It can be overwhelming when you work in a male-dominated field, especially in the culinary world, where less than 7 percent of restaurants in the U.S. are led by female chefs.
Despite the difficult journey, Giada de Laurentiis, Rachael Ray, Valerie Bertinelli and Anne Burrell beat the odds. Know Your Value recently spoke to the celebrity chefs at the 2020 South Beach Wine and Food Festival about how they were able to rise to the top, their best career advice and lessons they learned along the way.
Rachael Ray: Play the long game
No one knows more about the ins and outs of the culinary business than Rachael Ray, who started working in kitchens when she was just 11 years old.
Ray said she was inspired by her mother, Elsa Scuderi, who opened and managed several restaurants. Scuderi, according to Ray, didn’t take working for granted, and emphasized that there was no role that was beneath her.
“My mom was just such a force of nature,” Ray, 51, told Know Your Value. “You know, my mom started as a hostess and ended up running a huge food operation with millions of dollars’ worth of sales a year in a time when people told her she should be a housewife or a secretary.”
By watching her mom, who is now 85, Ray learned about the restaurant business from the bottom up. Ray and her siblings worked as dishwashers, servers and everything in between.
Ray, who is now the author of more than 20 cookbooks and host of the hit show “Rachael Ray,” said she learned as a child that “the idea that having a job is a privilege.”
Ray also stressed the importance of playing “long ball,” which she said women don’t talk about enough. In her case, it has meant at times accepting less money (for a better studio and to be able to give higher wages to her employees), but knowing it was part of a longer-term strategy.
“Sometimes it’s not good to think about yourself first or getting the most money or what some man is getting — I made my choices and sometimes they weren’t making me equal with the other men, but they were making me stronger than the other men because I had the space I wanted or the people that I wanted,” said Ray.
Giada de Laurentiis: Advocate for yourself and your family
Giada de Laurentiis has been a trailblazer on the food scene for years.
In addition to her Emmy-winning Food Network show “Giada at Home” and nine cookbooks, the 49-year-old chef opened one of the first female-branded restaurants, aptly named “Giada,” on the Las Vegas strip.
She characterized the opening of the Sin City restaurant five years ago as “one of the biggest highlights of my life.”
While Laurentiis doesn’t live in Las Vegas, she visits at least twice a month. Those trips are much easier to do because her cooking shows are filmed in nearby Los Angeles, a request she made that “was unheard of at the time.”
Still, Laurentiis knew she had to advocate for herself and advised women to do the same.
“Everybody shot in New York, but I wanted to be near my family, and I didn’t want to do it without them. And it meant the world to me to be home rather than doing it from a different state,” said Laurentiis. “I basically said from day one: I either shoot them in L.A., or I don’t shoot them at all.”
Valerie Bertinelli: Surround yourself with women who lift you up
Varerie Bertinelli said she has been successful, in part due to several women she has been lucky enough to have worked beside.
“I’ve had a lot of amazing women teach me to know my value as I go through this business,” said Bertinelli, who, before entering the culinary scene, spent nine years on the sitcom “One Day at a Time.”









