“Teachers such as [Winnipeg’s Darlyne] Brajkovich give full credit to the bombastic British celebrity chief and his Food Network brethren for making cooking so cool that teenagers — boys, in particular — are clamouring to learn,” they wrote, noting that Brajkovich’s elective classes fill up the fastest at Miles Macdonell Collegiate — mostly with boys. This trend popped up elsewere, both in other schools and in professional classes: all boys, all the time, taking photos of their dishes and putting them on Instagram. (It’s not just a girl/Asian thing, apparently!)
To be fair (and to take away some credit from Gordon, because we can), a large
“In my family, we don’t think it’s fair that one person should have to cook the whole supper or breakfast,” says Jeremy Kinnear, a Grade 8 student at Twelve Mile Coulee. “My dad teaches me how to make pasta. My mom teaches me how to make cookies. The bread I learned all by myself.”
Socioeconomic trends aside, we do have to applaud television for introducing the concept of the handsome male chef to North America. If that means that the world will be filled with handsome men who can cook things like Lebanese chicken and potatoes for dinner, we’re totally for it.