Rosie and six finalists will take part in the Mayor of Wandsworth’s Young Chef of the Year 2018 Charity Dinner
Rosie at work in the kitchen
Rose Picicco has won the fifth annual Wandsworth Young Chef of the Year competition.
Rose, who attends Southfields Academy, wowed judges with her dish of cod cakes followed by chicken parma ham, with a Portuguese desert of natas de ceu.
The Young Chef competition is run by the Mayor of Wandsworth and the council’s lifelong learning team in association with borough schools. It nurtures young talent, teaches young people how to cook good healthy food to a budget, provides a chance to learn from the experts and helps young people get a foothold in the catering industry.
Rosie and the six finalists
Each of the eight finalists won high street vouchers, with Rose scooping the top prize of £130 and a crystal trophy. The other finalists were: May Newkey-Burden (Burntwood School), Yafiet Binyam (Ernest Bevin College), Raheela Aslam (Ark Putney Academy), Farnaz Abubaka (Ark Putney Academy), Jamiee Hyacinth (Chestnut Grove) and Jada Burrell-Powell (St Cecilia’s).
The finalists will now all take part in the Mayor of Wandsworth’s Young Chef of the Year 2018 Charity Dinner, which is raising money for The Wandsworth Community Safety Trust, St. John Ambulance and the Rotary Club. Students will get the chance to work with Daksha Mistry, former Master Chef finalist, on preparing dinner for the evening.
As part of the competition, the young people involved have already benefited from attending two masterclasses at Billingsgate Seafood School and top London restaurant The Brigade.
Young Chef is part of a European-funded project led by London Councils called Pan Out. Pan Out has enabled this and other initiatives that have developed and supported students in Wandsworth. For more information visit www.panout.london.
Support for the competition was provided by the South Thames College catering school and major catering company Compass, which has been involved with the competition since it launched in 2013. Chefs from Compass judged the final, overseen by executive chef at Compass, Nick Vadis.
Nick Vadis said: “The standard just gets better and better each year. I am delighted to be part of the initiative with Wandsworth and I can’t praise each of these young people enough. We have seen some real talent developing through this competition and the finalists here today have demonstrated that they have what it takes to work in the hospitality industry.”
The Mayor of Wandsworth Leslie McDonnell said: “I hope taking part in this competition has inspired the borough’s young aspiring chefs. The dishes they created for the final were outstanding, and I’m looking forward to seeing what they come up with for the Charity Dinner.”
Contact the Lifelong Learning Team via their website at www.wandsworthlifelonglearning.org.uk or call them on (020) 8871 8618.
If you are interested in attending the Mayor’s charity dinner, call (020) 8871 6604.
March 22, 2018