The TU Dublin School of Culinary Arts and Food Technology, based on the TU Dublin
Grangegorman campus, Central Quad, provides education, training and research for the
culinary,
food,
beverage and
hospitality industries. Postgraduate programmes currently offered are an MSc in Culinary Innovation and Food Product Development, and a PG Diploma in Global Food and Drink Leadership. In 2009,
Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire became the first Irish chef to earn a PhD at the School, with a dissertation entitled 'The Emergence, Development and Influence of French Haute Cuisine on Public Dining in Dublin Restaurants 1900–2000: An Oral History'. Since then, a dozen PhD researchers have graduated from the School, while a further fourteen are pursuing PhD research as of late 2021 in areas as diverse as wine and
food writing, historic whiskey mash bills, culinary education and emotion in food product design. As part of its academic and practical training offers, the School runs two training restaurants, the Musgrave Marketplace Restaurant and the Ballymaguire Foods Restaurant. Both are working classrooms designed as a restaurant setting, in which the students prepare and serve food and drink to paying customers. The training restaurants have long been a feature of the School, dating back to the Cathal Brugha Street location. They are on principle open to the public; however, they are a classroom environment, and the primary objective is to facilitate student learning. The School also operates a Culinary Shop in the Central Quad building that sells baked goods, pastries, cookies and confectionary items produced by the students on site to the public, students, and staff on campus at a reduced price. Opening hours vary according to production levels. ==References==