Culinary specialist | |
---|---|
![]() ![]() Navy (lt) and Coast Guard (rt) Rating insignia | |
Issued by |
United States Navy United States Coast Guard |
Type | Enlisted rating |
Abbreviation | CS |
Culinary Specialist (abbreviated CS) is a United States Navy and United States Coast Guard occupational rating. The Navy rating was created on January 15, 2004 from the Mess Management Specialist (MS) rating. [1]
The U.S. Coast Guard replaced its previously named Food Service Specialist (FS) rating with Culinary Specialist on January 6, 2017 in order to "accurately reflect the culinary skills and professional expertise held by members of the rating". [2]
Food service ratings in the U.S. Navy were historically divided into two broad groupings until the merger of Commissaryman (CS) and Steward (SD) ratings to Mess Management Specialist (MS) on January 1, 1975. [3] Before 1975, stewards prepared and served meals to the officers, maintained their quarters and took care of their uniforms. [4] They served officers in the flag mess for admirals, the cabin mess for the ship's captain and the wardroom mess for all other officers.
Until the merger, the steward rating, and its predecessor ratings were largely segregated. Prior to World War 2, Commissarymen were known as non-rated Mess Attendants and Petty Officer Ships Cooks (SC), deadend jobs which ostensibly topped off at Petty Officer 1st Class, but rarely achieved, as sailors of African and Asian descent largely filled these roles. [5] [6]
Commissarymen prepared meals for enlisted sailors in galleys on the ship and shore bases in the general mess. They purchased food from approved sources, stored food stuffs and distributed to the galleys for preparation and kept accountability records. [7]
With the consolidation, sailors in the new rating became "responsible for food preparation and food service for both enlisted and officer messes." To accommodate the change, officers were now required to assume some of the upkeep of their staterooms and personal uniforms. Other cleaning duties became the responsibility of rotational pool of enlisted personnel from the ship. [8] This arrangement continues with the current culinary specialist rating. Nonrated enlisted personnel in pay grades E-1 to E-3 are usually required to assist in galley duty, much as those in the Army are assigned to KP duty. Technically called Food Service Attendants, this practice is somewhat derisively referred to as "cranking". [9]
In an effort to make Mess Management Specialist (MS) translate to the civilian sector, the rating title was updated to Culinary Specialist (CS) in 2004. This change allowed for easier recruiting tactics when giving job descriptions related to various civilian jobs with similar titles. It also provided sailors transitioning into the civilian sector an opportunity to use their culinary certifications that would now correlate into numerous career paths, including food production methods, cost control, nutrition, sanitation, and food marketing. [10] The Culinary Specialist rating now belongs to approximately 7,500 food service personnel who feed over 300,000 US Navy sailors worldwide. [11]
In the U.S. Coast Guard, its Comissaryman and Steward ratings were merged in 1973 into the Subsistence Specialist (SS) rating. The Subsistence Specialist designation was then changed to Food Service Specialist (FS) in 1996, to better describe the duties as opposed to the connotation of subsistence with bare survival. [12]
Culinary specialists operate and manage U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard messes and living quarters in addition to many other duties as follows:
Navy and Coast Guard culinary specialists operate messes for the President of the United States in the White House and at Camp David. [14]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
Culinary specialist | |
---|---|
![]() ![]() Navy (lt) and Coast Guard (rt) Rating insignia | |
Issued by |
United States Navy United States Coast Guard |
Type | Enlisted rating |
Abbreviation | CS |
Culinary Specialist (abbreviated CS) is a United States Navy and United States Coast Guard occupational rating. The Navy rating was created on January 15, 2004 from the Mess Management Specialist (MS) rating. [1]
The U.S. Coast Guard replaced its previously named Food Service Specialist (FS) rating with Culinary Specialist on January 6, 2017 in order to "accurately reflect the culinary skills and professional expertise held by members of the rating". [2]
Food service ratings in the U.S. Navy were historically divided into two broad groupings until the merger of Commissaryman (CS) and Steward (SD) ratings to Mess Management Specialist (MS) on January 1, 1975. [3] Before 1975, stewards prepared and served meals to the officers, maintained their quarters and took care of their uniforms. [4] They served officers in the flag mess for admirals, the cabin mess for the ship's captain and the wardroom mess for all other officers.
Until the merger, the steward rating, and its predecessor ratings were largely segregated. Prior to World War 2, Commissarymen were known as non-rated Mess Attendants and Petty Officer Ships Cooks (SC), deadend jobs which ostensibly topped off at Petty Officer 1st Class, but rarely achieved, as sailors of African and Asian descent largely filled these roles. [5] [6]
Commissarymen prepared meals for enlisted sailors in galleys on the ship and shore bases in the general mess. They purchased food from approved sources, stored food stuffs and distributed to the galleys for preparation and kept accountability records. [7]
With the consolidation, sailors in the new rating became "responsible for food preparation and food service for both enlisted and officer messes." To accommodate the change, officers were now required to assume some of the upkeep of their staterooms and personal uniforms. Other cleaning duties became the responsibility of rotational pool of enlisted personnel from the ship. [8] This arrangement continues with the current culinary specialist rating. Nonrated enlisted personnel in pay grades E-1 to E-3 are usually required to assist in galley duty, much as those in the Army are assigned to KP duty. Technically called Food Service Attendants, this practice is somewhat derisively referred to as "cranking". [9]
In an effort to make Mess Management Specialist (MS) translate to the civilian sector, the rating title was updated to Culinary Specialist (CS) in 2004. This change allowed for easier recruiting tactics when giving job descriptions related to various civilian jobs with similar titles. It also provided sailors transitioning into the civilian sector an opportunity to use their culinary certifications that would now correlate into numerous career paths, including food production methods, cost control, nutrition, sanitation, and food marketing. [10] The Culinary Specialist rating now belongs to approximately 7,500 food service personnel who feed over 300,000 US Navy sailors worldwide. [11]
In the U.S. Coast Guard, its Comissaryman and Steward ratings were merged in 1973 into the Subsistence Specialist (SS) rating. The Subsistence Specialist designation was then changed to Food Service Specialist (FS) in 1996, to better describe the duties as opposed to the connotation of subsistence with bare survival. [12]
Culinary specialists operate and manage U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard messes and living quarters in addition to many other duties as follows:
Navy and Coast Guard culinary specialists operate messes for the President of the United States in the White House and at Camp David. [14]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)