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Gender transformation in the profession of a chef: from home kitchen to the glass ceiling

Paradox that has accompanied the profession of a chef for centuries sounds something like this: a woman is the main one at home, but a man is the king in a professional kitchen. Today, when gender roles are rapidly being reviewed in all areas of life, the culinary world does not remain on the sidelines. However, the transformation here is slower than one would like, and it encounters deep stereotypes that have roots in antiquity. What is happening in the profession of a chef today? Why, with so many female chefs, only a few manage to break through to the position of head chef? And where is this sector heading — towards equality or towards new forms of inequality?

Historical paradox: home kitchen versus professional kitchen

It is funny, but a fact: in everyday life, the responsibility for cooking for the whole family traditionally falls on a woman, the "keeper of the hearth". At the same time, chefs in restaurants are predominantly men. This gap is not accidental. Even in Ancient Greece and Rome, a woman was tied to the home and could not engage in "serious" professions. Women slaves were allowed to bake bread and perform the simplest kitchen work, but it was men who planned luxurious parties, prepared exquisite dishes, and received applause from guests. This model has been consolidated for centuries.

In elite restaurants, the position of head chef has always been held by a man. Even the French word "le chef" exists only in the masculine gender. The English historian Charles Paget Smith has subtly noted: "women cook for people they love. Men cook for art". Behind this phrase is a whole philosophy that for decades has determined who has the right to creativity in cooking, and who remains in the shadows.

Numbers that speak for themselves

Statistics from 2025 reveal a picture that is unlikely to surprise anyone, but still makes one think. In the world, 81.5% of head chefs are men, while only 18.5% are women. The kitchens of leading restaurants around the world are almost always led by men. In Ireland today, there are about twice as many male chefs as female chefs. The gap becomes even more noticeable the higher up the career ladder: men make up approximately 79% of all head chefs and more than 90% of all executive head chefs.

In France, where gastronomy is elevated to the status of a national idea, women make up 35% of the staff of professional kitchens, but only 19% of them are head chefs. In Germany, where there was even a slight surplus of women among trained chefs in 2024 (297,000 women against 256,000 men), their share on leadership positions has been steadily decreasing as they move up the career ladder: only 33% of leadership positions in gastronomy are held by women. And in 2025, in Germany, 14 women and 337 men received Michelin stars.

In the United States, the average annual salary for chefs and head chefs in 2025 was $45,000 for men against $35,000 for women. In Europe, the gender pay gap in the hospitality industry ranges from 5.1% to 23.8%. The numbers stubbornly testify: the professional kitchen remains a territory of male dominance.

Why it happens: cultural and structural reasons

One of the main reasons is the very architecture of the professional kitchen. The famous chef of the 19th century, Georges Auguste Escoffier, who revolutionized the culinary art, created a system based on strict military discipline. The kitchen was built on an hierarchical principle with a clear "chef" (the French word means "boss" or "leader") at the top. This model, which has survived to this day, creates an environment that Anthony Bourdain described in his famous "Confessions of a Chef" as a space of male aggression and creativity, fueled by testosterone. It is no surprise that young men are drawn to this image of a hunter-hunter, while women find it difficult not only to break through but even to breathe in such an atmosphere.

Add to this the cultural stereotype: it is believed that a woman is not tough enough to lead a team, too soft for this role. Many female chefs admit that they have to work twice as hard to gain recognition and prove their competence where men are forgiven. A study by MIT in 2022 showed that women, despite better results and a lower likelihood of being fired, are promoted less often than men.

The glass ceiling in the kitchen

The term "glass ceiling" is fully applicable to the culinary profession. Female chefs face invisible barriers that prevent them from advancing to higher leadership positions. This is especially evident in the system of awards and recognition. For every restaurant headed by a woman, there are 16 restaurants managed by men. Among the 100 best restaurants in the world, the share of female head chefs is only 6.5%. In 2025, out of 22 new restaurants in the UK that received one Michelin star, only one was awarded to a woman chef.

