Orlando Sentinel

Valencia College chef earns educator honor

Denlinger ‘in disbelief’ after award from the American Culinary Federation

- By Amy Drew Thompson

Chef Jennifer Denlinger — or Chef D, as her students at Valencia College call her — cut an atypical path to the American Culinary Federation’s Top Chef Educator award.

But then, 2020 has been a decidedly atypical year.

“I’m still in disbelief,” says Denlinger. “This wasn’t my first rodeo.”

Denlinger, chef instructor, department chair, culinary management, teaches at Valencia College’s Walt Disney World Center for Culinary Arts & Hospitalit­y has thrown her toque in the ring in years previous for this esteemed award. To win in a year when the competitio­n was not only stiff but challengin­g in ways that only a global pandemic could make it, is surreal.

The regional portion, which requires the submission of a portfolio including the school’s culinary program, course informatio­n and lesson plans, was straightfo­rward.

Her tasting lab - a popular course with students that involves blind tastes of peeled apples, mashed potatoes at different temperatur­es and odd-flavored jellybeans was among the activities that won her the southeaste­rn division.

After that title, though, things went decidedly different due to the coronaviru­s.

“Normally, the four finalists would have gone to the ACF national conference for the live demo, which was supposed to be in Dallas.”

That event was cancelled, which necessitat­ed a solution that in some ways was far more complicate­d. One regional finalist dropped out due to the stringent requiremen­ts for competitio­n.

“There was no way we could do a multi-camera Zoom presentati­on from my home kitchen,” she says.

Instead, they did it at Valencia, which required layers of permission and planning ahead of time along with help from the school’s IT department cameras, sound bar, microphone­s, the works. It did, however, have its advantages.

“I didn’t have to pay to fly to Dallas with all my pots and pans and knives and shop at a foreign grocery store for all my ingredient­s.”

For the finals, Denlinger chose to make Chicken Chasseur with sides of mashed potatoes, glazed, obliquecut carrots and broccoli beurre noisette. The entire meal had to be prepared on camera in 45 minutes or less.

“I was 58 seconds over, but there was no point deduction because it was under a minute,” she says. Photo-finish, but she emerged victorious. And proud, if still in a bit of shock.

“I never thought I could do something like this,” she says humbly, crediting the team that helped her behind the scenes. She’s also delighted to bring some renown to Valencia and its program.

“So many schools are closing right now and smaller ones across the country aren’t doing so hot….” she says, noting that Valencia’s is a firstrate curriculum. “It’s not just a community college. You can get a world-class education here.”

 ??  ?? Denlinger prepared Chicken Chasseur for the finals portion of the competitio­n.
Denlinger prepared Chicken Chasseur for the finals portion of the competitio­n.

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