11-29-2024  10:46 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

By Deborah Wessell (Press Release from Mt Hood Community College)
Published: 04 May 2012

Most community college students don't launch their careers until after graduation. But Terri McGee got right down to business, opening Sweet Bubba Ray's take-out and catering company in November 2011,  before completing her Certificate in Culinary Arts at Mt. Hood Community College the following month.


Court Carrier, the school's Hospitality and Tourism director can't say enough about McGee. "She's a dedicated, standout student with a real passion for her work. I supervised her internship at Beaverton Bakery. She knew exactly what she wanted, and I applaud her for putting her learning into practice."

 
McGee gives a great deal of credit to her Texan mother. "I started cooking young, in the kitchen with my mom. I lived in Texas for eight years. When I looked at the Portland market I saw barbecue here and there, but not much down-home southern-style food."

When Sweet Bubba Ray's first opened at 5222 N.E Sacramento, in a commercial kitchen in Portland's Hollywood District, McGee offered both catering and take-out (just one or two days a week). But it's really "sit-down food," as she puts it, and she doesn't have the capital or the high traffic location to start a restaurant. So for now, she's catering for groups and serving lunches to the nearby workers who phone in their orders.

McGee's specialties are very down-home. Customer favorites include catfish filets fried in a light coating, collard greens and kale and in particular her sweet potato pie. But the phrase "easy as pie" hardly describes the catering business.

 "It's a lot of hard work, especially starting out," McGee admits. "I've really been burning the midnight oil. Great ideas aren't enough. You've got to put the work in, being on your feet all day, learning to be a jack of all trades. But it's fun and I enjoy it."

What does the future hold for Sweet Bubba Ray's? Given the down economy, McGee's near-term plan is just to stay afloat.

"But I'm very optimistic," she says. "Southern food is comfort food, and we all need a little comfort right now."

McGee first considered MHCC for the convenient location, then found culinary classes to enhance her cooking skills and coursework in small business management to turn her dreams into practical reality.  Carrier describes a program that started in 1986 with eight students and has grown to 115 today.

"We added Culinary Arts to the curriculum about five years ago," Carrier explains. "Portland is a foodie town beyond belief now and this gives students a cost-effective education in the field."

 

Recently Published by The Skanner News

  • Default
  • Title
  • Date
  • Random

theskanner50yrs 250x300