WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. – Pennsylvania College of Technology students and employees are again set to make a delicious impact at the iconic Kentucky Derby, slated to make its 152nd run at Churchill Downs racetrack in Louisville, Kentucky, on May 2.
Penn College students have been joining the Downs’ Derby Week culinary brigade since 1994 – missing only two years since (when Churchill Downs changed its food/beverage provider). Derby Week entails a series of themed race days leading up to the Kentucky Derby, the longest continually held sporting event in the United States. More than 150,000 guests typically attend the race, where high-end hospitality is an integral part of the tradition.
Levy, the current food/beverage provider, selected 28 students for paid Derby Week internships following a visit to Penn College in February.
Baking and culinary students will join chefs from across the country in the Downs’ premium venues, as well as the “main kitchen,” where staff handle literal tons of ingredients that will ultimately be part of a bucket-list experience for those who attend Derby Week events.
Also, two students majoring in business administration will serve the “front of the house,” interfacing with guests.
Several students are making a return trip to the Derby. For Jeanita J. Pierre, an applied management student and baking & pastry arts graduate from McConnellsburg, this will be her third Derby Week internship.
“At the 150th and 151st Kentucky Derbys, I had the opportunity to work with a wide range of seafood, charcuterie and pastry,” she said. “These experiences strengthened my skill set and boosted my confidence at a time when I was questioning my career path. This event challenges me to grow professionally, motivates me academically, and I have enjoyed my experience and am proud to be a part!”
Emma J. Turner, a culinary arts technology and applied management student from South Williamsport, thought after her first go-round last year that it was great but something she only wanted to do once.
“However, here I am returning, because it is not only one of the longest and hardest weeks of your life, but it is the most rewarding,” she said.
“That final day, after you have fed thousands of people, getting to watch the final race reminds you how lucky you are to get to experience such an amazing opportunity to come together with so many different individuals who allow you to build your connections with the hospitality world,” she said. “I am eager to be returning; I will be coming in knowing how much I have grown since last year and how much stronger I have become in the culinary field.”