The Dos and Don’ts of Becoming a Personal Chef

Chef Chris Spear explains how being creative is just as important as being a great entertainer when you’re a personal chef. Plus, why digital recipes are vital to business success.

I started my personal chef business, Perfect Little Bites, 11 years ago with the goal of bringing the fine dining experience into a customer’s home. In a lot of ways, I am an entertainer. I bring everything with me – china, linens, equipment – cook the food on-site and oftentimes, do culinary instruction. 

It took me several years to figure out my process and build up momentum enough to become a personal chef full-time. I’ve found my footing and have even developed a community (and podcast) of like-minded industry experts called Chefs Without Restaurants for customers in need of a personal chef in Maryland-DC-Virginia.

From costing, to scaling and planning, as you can imagine, being a successful personal chef has a lot of challenges. People are always asking me for some tips on how to start a personal chef business. So here are a few things I recommend as you start your journey as an entrepreneur.

How to Become a Personal Chef – 5 Tips for Success

Do – Practice with friends and family

To become a personal chef, the first thing you need to do is get out there and practice. Cooking in your home or at a restaurant is so different from cooking in other people’s houses. Find a neighbor, a relative, or someone who has an anniversary or birthday, and just offer to cook for them. 

It could be as simple as a two-course dinner to see what it’s like to take all of your stuff into someone’s house to cook on a stove you’re unfamiliar with. You also need to understand how you cook with people talking to you and watching.

As a personal chef, you have to be able to deal with whatever comes your way, whether that’s a dog or kid running through the kitchen, having five things cooking at once, or people asking a whole bunch of questions. You can’t just think, “I’m a chef, I make good food and will just go to a person’s house and cook it.”

Don’t – Focus only on your food

As a personal chef, you’ve been hired for more than just your food. You need to think about what your experience is going to look like overall. For a lot of chefs, this is really hard to accept. You have to let go of some of your ego to be succesful. For example, when I was starting out, I told myself I wouldn’t make something like a chicken parmesan because it seemed a little mundane. But if it’s a client’s favorite dish, why should my personal bias get in the way? You’re a chef and can do a great job of it. Why not make the best chicken parmesan they’ve ever had? 


Do – Ask for reviews early on

Once you start booking clients, reviews are super important. A lot of my customers today tell me that they went to Google and picked me because I was the top-reviewed chef in the area. 

People love social proof. And when someone says they had an amazing time, they want to experience it too. Because only 25% of people actually write up reviews, make sure you ask everyone you can as early as you can. 

I pride myself on the fact that I have exclusively five-star reviews on every platform – Google, Yelp, and Facebook – in the 11 years I’ve been a personal chef. It can feel like a lot to repeatedly ask for reviews, but being persistent can help your business grow significantly.

Don’t – Underestimate the power of a network

A lot of personal chefs come from big operations, where you have a lot of people to bounce ideas off of and work with. But when you start your own business, you don’t usually have anyone. Most of us are a small team, if not just one person.

Since we’re doing everything, including business development, having a stream of referrals can really help you out. If you’re booked on Friday night, but someone wants to hire you on the same day, it’s great to have another chef you can recommend. Not only will your prospect be grateful, but your referrer might pay it forward to you later on. 

Being a personal chef is much easier if you have people to lean on who know what you are going through. Even a network of just four chefs in your local community can be a huge help. You are not only sharing job opportunities, but resources and advice. 

Do – Work with vacation rentals

I did a whole podcast episode on this, but I would say that one of the biggest business drivers for me has been working with vacation rentals like Airbnb. They account for about 90% of my business these days. 

If a guest is hosting an event, then more than likely they are looking for someone in the area to cook for them. Reach out to the owners and operators of vacation rentals, not Airbnb directly. Ask them if they will pass on your contact info to upcoming guests.

A lot of times people say, just leave a card. However, by the time guests get to a house, a card’s not going to help if you’re booked out two months in advance. Make it easy for the owner and operator and put together a media kit or PDF they can share as a welcome package.

Don’t – Rely on a recipe journal or binder

1. Sharing 

Some of my clients ask me to send them recipes. This is so easy to do with meez. I can just pull up the recipe on my phone, type in their email, and share a link with them instantly. This is also really helpful when I am planning a cooking lesson at a client’s home and working with freelancers. Instead of printing recipe packets for everyone, I can just email them a meez recipe.

