What’s Cooking With Our Graduates? Meet Eric Carter

Eric Carter, Santa Cruz County Stories: Cabrillo College culinary director serves up passion for cooking, student success

By Bonnie Horgos
Santa Cruz Sentinel
Posted:   03/17/2013 05:05:01 PM PDT
Updated:   03/17/2013 07:35:49 PM PDT

APTOS — For leisure reading, Eric Carter turns to the cookbooks of Thomas Keller, the famed restaurateur of the Michelin-starred French Laundry.

Photo: Eric Carter

Eric Carter, chair of the Culinary Arts program at Cabrillo college and… (Matthew Hintz/Sentinel)

“I like reading them for the sheer pleasure,” Carter said of the tomes. “They’re challenging recipes, but they’re fun to read.”

The La Selva Beach resident’s reading choice makes sense, though.

Carter is director at Cabrillo College’s Culinary Arts and Hospitality Management program, shaping students into budding chefs in and out of the kitchen multiple days per week. He also helped reboot the community college’s Pino Alto Restaurant at the Sesnon House, where eager pupils get hands-on experience running the kitchen and floor Wednesday through Friday.

In the past few years, Carter has taken an initiative to increase student success. Since then, the number of students receiving degrees and certificate in Cabrillo’s culinary program has tripled.

While Carter has taught at Cabrillo for 17 years, his personal training in the kitchen was baptism by fire. He never studied at a culinary school, learning instead by working side jobs to support himself through college at San Jose State.

His first gig was at age 18 washing dishes at Villa Fontana Retirement Community in San Jose, though he doesn’t really flaunt it on his resume.

“It was dish-washing slash putting parsley on the plate for garnish,” Carter said with a laugh.

After that, he trained as a saute cook, where he cooked up food and sauces up to 60 hours per week.

“You need to multitask, and I like that,” Carter said. “I enjoy the pressure of cooking on the line.”

While Carter enjoyed working in various kitchens through the years, he decided to hang up his apron and start teaching when his four children started attending school. He had to take a pay cut, but the hours and summer vacations were ideal.

While demo kitchens and lecture halls are a change of pace, Carter said he fostered skills early on that he incorporates into his lesson plans. Last year, there were 265 students enrolled in the Culinary Arts program.

“You’re always teaching when you’re cooking,” Carter said. “I think you have to be a lot more patient as an educator, though.”

So what about cooking at home? Carter hits up the Aptos Farmers Market at Cabrillo College every Saturday, looking for fresh, local ingredients such as salmon and salad greens. It helps that his wife, who he met in his class, likes to cook as much as he does — she generally makes a salad every night, and he tackles the main course.

“I love to cook at home,” Carter said. “I cook at home more now than when I was a chef.”

Follow Sentinel reporter Bonnie Horgos on Twitter at Twitter.com/bhorgos

Getting to Know Eric Carter
Born: May 30, 1958, in San Jose
Family: Wife Peggy Chandler-Carter; children Peter, 29, Mary, 28, Sarah, 24, and Tom, 22
Education: Bachelor’s degree in psychology, San Jose State, 1981; master’s degree in education, San Jose State, 2008
Bonding: Carter taught his children how to cook, and gave his daughters a binder full of his favorite recipes one year for Christmas. ‘The boys were jealous, so I made them binders, too.’
Hobbies: When Carter isn’t poring over cookbooks, he likes to surf and kayak fish.
Taste: Carter said he likes to eat everything except for orange circus peanuts. ‘I don’t like them, but I’m a pretty adventurous eater.’
Community: Carter moved from Saratoga to La Selva Beach 10 years ago. ‘I absolutely love that little community. We know our neighbors, and we’ll have a glass of wine with them, or watch the sunset together at the bluff.

M.A. Alumni Making a Difference

Image: Dr. Adriana ManagoDr. Adriana Manago (MA in Experimental Psychology, Class of 2004) has accepted a tenure track position in Cultural Developmental Psychology at Western Washington University in Bellingham!  After leaving SJSU, Adriana received her Ph.D. in developmental psychology and a certificate in Culture, Brain, and Development from UCLA in 2011.  Just before accepting her new faculty position, Adriana completed postdoctoral training in Developmental Psychology, University of Michigan.  We wish Adriana all the best and look forward to hearing more about her research and work in Chiapas Mexico.

image: Karen Gee AtwoodKaren Gee Atwood (MA in Experimental Psychology, Class of 2004) has accepted a tenure track position in the Department of Psychology at Mission College, Santa Clara, CA.  After completing her degree at SJSU, Karen worked for several years as an Instructor of Psychology at Foothill College.  Karen also hold a Master degree in Education from Stanford University.

Karen’s thesis investigating the impact of instructor-provided lecture notes on note taking and generative processing will no doubt inform her work within the classroom.

image: Bryan McClainBryan McClain (MA in Experimental Psychology, Class of 2002) is the President and Co-founder at Metric Lab.  Bryan co-founded Metric Lab in 2005 with the vision of helping clients truly understand their consumers and design products that are user-centered. Bryan’s background stems from rigorous academic and industry experience which includes a BA and MA in experimental psychology from SJSU and over eleven years experience in user-centered research and design. Bryan is a published author with several magazine articles, academic journal articles, and web periodical articles to his name. He has also acquired a U.S. patent and registered trademark for concepts that he has developed.

image: Demetrius MadrigalDemetrius (MA in Experimental Psychology, Class of 2002) truly believes in the power of research, when it is done well. With a background in experimental psychology from SJSU, Demetrius performed research in the University setting as well as NASA Ames Research Center before co-founding Metric Lab with long-time collaborator, Bryan McClain. At Metric Lab, Demetrius enjoys innovating with powerful research methods on exciting projects ranging from consumer electronics with companies like Microsoft or Kodak, to modernization efforts with the U.S. Army.

Dr. Dante PicchioniAfter receiving his master’s degree, Dr. Dante Picchioni (MA in Experimental Psychology, Class of 1999), was accepted into the Ph.D. program in Experimental Psychology at the University of Southern Mississippi.  While receiving a “broad” degree such as experimental psychology isn’t the usual path for someone considering a career in cognitive neuroscience, Dante was able to tailor and focus his classes and research on neuroscience topics. For example, he wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on the epidemiology (causes) of narcolepsy.

When it came time for him to do his post-doctorate study, he took a position where he learned the intricacies of working with and employing the fMRI for conducting neuroscientific research. Dante now works at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD.