on working in restaurants,
including Nosmo King, Harvest, Savoy, Arcadia and
several summers in Maine, in addition to studying.
In 1997 she won an IACP scholarship and used it
to attend a pastry and baking program at the Culinary
Institute of America, where she also studied artisanal
bread baking.
Travel, too, was a big part of Wides's education.
She is one of ICE®'s experts on Asian cuisine, the
result of two extended trips she took throughout
Southeast Asia, backpacking it solo. Wides was particularly
fascinated by the Asian street foods she came across
in her travels, and would like to put her experiences,
and the street-food recipes she often teaches in
her recreational classes, into a book. Wides will
be traveling to Asia again this spring when she
heads to Singapore's at-sunrice culinary academy
to teach classic European techniques to local chefs.
January, 2003 |
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