2. Scaling 

meez really comes in handy when you have to create a recipe for an odd number of guests. All you have to do is put in how many people you are cooking for, and it scales the recipe exactly. That means I can leave a house with little to no food waste, whether I’m cooking for five or ninety-nine people. 

3. Organization 

As a personal chef, you are at someone else’s house, not a commercial kitchen or your own place. Previously, I would bring a little manila folder with all these paper recipes. Keeping them organized was hard, plus they often weren’t scaled or converted. Now I can just bring a tablet or my iPhone, pull up the recipe in meez, and get started.

4. Search 

As personal chefs, our menus change every day. And sometimes you make a dish, prep too much, and have to use an ingredient by the next day. For example, I do an apple fennel celery salad and almost always have fennel leftovers. Before, I wasn’t sure what was the best way to use an ingredient like this. But now with meez, all I have to do is type’ fennel’ into the tool and it will pull up all recipes with fennel listed as an ingredient. 

💡Quick meez tip

With the latest iPhone update, recipe importing is even easier. All you have to do is take a photo of your recipe, click on the recipe text, and copy and paste it into meez. Your recipes can be imported in minutes without any real manual labor required. 

About Chris Spear

Chris Spear is the chef and owner of Perfect Little Bites, an in-home personal chef business based in Frederick, Maryland. You might also know him as the host of the Chefs Without Restaurants podcast, and the man behind the culinary networking organization of the same name. Chris graduated from Johnson & Wales University with a B.S. in culinary arts, and has been working in the foodservice industry for almost 30 years. Now Chris splits his time between cooking unique dishes for his guests and engaging with the culinary community he built. He has written editorials for StarChefs, and some of his recipes can be found on the Garden & Gun and Imbibe websites.

This article was originally published on the meez website and contains some affiliate links. That means that if you signup through my referral link, I might receive a small comission.

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Exploring the World of Immersive Culinary Retreats with Lisa Donovan and Julie Belcher of Rêverie Retreats

About Rêverie Retreats

On this week’s show, I have Lisa Donovan and Julie Belcher of Rêverie Retreats. These retreats are the kind of trips that I want to take. Travel to the Loire Valley… Take a French pastry lesson with an acclaimed baker…Have a natural wine tasting. Plenty of time to eat and relax. Maybe make some new friends. Come explore the world of immersive culinary retreats on this week’s podcast.

On This Week’s Podcast

You’ll learn how and why Lisa and Julie started this, and how you can join them on one of these excursions. We talk about how they select the partners and purveyors they work with, natural wine, and not wanting to work in professional restaurant kitchens. I also wanted to discuss their dynamic and what their working relationship looks like. How they balance the tasks and workflow. And I also had to talk to Lisa about pie crust

You can listen to the show on PodpagePodlink,  BuzzsproutITunesSpotifyTuneInStitcherAmazon MusicPandora I Heart Radio, and everywhere podcasts are found.

Relevant Links and Where to Learn About Rêverie Retreats

RÊVERIE RETREATS

Check out the Rêverie website and book a tour

Instagram: ReverieJulie Belcher, and Lisa Donovan 

Previous podcast episode with Lisa Donovan

Lisa’s book Our Lady Of Perpetual Hunger

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If you enjoy the show and would like to support it financially, please check out our Sponsorship page (we get a commission when you use our links).  

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Chris Spear’s personal chef business Perfect Little Bites

How to Grow Your Personal Chef Business with Airbnb

On This Week’s Podcast

This week’s Chefs Without Restaurants podcast is a solo episode (find it here). I teach you how to grow your personal chef business with Airbnb, VRBO and other vacation properties. This has been where the majority of my business has been coming from for the past five years. 

I’ve talked about it as part of other podcast episodes but thought it warranted a standalone episode. If you want to make more money cooking as a personal chef or caterer, tune in to find out my top tips for acquiring more customers staying at rental properties. 

For more advice on growing your personal chef business, here’s an episode with chef Steven Lash where we talk about the personal chef business. Do you have tips you’d like to share on how to grow your personal chef business? Let me know. Connect with me on one of the platforms below. 

Relevant Links and Where to Learn About Chefs Without Restaurants

You can listen to the show on PodpagePodlink,  BuzzsproutITunesSpotifyTuneInStitcherAmazon MusicPandora I Heart Radio, and everywhere podcasts are found.

