A sous chef is a senior role in which, in more traditional kitchens, cooks can spend their entire career slaving away without ever getting close to the position. However, it is now becoming increasingly attainable to young, talented chefs.
'It has totally changed from the old, classic kitchen rankings to modern kitchens. There are young cooks who are very talented and after their apprenticeship - and maybe five or six years on their own - they may open their own restaurant. It's all possible,' says Martin Kniss, executive chef at the Caf? Deco Group.
Typically, restaurants serving Western cuisine are divided into a hot side - serving stews, roasts, and fried and sauteed items - and a cold side, specialising in pastries and desserts, and preparing food such as sandwiches and salads. A sous chef's role is to oversee these departments, reporting to the head chef or executive chef.
Other tasks include helping to design menus, controlling the cost of menu items, rostering and purchasing. They also have to fill in for the executive chef and more junior chefs when needed.
Angelo McDonnell, group executive chef at Igor's Group, says not everyone can become a sous chef. 'You need to commit yourself to a lot of hard work and pressure, [plus] being a great cook and having management skills.'
In kitchens where ranks are structured, cooks usually begin their careers as commis, working under a chef de partie (station chef) who is in charge of a specific department.
They will rotate across the kitchen's departments, spending about a year in each before being promoted to half-station chef, or a more senior role. Station chefs, with experience across different departments, will be picked to become sous chefs if there is a vacancy for the role. Conrad Hong Kong executive sous chef Kenneth Yuen says the process can take three to five years in smaller restaurants, and longer in larger ones, such as those in hotels.