An Ever-Bigger Taste of Latin America
This year’s Latin Flavors, American Kitchens Conference emphasized cuisines from Argentina to Guatemala and identified hot trends: handheld foods, smoke, bar foods and Cocktails.
The kitchens of The Culinary Institute of America (CIA), San Antonio recently hosted the most prominent collection of Latin-cuisine experts from throughout the Americas. The chefs assembled in Texas for the college’s fourth-annual Latin Flavors, American Kitchens conference, October 5-7. Presenting chefs included Rick Bayless of Frontera Grill, Topolobampo and Xoco in Chicago; Roberto Santibanez of Fonda in Brooklyn; Humberto Dominguez of Restaurant Kakao in Guatemala; and the CIA’s Latin-cuisines faculty: Alain Dubernard (Mexico), Almir Da Fonseca (Brazil), Iliana de la Vega (Mexico), Elizabeth Johnson-Kossick (USA) and Sergio Remolina (Mexico).
In a zero-growth environment, this fast-casual sub-segment continues gaining market share.
The chef de cuisine of Corn Maiden restaurant near Santa Fe dispels some myths and misconceptions of working with chiles—while talking up their strategic use as a flavor enhancer—in menu development.
The NRA says the CSPI-sponsored Food Day need not be limited to one day a year. Indeed, there’s much to celebrate in light of 10% of Americans working in the restaurant industry and restaurants’ dedication to providing healthier menu options.
Case studies, whether already prepared or created by you or your students, are a wonderful way to force students to interpret and analyze industry situations that are new to them—and often missing from their books.
Your students will groan with shock and surprise to learn that for every $100 in sales a foodservice operation earns only $4 to $7. But your job is to show them the real world they’re training to excel in.
A new e-learning module focusing on practical foodservice uses for this fascinating fruit launches on the CIA ProChef Web site.
Senator Schumer launches a push to secure new funding to help The Culinary Institute of America and Hudson Valley farmers get products on local shelves and into local restaurants.
For those who have always wanted to learn the art of bread baking, The French Culinary Institute’s November 1 release of The Fundamental Techniques of Classic Bread Baking (Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 2011, ISBN: 978-1-58479-934-4, $65.00/Can. $75.00) is the perfect cookbook. An indispensable addition to any serious home-baker’s library, The Fundamental Techniques of Classic Bread Baking is a glimpse into the exclusive French Culinary Institute’s intensive 12-week bread-baking course. Created in 1997, this course is taught by some of today’s greatest artisanal bread bakers and regarded as one of the top programs in the world.
Demonstration Hall on the campus of Michigan State University was the site of a world record-breaking line of—believe it or not—tacos. And two students in The School of Hospitality Business demonstrated their perseverance, persuasive powers and organizational skills by spending nearly eight months orchestrating the memorable event, which occurred on September 30 and fulfilled the Guinness Book of World Records requirements.