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HOLLAND
COLLEGE March 5, 2002
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INSIDE |
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College
Island
Editorial
Entertainment
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FRONT
PAGE
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College
instructor whips up delicious vittles for TV viewers
Stacey
Colwell
scolwell@eastlink.pe.ca
Since he began starring in the Food Network's genre-bending Cook Like
a Chef series last year, instructor Tim McRoberts of the Culinary
Institute said his students have discovered a gold mine of material
to use to poke fun at him.
"Little mannerisms you have they start picking them up and imitating
you, but it's fun. It makes their time here more enjoyable,"
laughs the 33-year-old, who's worked at the culinary school for seven
years.
"They laugh at how fast I walk or sometimes how I run around
the place or how I say the word Ôbeautiful' all the time."
McRoberts said he's a little more serious at his day job.
"What you see on TV and what you see here every day are two very
different things. For the TV to capture your personality you need
to turn up your energy level at least three times. If I acted in the
classroom the way I did for the TV show I'm sure they'd lock me up
because it's just crazy."
Cook Like a Chef is trying to redefine the cooking show genre with
its 360 degree camera work, jazz music and frenetic action.
"The concept of the show is we don't tell you what to cook, we
tell you how to cook," said McRoberts, P.E.I.'s chef of the year
in 1999.
"The bottom line at the end of the day is if we've inspired you
to get into the kitchen to enjoy cooking then we've done our job.
It's very fast-paced, artistic and funny."
One of six chefs on the 39-episode series, McRoberts recently finished
shooting five appearances in Toronto and will go back again in July.
He'll be joined by fellow instructor Allan Williams, who acts as his
sous-chef.
"We go for about a week or for a long weekend and you just film
night and day and get them all done. It's grueling, we're up at about
five o'clock (a.m.) and if it's a good day I'm home at 10:30 (p.m.)"
Things don't always go as smoothly as they appear on-screen.
"There was one time when I had to snap some nice crispy asparagus
and throw it in a pot. When I went to grab the bunch and snap them
they weren't very fresh and they just kind of bent," he said
with a laugh. "That kind of stuff happens all the time."
Although he enjoys his work on the program, it can't match his passion
for teaching the art of cooking at the Culinary Institute.
"When I teach I imagine all these lightbulbs on top of the student's
heads and they're all off when we begin," said the former sous-chef
at Toronto's prestigious Royal York Hotel.
"There's nothing better than the feeling of walking out of the
class and the lightbulbs are all turned on.
"That's how I judge what I do and that's how I get happiness."
Cook Like a Chef appears Monday through Saturday at 6:30 p.m. on the
Food Network.
McRoberts' next appearance is about poultry on March 8.

STACEY COLWELL PHOTO
Chef Tim McRoberts prepares a tray of food at the Culinary Institute
of Canada in Charlottetown last week. Besides working as an instructor
at the institute, he also stars in Cook Like a Chef on the Food Network.
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