Mass production of dough

Forging a Path to Food Science

Geoffrey S. Blair (Pastry, 鈥13) advanced from brand manager to pastry chef to food scientist by age 45 with a career change, two master鈥檚 degrees and experience in the NYC food industry.

Geoffrey came to the 欧美三级片鈥檚 New York campus in 2012 for a professional development course to explore his love for baking and a possible career change. The brand strategist realized what he wanted to do for the rest of his life and enrolled in the 10-month Pastry & Baking Arts program.

鈥淭he instructors were extremely knowledgeable,鈥 Geoffrey says. 鈥淐hef Kathryn Gordon was always saying, 鈥榶ou鈥檒l get out of this what you put into it,鈥 and it was so true because there was so much offered 鈥 not just the current module that you鈥檙e taking, but there are so many extra courses and classes that you can take to learn more about the field. It鈥檚 your arsenal of knowledge, and that to me was one of the greatest things about ICE.鈥

Geoffrey externed at Cafe Boulud and interned at Dominique Ansel Bakery and The Dutch for additional experience in the industry while deciding whether to pursue food science.

鈥淐hef Michael Laiskonis did a demonstration with sodium alginate, and I was just blown away by chemistry and food,鈥 Geoffrey says. 鈥淚 worked with a lot of hydrocolloids, and the technical aspect of interactions was something I was more passionate about than creatively displaying products on a plate for customers.鈥

He opted to continue his education in Bakery Science online through the Institute of Baking, followed by a master鈥檚 program in Food Science at North Carolina State University, where he鈥檇 earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree years earlier.

Geoffrey transitioned from restaurants and bakeries to the manufacturing and large-scale production side of the food industry first as a product development food technologist for Garden Lites, then as a food technologist for Salem Baking Company, product development intern at PepsiCo and grad student technician in a USDA peanut lab. His biggest success came with the creation of two products from concept to commercialization: a trail mix cookie and gluten-free cranberry oatmeal white chocolate.

鈥淭hat was my greatest achievement because I had customer interaction and created a product that is still on shelves,鈥 he says of the experience with Salem Baking Company and Whole Foods. 鈥淥ur company didn鈥檛 have that much knowledge of gluten-free, and my first food manufacturing job out of ICE was with a gluten-free manufacturer, so my knowledge increased tremendously with gluten-free flour. I was able to work with some flour mills to reformulate a gluten-free flour that was a little bit more palatable.鈥

Geoffrey S Blair is a food scientist at Treehouse Foods.Today, he鈥檚 developing private label refrigerated dough products that likely end up at your grocery store. 鈥淚 love it because we reach a lot more people than you ever would in a restaurant or a bakery,鈥 Geoffrey says. 鈥淢y day-to-day responsibility involves product and process improvements along with some innovation. Ingredient interaction is crucial to understand; after all, it is the structure for any great product whether it鈥檚 in a manufacturing setting or your home kitchen.鈥

Geoffrey reverse engineers recipes, experiments with ingredients and tests new products with pilot runs. He incorporates his food safety and food chemistry expertise with his pastry education and restaurant experience.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a successful food scientist: understanding all aspects,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not just developing a formula, you鈥檙e a quality investigator and a microbiologist at the very front of the line. You have to understand all of those aspects before you can actually make something.鈥

His food science degree added the expertise to address allergens, whether gluten, dairy or peanuts.

鈥淚f you love baking and culinary, but you want more technical aspects, I would encourage you to look into food science programs across the country,鈥 Geoffrey advises students. 鈥淚f you graduate with a food science degree and you have that culinary or pastry knowledge, you鈥檙e going to be a lot more successful than if you just have one. Plus, the benefits are better working in the corporate world: Full medical and dental are wonderful things to have.鈥

It took Geoffrey 10 years after changing careers to land where he is now, and he encourages the next generation of chefs and food scientists to explore their options, ask chefs for advice and research the programs bridging the two fields. 鈥淚 still have a long path ahead of me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t takes time. You鈥檙e not going to figure out your entire life overnight. It鈥檚 going to change.鈥

Start your culinary or pastry path in ICE鈥檚 career training programs.

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