chefwear
Appearance
English
[edit]
Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]chefwear (uncountable)
- Clothing to be worn by chefs.
- 2000, Anthony Bourdain, Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly, Bloomsbury, →ISBN, pages 257–258:
- When I dropped by to see him recently, passing first through his stylishly sparse sixty-five-seat dining room, past his four sommeliers – count them, four – through a kitchen staffed by serious- looking young Americans in buttoned-up Bragard jackets with the Veritas logo stitched on their breasts and chefwear MC Hammer pants, down a flight of stairs, I found him wrapping a howitzer-sized log of foie gras in cheesecloth.
- 2003, Emeril Lagasse, From Emeril’s Kitchens: Favorite Recipes from Emeril’s Restaurants[1], William Morrow, →ISBN:
- Emerilware and cutlery, cookbooks, specialty food products, chefwear, and more
- 2006, Bonny Wolf, Talking with My Mouth Full: Crab Cakes, Bundt Cakes, and Other Kitchen Stories, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, page 72:
- There has been, however, something of an apron revival—modern chefwear catalogs feature clogs, chef’s pants, and serious aprons.
- 2014, Shelley Costa, Basil Instinct, Pocket Books, →ISBN, page 160:
- Meanwhile, I shucked my chefwear long enough to do two things.
- 2015, Brian Seibert, What the Eye Hears: A History of Tap Dancing, New York, N.Y.: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, →ISBN, page 531:
- One number directly alluded to that show’s “Butter and Egg Man,” with three men in chefwear vying for the attention of a female singer.
Further reading
[edit]Chef's uniform on Wikipedia.Wikipedia