Where women work: segregation within the profession

Interestingly, women in professional cooking often end up in certain niches. They predominate in pastry, in cold kitchens, in positions considered "less prestigious". This resembles horizontal segregation, when women concentrate in certain, often less paid and less prestigious areas. Studies confirm that women in the culinary profession face both horizontal and vertical segregation, receive lower salaries, less prestige, and recognition.

The winds of change: new voices and new approaches

However, the picture would not be complete without telling about those who are changing the rules of the game. Around the world, women chefs are emerging who not only break through the glass ceiling but also reshape the culture of the kitchen.

Tasya Magalhães from Brazil, recognized as the best chef in Latin America in 2025, went even further: when she opened her restaurant Nelita in São Paulo, she decided that the kitchen would be led exclusively by women. She encourages them to express their individuality, wear bright accessories, and not be "rough, angry, or especially strong". "I lost my femininity at the beginning of my career," she admits, "and I don't want other women to go through the same thing". Her approach is not just equality, but a redefinition of the philosophy of the kitchen.

In France, where women make up only 19% of head chefs, there are such innovators as Letizia Viss (owner of La Femme du Boucher in Marseille), who openly speaks out against harsh working conditions, Georgia Viu — the first woman of color and immigrant origin to receive a Michelin star in France, and Manon Fluri — an advocate for organic cuisine and the expansion of women's rights. These women are breaking stereotypes not only with their skill but also with their presence.

What is changing in Russia and the world

The labor market in the hospitality industry in Russia is experiencing a rapid growth. According to 2025 data, the demand for head chefs has increased by 115%, and the average salary has reached 101,488 rubles. This opens up new opportunities for everyone, regardless of gender. However, gender statistics in Russia remain difficult to collect: as in many countries, there is no official gender breakdown by positions in the culinary industry.

International organizations such as Worldchefs actively research the issue of gender inequality. In 2025, a report titled "State of Gender Equality in the Travel and Hospitality Industry" was published, showing that 63% of women respondents believe that they have to work harder due to their gender to gain recognition. This is a worrying signal, but also a stimulus for change.

In Germany, journalist Denise Wacht started the platform "Chef:in" — the first platform for female head chefs, which aims to increase their visibility, create a network, and inspire the next generation. "We live in a patriarchal system," says Wacht. "Men promote men, and women have to prove themselves twice as much."

Where the profession is heading

Gender transformation in the profession of a chef today is a slow but irreversible process. On the one hand, the numbers still demonstrate a deep imbalance. On the other hand, more and more women are coming into the profession, more and more of them are staying and breaking through, and more and more men are beginning to realize that diversity makes the kitchen stronger.

It is important to understand: the problem is not that men and women cook differently. The problem is that the system created by men for men has not adapted to new realities yet. Changing this system requires not just quotas or separate awards for women, but a review of the culture of professional kitchens — its hierarchy, its harshness, its unwritten rules.

Conclusion

The profession of a chef is experiencing a deep transformation today. The paradox in which a woman is the main one at home but rarely becomes a head chef in a restaurant is gradually losing its strength. The new generation of female chefs is not just entering the profession — they are redefining it. They create their restaurants, their teams, their aesthetics, and their philosophy. They show that the kitchen can be not a battlefield, but a space for creativity and collaboration. And although the path to equality is still long, every new name on the list of head chefs, every new Michelin star awarded to a woman, every restaurant where a female team works on an equal footing with men, is a step in the right direction. Because true cuisine, like any art, knows no gender.


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A következő Michelin-csillagot egy férfi-chef vagy egy nő-chef:in kapja? // Vienna: Austria (ELIBRARY.AT). Updated: 26.06.2026. URL: https://elibrary.at/m/articles/view/A-következő-Michelin-csillagot-egy-férfi-chef-vagy-egy-nő-chef-in-kapja (date of access: 26.06.2026).

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