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If you enjoy the show, and would like to support it financially, check out our Patreon, or you can donate through Venmo or Buy Me a Coffee

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This Week’s Sponsor

Sponsor- The United States Personal Chef Association

Over the past 30 years, the world of the personal chef has grown in importance to fulfill those dining needs. While the pandemic certainly upended the restaurant experience, it allowed personal chefs to close that dining gap.  Central to all of that is the United States Personal Chef Association.

Representing nearly 1,000 chefs around the US and Canada.  USPCA provides a strategic backbone for those chefs that includes liability insurance, training, communications, certification, and more. It’s a reassurance to consumers that the chef coming into their home is prepared to offer them an experience with their meal. USPCA provides training to become a Personal Chef through our Preparatory Membership.  Looking to showcase your products or services to our chefs and their clients, partnership opportunities are available.

Call Angela today at 800-995-2138 ext 705 or email her at aprather@uspca.com for membership and partner info.

Chef Virginia Willis on Writing Cookbooks and Her Wellness Journey

About Virginia Willis

This week on the podcast I have James Beard Foundation Award-winner, chef Virginia Willis. She was the TV kitchen director for Martha Stewart, Bobby Flay, and Nathalie Dupree and executive producer for Epicurious TV on the Discovery Channel. She’s made cookies with Dwanye “The Rock” Johnson, foraged for berries in the Alaskan wilderness, harvested capers in Sicily, and beguiled celebrities such as Jane Fonda and Bill Clinton with her cooking — but it all started in her grandmother’s country kitchen. Virginia is the author of a number of books including Lighten Up, Y’all, Basic to Brilliant, Y’all, Okra, and Grits.

On This Week’s Podcast

On the show, we discuss how she got into writing cookbooks, how her cooking style has changed, and her wellness journey which has led to her losing 70 pounds. We talk about food media, and credible sources for recipes and cooking tips. Virginia’s also passionate about sustainable seafood, and we discuss that as well.

This Week’s Sponsor

Looking to make better pizza? How about bagels, bread, or English muffins? Then you need a Baking Steel. Don’t just take my word for it. Kenji López-Altof Serious Eats/The Food Lab said “this is the answer I’ve been waiting for to produce consistently awesome pizza over and over”.

You can listen to the show on PodpagePodlink,  BuzzsproutITunesSpotifyTuneInStitcherAmazon MusicPandora I Heart Radio, and everywhere podcasts are found.

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Virginia Willis

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Virginia’s Eating Well Recipes

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If you enjoy the show, and would like to support it financially, check out our Patreon, or you can donate through Venmo or Buy Me a Coffee


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From Fine Dining to the Personal Chef Business with Chef Lana Lagomarsini of Lana Cooks

About Lana Lagomarsini

On this week’s podcast we’re joined by Lana Lagomarsini. Lana is the chef and owner of Lana Cooks, a personal chef business based in the New York City area. Lana comes from a fine-dining background, having cooked at Blue Hill at Stone Barns, Gramercy Tavern, Daniel, and Momofuku Ko. Like many chefs, when restaurants began shutting down due to Covid, Lana explored the personal chef sector. After this podcast aired, Lana was one of the chefs featured on the Netflix series Pressure Cooker.

On This Week’s Podcast

On the show, we discuss her restaurant background and her transition into the personal chef business. We talk about kitchen culture, finding her culinary voice, and the future she’d like to see in the food industry. Lana also talks about cooking for her community, her involvement in the Black Food Movement, and how African American Cuisines and the slave trade impacted American Cuisine.

This Week’s Sponsor

Looking to make better pizza? How about bagels, bread, or English muffins? Then you need a Baking Steel. Don’t just take my word for it. Kenji López-Altof Serious Eats/The Food Lab said “this is the answer I’ve been waiting for to produce consistently awesome pizza over and over”.

You can listen to the show on PodpagePodlink,  BuzzsproutITunesSpotifyTuneInStitcherAmazon MusicPandora I Heart Radio, and everywhere podcasts are found.

LANA LAGOMARSINI

Lana’s Instagram
Lana’s Website


CHEFS WITHOUT RESTAURANTS

You can listen to the show on PodpagePodlink,  BuzzsproutITunesSpotifyTuneInStitcherAmazon MusicPandora I Heart Radio, and everywhere podcasts are found.

If you enjoy the show and would like to support it financially, please check out our Sponsorship page (we get a commission when you use our links).  

Get the Chefs Without Restaurants Newsletter

Private Facebook group

Chefs Without Restaurants Instagram

Founder Chris Spear’s personal chef business Perfect Little Bites

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