Let's Talk Chef Shoes, Part One | Short Order | Miami | Miami New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Miami, Florida
Navigation

Let's Talk Chef Shoes, Part One

Through the early years of my career in professional kitchens, I wore ankle-high, steel-toed, Velcro-strapped, taupe-colored leather chef shoes made by the esteemed French chefwear company Bragard. They looked like nurse shoes in a straightjacket. Regardless of where I was cooking, I could always count on being ridiculed for having...
Share this:

Through the early years of my career in professional kitchens, I wore ankle-high, steel-toed, Velcro-strapped, taupe-colored leather chef shoes made by the esteemed French chefwear company Bragard. They looked like nurse shoes in a straightjacket. Regardless of where I was cooking, I could always count on being ridiculed for having the ugliest damn footwear ever constructed. I couldn't help but note on the website that Bragard no longer sells this model.

For awhile I tried steel-toed clogs, which the old European chefs at the Culinary Institute of America preferred. These were almost as hideous, and just as heavy as the Bragard bricks. After a few years of not dropping any heavy pots or pans upon my feet, nor having knives spear footwards, nor spilling boiling oil on my anchored footsies...I switched to sneakers. Most chefs shun these due to lack of support, but I like that they're light and cool. Same with Crocs, which I also tried, although not in the bright orange color that Mario Batali has made famous. So when Carrie Koscar of of The Foundation Public Relations was recently in town to promote Vancouver-based Native shoes, she offered me (and many others) a pair of the company's just-released-in-Miami shoes to try out in the kitchen. I said sure. Free is free.


Then again, as you can see from the picture, it's probably not the nicest looking of Natives. The design isn't that bad, but jeez, what a color. This particular

style is called the Corrado; the name of the color is Loch Ness.

Hmmm....The other shoes int the collection have much prettier

names, and as seen in the first photo, they are much cooler looking;

fantastic colors, too (retail for all lines is about $44). When I told

Ms. Koscar that I didn't care for the Corrados as much as the others,

she told me of a magazine fashion editor who had just emailed her to

say how much she liked the Corrados, and wanted a pair for her toddler

son (Natives for kids are shipping in August). "There is a style for everyone," Carrie said.


I asked her what makes the shoes suitable for kitchen wear. She pointed out that they "mold to your feet, are lightweight, antimicrobial and odor resistant". The Corrado, in particular,

"is perfect for the kitchen due to the fact that it is a closed top

silhouette -- that way if food/ liquids are spilled, it won't harm the

chef." She went on to say that the bottoms of Natives are also slip-proof and completely washable. "After a long day in the kitchen, just throw them into the dishwasher!"


I did a private cooking gig last Saturday and was on my feet, in my

Loch Ness Corrados, for ten hours. I liked them for the same reason I

like sneakers, although most chefs will insist upon stouter support.

And the point about being easy to wash off is true, although even if I

had a dishwasher I'm pretty certain my wife would not allow me to put

my shoes in them.


"New shoes!," one of the maids said to me when I entered the kitchen. "They're very nice."


"I don't know," I responded, "Do you really like them?"

Suddenly it dawned on me that perhaps I had been too rash in judging the footwear so harshly.


"No," she laughed, "but they look comfortable, and that's whats important."


I smiled and nodded -- partly because what she said is obviously true,

and partly because it felt good to be reminded of my glory days as a

young chef in ugly shoes.

Monday: The chef shoe fetish continues as we find out what our local culinarians use as footwear when they work in their restaurant kitchens.

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Miami, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.