Culinary Arts · Georgia

Culinary Arts colleges in Georgia

Culinary Arts program coverage in Georgia is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Culinary Arts trains you to cook professionally and run a working kitchen, blending hands-on technique with menu planning, food safety, and cost control.

We're still verifying Culinary Arts programs in Georgia. Try a broader search at /results?q=Culinary Arts or browse all colleges in Georgia.

What you'll study in a Culinary Arts program

  • Knife skills and core cooking methods (sauté, braise, roast, grill, poach)
  • Stocks, sauces, and the classical mother-sauce foundations
  • Menu planning, recipe development, and food costing
  • Food safety, sanitation, and HACCP-based kitchen practices
  • Kitchen math, portioning, purchasing, and inventory control
  • Garde manger, charcuterie, and cold-kitchen preparation
  • Plating, presentation, and the aesthetics of finished dishes
  • Kitchen organization, station work, and supervising kitchen staff
  • Production-kitchen labs and a supervised restaurant externship

Where a Culinary Arts degree can lead

  • Chef
  • Sous Chef
  • Pastry Chef
  • Restaurant Manager
  • Food Stylist
  • Culinary Instructor

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 chefs and head cooks median $60,990).

A Culinary Arts major teaches the craft of professional cooking and the operation of a commercial kitchen. You learn knife skills and the foundational cooking methods, sauces, stocks, sautéing, braising, roasting, and grilling, then build toward composing dishes, planning menus, and plating food with attention to flavor, texture, and presentation. Coursework also covers food safety and sanitation, nutrition, kitchen math and recipe costing, purchasing and inventory of ingredients, and the supervision of line cooks and other kitchen staff. Students typically study a range of cuisines and stations so they can move between roles in a brigade. Culinary Arts centers on savory cooking and kitchen leadership, which sets it apart from Baking and Pastry Arts (a sweet-side specialty in doughs, breads, and desserts), from Food Science (the chemistry, microbiology, and product development behind food), and from Hospitality or Restaurant Management (the business and front-of-house side of running an establishment).

Culinary Arts is most commonly offered as a certificate or an associate degree, and bachelor's programs exist for students who also want management and business coursework; the cooking roles most associated with this field typically list a high school diploma or equivalent as entry-level education, with much of the skill built through training and on-the-job experience. Programs are heavily lab-based: students cook in production kitchens, and many require a supervised externship or practicum in a working restaurant or food operation as a capstone. A food-handler or food-manager safety credential is commonly expected, and any programmatic accreditation or state or local food-safety requirements should be verified directly with the program and the relevant authority. Graduates work in restaurants, hotels, resorts, catering companies, private and personal cheffing, institutional and corporate dining, bakeries and cafés, and food media or styling, often starting on the line and advancing toward sous chef, head chef, or kitchen management.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of chefs and head cooks, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $60,990 and projects employment to grow about 7.1% from 2024 to 2034; a high school diploma or equivalent is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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