Certification Designations
ACF offers 14 certification designations each
requiring specific qualifications.
Choose Your Area of Expertise
Cooking Professionals | Personal
Cooking Professionals | Baking and Pastry
Professionals | Culinary Administrators | Culinary Educators
Cooking Professionals
Certified
Culinarian® (CC®): An entry level culinarian within a
commercial foodservice operation responsible for preparing and cooking
sauces, cold food, fish, soups and stocks, meats, vegetables, eggs and
other food items.
Certified
Sous Chef (CSC): A chef who supervises a shift or station(s) in a
foodservice operation. Equivalent job titles are sous chef, banquet
chef, garde manger, first cook, a.m. sous chef and p.m. sous chef.
Certified
Chef de Cuisine® (CCC®): A chef who is the supervisor in
charge of food production in a foodservice operation. This could be a
single unit of a multi-unit operation or a free-standing operation. He
or she is in essence the chef of the operation with the final
decision-making power as it relates to culinary operations.
Certified
Executive Chef® (CEC®): A chef who is the department head
usually responsible for all culinary units in a restaurant, hotel, club,
hospital or foodservice establishment, or the owner of a foodservice
operation. In addition to culinary responsibilities, other duties
include budget preparation, payroll, maintenance, controlling food costs
and maintaining financial and inventory records.
Certified
Master Chef® (CMC®): The consummate chef. A CMC possesses
the highest degree of professional culinary knowledge, skill and mastery
of cooking techniques. A separate application is required, in addition
to successfully completing an eight-day testing process judged by peers.
Certification as a CEC or CEPC is a prerequisite.
Personal Cooking Professionals
Personal
Certified Chef (PCC): A chef who is engaged in the preparation,
cooking and serving of foods on a “cook-for-hire” basis.
Must also have knowledge menu planning, marketing, financial management
and operational decision making. Has at least three years of cooking
experience and one full year of Personal Chef experience.
Personal
Certified Executive Chef (PCEC): An advanced chef who is engaged in
the preparation, cooking and serving of foods on a
“cook-for-hire” basis. Must also have knowledge menu
planning, marketing, financial management and operational decision
making. Has at least three years of Personal Chef experience.
Baking and Pastry Professionals
Certified
Pastry Culinarian® (CPC®): An entry level culinarian
within a pastry foodservice operation responsible for the preparation
and production of pies, cookies, cakes, breads, rolls, desserts or other
baked goods.
Certified
Working Pastry Chef® (CWPC®): A pastry chef who supervises
a pastry section or a shift within a foodservice operation and has
considerable responsibility for preparation and production of all pastry
items.
Certified
Executive Pastry Chef® (CEPC®): A pastry chef who is a
department head, usually responsible to the executive chef of a food
operation or to the management of a pastry specialty firm. A CEPC has
supervisory responsibility as well as administrative duties.
Certified
Master Pastry Chef® (CMPC®): A CMPC possesses the highest
degree of professional knowledge, skill and mastery of cooking
techniques as they apply to baking and pastry. A separate application is
required, in addition to successfully completing an 8-day testing
process judged by peers. Certification as a CEC or CEPC is a
prerequisite.
Culinary Administrators
Certified
Culinary Administrator (CCA): This is an executive-level chef who is
responsible for the administrative functions of running a professional
foodservice operation. This culinary professional must demonstrate
proficiency in culinary knowledge, human resources, operational
management and business planning skills.
Culinary Educators
Certified
Secondary Culinary Educator™ (CSCE™): An advanced-degree
culinary professional who is working as an educator at an accredited
secondary or vocational institution. A CSCE is responsible for the
development, implementation, administration, evaluation and maintenance
of a culinary arts or foodservice management curriculum. In addition, a
CSCE demonstrates the culinary competencies of a CCC or CWPC during a
Practical Exam.
Certified
Culinary Educator™ (CCE™): An advanced-degree culinary
professional, with industry experience, who is working as an educator in
an accredited postsecondary institution or military training facility. A
CCE is responsible for the development, implementation, administration,
evaluation and maintenance of a culinary arts or foodservice management
curriculum. In addition, a CCE demonstrates the culinary competencies of
a CCC or CWPC during a Practical Exam.
All applications are available at the Resources page.