Chefs Speak Out: Our Communal Meal
Friday, 01 October 2010 21:35By Lynn Schwartz
Part of Berkeley’s now-famous “gourmet ghetto,” TV cooking personality, author, restaurateur and chef John Fields says he’s done with pretentious food.
Like many chefs, John Shields first learned a love and respect for food from a family member. In Shield’s case, it was his grandmother, Gertie Cleary. Shields has had an accomplished career, which includes two acclaimed restaurants, four cookbooks and two television series: “Chesapeake Bay Cooking” and PBS’ “Coastal Cooking with John Shields.” What now captures his interest is the kind of cooking that his grandmother originally taught him—simple, healthy and local food.
Students give high marks to reporting on current events—even though it requires more work from them—and indicate they learn more as a result.
Part 1 of a two-part series from Chef Weiner on advising your students on selecting and maintaining knives.
Florida—not California—is the nation’s largest producer of fresh tomatoes. This lesson plan will assist in demonstrating how increased menu usage of Florida tomatoes can increase profitability.
When Rochelle Huppin enrolled at The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) in 1985, she was not comfortable in the polyester student-issue chef's uniforms of the day. With a doctor's note saying she was allergic to synthetic fabrics, she was allowed to wear a pair of handmade all-cotton houndstooth print pants.