Chef de partie
|  C. W. van Dusschoten, a chef de partie (1966) | |
| Occupation | |
|---|---|
| Names | Station chef, line cook | 
| Occupation type | Profession | 
| Activity sectors | Single department | 
A chef de partie, station chef, or line cook[1] is a chef in charge of a particular area of production in a restaurant. In large kitchens, each chef de partie might have several cooks or assistants, sometimes referred to as demi-chefs, who operate in specific stations.[2]
In most kitchens, however, the chef de partie is the only worker in that department. Line cooks are often divided into a hierarchy of their own, starting with "first cook", then "second cook", and continuing as needed by the establishment.
Station chef titles
Station chefs who are part of the brigade system:
| English | French | IPA | Responsibilities | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Sauté chef | saucier | [sosje] | Sautéed items and their sauce. (The highest position of the stations.) | 
| Fish chef | poissonnier | [pwasɔnje] | Fish dishes, and often fish butchering, and their sauces. (May be combined with the saucier position.) | 
| Roast chef | rôtisseur | [ʁotisœʁ] | Roasted and braised meats, and their sauces. | 
| Grill chef | grillardin | [ɡʁijaʁdɛ̃] | Grilled foods. (May be combined with the rotisseur.) | 
| Fry chef | friturier | [fʁityʁje] | Fried items. (May be combined with the rotisseur.) | 
| Entrée preparer | entremétier | [ɑ̃tʁəmetje] | Hot appetizers and often the soups, vegetables, pastas and starches. | 
| Soup chef | potager | [pɔtaʒe] | Soups. (May be handled by the entremétier.) | 
| Vegetable chef | légumier | [legymje] | Vegetables. (May be handled by the entremétier.) | 
| Roundsman | tournant | [tuʁnɑ̃] | Fills in as needed on stations in the kitchen, a.k.a. the swing cook. | 
| Pantry chef | garde manger | [ɡaʁd mɑ̃ʒe] | Cold foods: salads, cold appetizers, pâtés and other charcuterie items. | 
| Butcher | boucher | [buʃe] | Butchers meats, poultry, and sometimes fish and breading. | 
| Pastry chef | pâtissier | [patisje] | Baked goods and plated desserts, including pastries, cakes, and breads. May manage a separate team and department. | 
References
- ^ Sophie Brickman (September 12, 2010). "How French Laundry's chefs reach for the stars". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ Pratt, Justin (2012-10-21). "What Is a Demi-Chef?". Chron.com. Hearst Communications. ISSN 1074-7109. OCLC 30348909. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Houston Chronicle. Job Description: Demi chefs assist executive chefs with an array of different tasks in the kitchen.