Chef Rosalind Chan's Sweet Success
Although
Chef Rosalind Chan had a regular office job, her passion for baking proved irresistible.
It was thus that she quickly gained recognition and soon she was using all her
vacation time to teach aspiring bakers. “There was no time between working full
time in an office in the daytime and teaching cake decorating in the evenings.
I was travelling more than my boss. So I had to choose one and I chose my
passion,” Chan told frigglive.
Ever
the astute entrepreneur, she noticed the demand for this niche market and
opened the first of her three schools in Malaysia at Section 14 Petaling Jaya
in 2006. Competition was stiff when cake decorating first caught on and it was
difficult to manage her schools as she was not based in Malaysia.
Chan
then consolidated all three schools into one at her now headquarters and
teaching academy in Kota Damansara called International Centre of Cake Artistry
(ICCA), apart from Sugar Tiers, that is located in Toronto, Canada.
Interestingly,
Chan’s cake-baking career started in England, where she worked full-time with a
legal firm so focused on business in the office during the day while taking
cake decorating classes at night.
“When
I was living in Britain, I took up various courses in cake decorating and I
joined competitions. I only started professionally in the cake decorating business
after migrating to Canada”. It goes without saying that she continued to bake
in Canada.
Now
a celebrity chef in her own right, Chan lives by the motto “If you want to do
something, be the best in doing that thing. Otherwise, forget about doing it”,
she says. Her ambition to be recognised in the baking industry in Canada came
true when she became the first Chinese to be a certified Wilton Trainer by
Wilton USA, a leading food crafting company based in the United States. She
later joined Wiltons team of international trainers.
Chan’s
story is inspirational as she dared to dream big and achieved what she aspired
to. When she first left Malaysia, it was not to pursue her cake-baking dreams
but to study business administration and law.
She
stayed on in England for 11 years before migrating to Canada in 1991, but did
not continue pursuing law when she got married and had her first child because
she found it too tough being a working mother and a housewife at the same time.
She eventually completed her BA from the American University of Sarasota
through an affiliated British night school.
What
separates Chan from her peers is her attention to detail when it comes to cake
decorating. While speed is essential, it is intricacy and accuracy that trump
everything else. Her emphasis on the details has her doing stuff like
painstakingly dissecting a flower petal by petal so that she can duplicate the
flower exactly in her designs.
“If
you want to create a rose, make sure you create the rose with the same amount
of petals that the real one has. I would never accept a look-alike flower, it
has to be exactly the same. For certain sugar flowers we make, we charge by the
number of flowers. Therefore it is important to deliver the best to our
customers,” she says. And therein lies the secret of her phenomenal success.
Labels: Chef Rosalind Chan, ICCA, International Centre of Cake Artistry, sugar craft. macaroons