This Certificate in Baking is designed to provide students with a foundational skill set relevant for employment opportunities in the baking and pastry segment of the food service and hospitality industries. Courses in this certificate program will focus on preparing students to work in bakeries, bread houses and restaurants, and provide an avenue of entry for students who wish to continue developing their skills in the A.A.S. Degree in Culinary Arts or A.A.S. Degree in Pastry and Baking Arts.
Graduates will be able to:
A. Depending upon a student's placement or for transfer purposes, this program may have pre-requisite(s). See a pathway coordinator or student development specialist for advisement.
B. The culinary uniforms and knife kits are obtained through the Passaic County Community College Bookstore in Paterson. The knife kit from the bookstore is optional. The bookstore is located at 125 Broadway, Suite 104 in Paterson, NJ 07505 and their phone number is 973-247-9406. Books are assigned to individual courses and prices vary. Books and uniforms can be delivered to the Wanaque campus during the first week of the semester by making arrangements with the PCCC Bookstore.
C. Specific Board approved fees are associated with some but not all Culinary Arts, Baking, Pastry and Restaurant Management courses.Students should seek advice from the Office of Financial Aid to determine if course fees are covered.
This course provides the knowledge necessary to function as a fluent computer user in today’s technological society. Topics include computer terminology, computer hardware and software
capabilities, what makes a computer powerful, the societal impact of computers, ergonomics, ethical computing behavior, information privacy, and computer security. Students complete projects encompassing Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint), as well as an 0information literacy project focusing on effective use of the Web. Students with no computing experience are encouraged to complete a computing keyboarding course (CIS 103) before taking this course.
Fall, Spring, Summer
This course focuses on the stages of the writing process and includes a formal research paper. A variety of writing and reading assignments are designed to develop analytical and critical-thinking skills.
- General Education Course
College Level or with applicable co-requisite
Fall, Spring, Summer
This course introduces the student on how to achieve his or her goal in the Culinary Arts Program. A brief history of key figures and developments in culinary arts is also covered. Students will learn studying techniques, ethics, professionalism and image making. Students will develop marketability skills while learning what the industry requires of them and will begin to assemble their career portfolio, their certificates, and to build their resume.
MA 025A, ENR 040, DE 020, DE02
Fall
This kitchen laboratory course expands on the techniques introduced in Culinary Fundamentals, and prepares the student for an introductory level position in the food service industry in Garde Manger. Intermediate knife skills, food fabrication, kitchen sanitation, and classic techniques in making soups, salads, charcuterie items, sandwiches, hors d’oeuvres, and breakfast cookery are accomplished. Recipe comprehension, cooking methods, and techniques will be stressed.
CU 102 - Introduction to Culinary Arts
CU 105 - Culinary Fundamentals
PA 114 - Baking Fundamentals
RM 101 - Sanitation and Safety in Food and Beverage Service
RM 105 - Dining Room Service
CU 109 - Culinary Cooking Methods
PA 116 - Restaurant Bakeshop
RM 107 - Cost Control in Foodservice
Spring
This course covers the essentials for entering the food service industry as a working professional baker's assistant. It covers baking terminology, techniques and theories, proper knife handling,
cooking and baking methods, safe food handling, seasoning and tasting, production organization, and timing skills. Students are introduced and produce quick breads, yeast breads, cookies, pies and tarts, custards, creams, chocolates, tarts, and do beginning pastry work. This course is open to all non-majoring students but must obtain their uniform and knives.
MA 025A, ENR 040, DE 020, DE025
CU 102, CU 105, RM 101, RM 105
Fall
This course is designed to teach students sanitation and safety concepts in the operation of a food and beverage service establishment. Focus is on current laws, food-borne illnesses, safe storage of food, food protection in receiving, preparationand serving, pest control, accident prevention and crisis management. Students alsolearn about alcohol law, the prevention of intoxication, and handling issues that may arise in an establishment serving alcohol.
Spring 15 wk semester, Fall 15 wk semester
This course is designed to teach students Customer Service. Students will understand the importanceof customer-centric as they learn dining room maintenance, how to greet and seat customers, and provide customer service in a dining room setting. They will learn what it takes to exceed guest expectations and how to handle guest payments and recovery.
Spring 15 wk semester, Fall 15 wk semester
This course covers some intermediate methods and techniques for entering the food service industry as a working professional baker or pastry chef in a restaurant or food service facility. Students expand their knowledge and skills obtained in PA 114 to create a variety of bakeshop items that are ready to serve or can be plated and served. Breads, pies and tarts, cakes, custards, puddings, pastry items, sauces, frozen desserts, healthful and gluten free desserts are created. Students learn menu development, costing, and plating techniques.
CU 102 - Introduction to Culinary Arts
CU 105 - Culinary Fundamentals
PA 114 - Baking Fundamentals
RM 101 - Sanitation and Safety in Food and Beverage Service
RM 105 - Dining Room Service
For A.A.S. in Culinary Arts students , the co-requisite is PA 118 and Career Certificate in Baking
RM 107 - Cost Control in Foodservice
Spring 15 wk semester
This course, lecture and lab, is designed for Pastry Arts majors and covers the essentials for entering the food industry as a working professional baker's assistant. This course serves as an intermediate exposure to the baking theory, terminology, food handling standards, kitchen operations, production organization and timing skills through extensive hands-on experience of classical and modern baking techniques.
CU 102 - Introduction to Culinary Arts
CU 105 - Culinary Fundamentals
PA 114 - Baking Fundamentals
RM 101 - Sanitation and Safety in Food and Beverage Service
RM 105 - Dining Room Service
PA 116 - Restaurant Bakeshop
RM 107 - Cost Control in Foodservice
Spring 15 wk semester
This course, lecture, and lab is designed for Pastry Arts majors and covers the essentials for entering the food industry as a working professional baker's assistant. This course serves as an intermediate exposure to baking theory, terminology, food handling standards, kitchen operations, production organization and timing skills through extensive hands-on experience of classical and modern baking techniques. A 135-hour practicum plus weekly 50-minute seminar (supervision) must be completed.
For students in the Certificate of Achievement in Baking, the pre-requisite is PA 116.
For the students in the Career Certificate in Baking, the pre-requisite is PA 118.
For students in the A.A.S. in Pastry and Baking Arts, the pre-requisite is PA 218.
Spring 15 wk semester, Fall 15 wk semester
This course is designed to teach students how to control foodservice costs by doing forecasting and budgeting, determining menu prices, controlling food costs in purchasing, receiving, storage, and issuing. Students will learn to project restaurant revenue and how to manage buffets and banquets.
CU 102 - Introduction to Culinary Arts
RM 101 - Sanitation and Safety in Food and Beverage Service
RM 105 - Dining Room Service
Spring 15 wk semester
This course introduces students to the biochemical basis of nutrient action. Topics include the structure, function and metabolism of the three primary nutrients—carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins, as well as the interaction of various enzymes, vitamins, and hormones on food metabolism. Physiology of nutrient deficiencies and study in methods of research in nutrition are also covered. Laboratory experiments include chemical analysis of major nutrients, measurement of kilocalories, metric units, and percentages of nutrients.
- General Education Course
MA 022 - Mathematics Fundamentals for Liberal Arts
OR
MA 025 - Accelerated Algebra
OR
MA 025A - Algebra A
OR
MA 025B - Algebra B
OR
Test Placement
Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer