Culture The Sweet Life of Natasha Pickowicz To launch our global Women In Food series we asked NYC Pastry Chef Natasha Pickowicz about her passion for pastry, smashing gender roles and how she’s helping reshape restaurant culture in the wake of #MeToo. By Angela Ledgerwood Culture To launch our global Women In Food series we asked NYC Pastry Chef Natasha Pickowicz about her passion for pastry, smashing gender roles and how she’s helping reshape restaurant culture in the wake of #MeToo. By Angela Ledgerwood Previous article Heidi Ireland: ‘One Of The Issues I Tackled Early On In My Career Was Finding My Voice In A Very Masculine Industry’. Next article Pastry Chef Natasha Pickowicz’s Favourite Cookbooks And Go-To Christmas Recipe Radically cool and kind is one way to describe NYC’s pastry wunderkind Natasha Pickowicz, the Executive Pastry Chef at the Matter House group of restaurants comprising of Estela, Flora Bar and Café Altro Paradiso. While Pickowicz is known for her outrageously-mourish sticky buns, perfectly tangy lemon tarts and other sweet sensations, she’s quickly becoming renowned as a talented food writer and community rabble-rouser. Earlier this year she organized a bake sale that raised $21,000 for Planned Parenthood and, to prove she’s always up for a challenge, she recently flew from Manhattan to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, with precious cargo. That cargo was five layers of pistachio sponge cake – carefully packed in her suitcase – and part of a dear friend’s wedding cake that was later assembled with rosewater buttercream and decorated with foraged weeds and wildflowers plucked from the base of the mighty Grand Teton mountain range. When she’s not flying with sugar in her carry-on, Pickowicz is managing her team of pastry cooks, and challenging herself (and her boss, Chef Ignacio Matto) to create a truly progressive kitchen. Here, she examines how to change workplace culture from within whilst keep the magic of baking alive. “I went to Cornell and majored in English Literature. I wrote for my college paper, the Cornell Daily Sun, and after graduation I became the Arts & Entertainment Editor of an alt-weekly paper called The Ithaca Times. I originally hoped to get my PhD in Ethnomusicology, but I was rejected from every program I applied to. In my desperation for work, I was hired as a baker at a small luncheonette called Dépanneur le Pick Up. They asked me if I had worked in a restaurant before. I lied and said that I had. Once I started learning about pastry and adapting to this completely different style of life, I found that I had no time to devote to writing. One of the most surprising (and beautiful!) aspects of my current life as a pastry chef is how I have been able to fold writing back into my practice — this time from the perspective of a chef, not as a critic or observer.” Want more from Natasha? Check out her favourite cookbooks and delicious holiday recipe here. womeninfood Best Of Future Women Culture “Never an excuse”: Why Katrina still can’t stand the smell of bourbon By Sally Spicer Culture Janine never thought divorce would mean losing her family and friends By Sally Spicer Culture “Invisible victims”: Why Conor was forced to live in an unsafe home By Sally Spicer Culture Miranda*’s mothers group helped her escape abuse. Then the stalking began By Sally Spicer Culture “We can’t change this on our own” By Melanie Dimmitt Culture “Marching forward means ensuring all our voices are heard” By Melanie Dimmitt Culture Dr Ann O’Neill’s husband committed “the ultimate act of revenge” By Sally Spicer Culture The question victim-survivors like me are tired of being asked By Geraldine Bilston Your inbox just got smarter If you’re not a member, sign up to our newsletter to get the best of Future Women in your inbox.