| My dh was like this when we were in college and ended up working for a catering company. He loved it. |
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A kid at my daughter's school did this a few years ago. Might be an idea for your son..
https://www.vice.com/en/article/meet-the-21-year-old-running-an-omakase-restaurant-in-his-dorm-room/ |
It is his idea. Part of planning or marketing someone is learning about the demographic you want to serve, which is probably middle aged moms feeding their families. So, shockingly, he asked the middle aged mom he knows best, and I got curious if it would work and reached out to some other middle aged moms. |
| I would have LOVED to have a college kid come over to my house and make dinner, especially when my kids were young and we were juggling daycare pickups and getting dinner on the table. |
| I had a job in a shelter and got to make dinner |
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I like the idea of working at a catering company.
The rest of this reads “kid who thinks he’s precocious but just wants to mooch off others’ kitchens.” |
| This is a ridiculous ask. Lots of kids like to cook. No one likes dining hall food. But you suck it up until you can move to an off campus apartment or into a suite with a kitchen or whatever. Also he’ll miss out on a lot of socialization freshman year if he opts out of the dining hall (not to mention that both of my kids’ colleges required full meal plan freshman year). |
Yes, I know of someone who is sort of doing this. Not for cooking, but for company for their father. But, the person is a college student and gets use of their kitchen and pays very little I'm rent. |
I wouldn't hire an 18 yr old college freshman to cook for my elderly relatives. I wouldn't trust him to show up completely sober, to cook to their dietary needs, to not steal from them, to not bring friends with him, etc. |
That came off as different in the original first post. ?
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It would be like housekeeper / cook not “personal chef” with no credentials. He would be marketing himself as providing service running errands / grocery shopping, prep/ cook meals. Look at jobs adds at care.com where there is cooking. That’s his market with middle aged moms. If someone hires him, it will ultimately depend on fit (what they need and what’s he’s willing / able to do, schedules, etc). The “let him take a serving” adds complication to this arrangement. |
So he doesn’t know how to use a computer, or a phone? That’s interesting. He doesn’t know how to pick up the phone and call a few of his parents’ friends, or his friends’ parents? He doesn’t know how to post on DCUM himself? That’s really pathetic. Doesn’t make it seem like he’ll be able to run a business. Oh well. |
| Does he have any actual experience cooking professionally? Does he know how to thoroughly and properly clean up after himself? There’s a huge difference between someone who just likes to cook for themselves and a pro. |
Has he been formally trained in cross contamination and safe food handling/prep? If not no. |
He definitely knows how to clean properly, and has food handler certification because he cooks for a couple programs that serve the homeless. Our family has a younger kid with an allergy so we keep our kitchen 100% allergen free, so he gets the importance of checking ingredients, and is good at substituting. He has sold some things -- like a set of cupcakes for a birthday party, but that's been a very small part of his experience. |