The success of any restaurant depends in large part on the chef and the quality of food presented to the public.
Before whenever someone was discussing a new eatery that provided a good vibe coupled with delicious plates, people automatically assumed the chef was male. This notion is now changing as many female chef are making their mark in the food scene. Head Chef at WISH on Florida in Durban, Snegugu Wanda is one of the females who want take up the food space.
If there is one thing that explains the head chef Snegugu Wanda, is her passion for culinary. Wanda initially studied Law at the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal and even had dreams of becoming the next Chief Justice of South Africa. While completing her articles with Strauss Daly, she was deterred by the sudden urge to take up a culinary career.
In 2013, in her third year, she dropped out and enrolled to the Capsicum Culinary Studio in Durban.
In the middle of my legal studies I felt the sudden urge to follow my passion, and I registered at Capsicum culinary studio. The following year I did my diploma in food preparation and culinary arts.
After her culinary studies, Wanda flew through the ranks when she started her first job, working her way up from griller to head chef at Wish on Florida in just two years. She says to make it as a black woman in the industry, it takes twice the amount of hard work and dedication to hone the craft.
Chef Gugu specialises in Fusion cuisine, because she believed it’s important to keep being creative throughout out this industry your passion will determine your longevity. “You need to stay inspired and Fusion allows you to learn and try new things you’re always learning”.
The young chef was raised in the rural township of Umlazi on the eastern coast of Kwa-Zulu Natal and was taught to cook by her late grandmother, Esther Wanda. She jokingly says that her mother, Thulisile, was focused on her career and did not have time to engage in set societal gender roles. “My mother doesn’t cook. She didn’t know how to cook at all,” she laughs.
“She is a very career focused woman, so I was raised by uGogo. One of my fondest memories is my grandmother teaching me so I can turn around and teach my mother how to cook,” she says.
When Wanda made the decision to switch careers her parents supported the decision. “As much as they were not sure of my decision, as any parent is when their child decides to venture into the arts professionally, they still had my back 100%,” she says.
Wanda, who is a member of the South African Chefs Association (SACA) hopes that the women’s league of the organisation, formed recently, will be the fuse that ignites the spirit of transformation in the industry. She advises young women in the industry to never give up on their dreams.
Don’t give up. It’s tough, you will work for peanuts, you will be unappreciated, but there is a new wave rising of strong young, black females who want to take over the kitchen. We need that generation to persevere and change the stereotype and the narrative of this industry. So don’t give up.
She hopes the next five years will bring about the birth of her very own restaurant.
Eventually I want to open a self-sustainable restaurant where the produce comes from the farm so it’s basically self-sustained and I want it to be a community project, I want the people of that community to sustain and run that restaurant so that eventually we relieve unemployment, give people skills.