IACP – Seattle, Day One

Img_1492 Seattle, 9am.  Just getting ready to attend the first day of seminars at the IACP convention.  Over 1400 culinary professionals are here to take part in this annual affair.

My friend Judy Witts of Divina Cucina  is here from Florence, and she asked a group of IACP’ers to join her for lunch at Salumi, which is one of the hottest lunch places in Seattle. Judy booked months in advance.

Img_1493 On the right is Armandino Batali, the president and salumist at Salumi, and on the left is Sinclair Philip of Sooke Harbour House, an exclusive but homey inn west of Victoria, BC.  Sinclair knows his food, and declared our lunch at Salumi likely to be the best meal we’ll experience all week in Seattle.  I think I’m forced to agree.

Img_1485 Over the course of a couple of hours Armandino (who is the father of renowned New York City restaurateur Mario Batali) trotted out some of his finest creations, including this amazing beef tripe braised in tomato sauce.  I am definitely not a tripe fan, but this had me swooning. We also enjoyed lamb proscuitto and a wide variety of other cured salamis, including a mole (that’s a Mexican-style cocoa-based flavouring), and lomo, cured loin of pork.

Img_1490_1 More highlights:  pig’s ears sliced thinly into a warm green salad, tiny green lentil salad with cotechino sausage, tuna and huge white beans, golden beets served with cumin and fennel powder, the list went on and on.  Fantastic!  More later from Seattle…

   

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Food For Thought – Chocolate Part 1

Img_1457 People seem to be going crazy over chocolate these days, especially dark chocolate, as recent scientific studies seem to indicate that regular consumption of dark chocolate can help lower cholesterol, and fight cancer.  Today’s edition of Food For Thought featured part of my interview with chocolate lover and connaisseur Dr. Jordan LeBel, who is an associate professor in the Hotel and Restaurant School in Ithaca, New York.  Dr. LeBel was hired by the Poulain chocolate company (owned and distributed in Canada by Cadbury) to talk about the health benefits and history of chocolate.  To listen to today’s show in Real Audio, Click here.

Img_1458The good news is that Cadbury is trying to bring Poulain high-quality dark chocolate to the masses.  You can now purchase Poulain chocolate in stores such as Shoppers Drug Mart and Sobey’s across Canada, and in Western Canada and BC in IGA, Safeway and Overwaitea or Save-On Food stores.

I’ll have more from Dr. LeBel next week, along with the story of two young chocolatiers who are bringing a worldwide taste of chocolate to a new shop called Chocoatl in Vancouver’s Yaletown.

Here are a couple of links to interesting articles on the dark chocolate phenomenon:

The first from the Globe and Mail, and the second from Elliott Minor at the Associated Press.

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Pacific Palate – Cherry Blossom Festival

Tuesday morning on Pacific Palate I talked about the First Annual Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival.  Thanks to Paul Schellenberg, the festival’s marketing director, for coming in and bringing in the special bento box picnic that is being offered for a great price of $10 during the celebrations.

Where there’s a festival, there’s food.  In Tokyo, where celebrating the cherry blossom is an ancient tradition, some vendors sell takoyaki, fried balls of octopus. Takoyaki0001_1 Here is one vendor skilfully turning the takoyaki in their special cooking mold so that they cook evenly.

If you want to see how cherry blossoms can be used in restaurant meals, this time of year sushi master Tojo uses blossoms at his restaurant.

This is your last week to enter my ‘What’s the Strangest Food You’ve Ever Eaten?’ contest, with copies of Taras Grescoe’s ‘The Devil’s Picnic’ up for grabs as prizes.  To view the contest page, click here.

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So Much On My Plate – Maple Syrup

Maple_syrupThis week, So Much On My Plate celebrated maple syrup.  You can use it for so much more than a topping.  I have 4 recipes for you, the first recipe is one I adapted from a dish I learned from a former executive chef at the Fairmont Waterfront, Daryle Nagata.  Last time I heard, he was with the Fairmont in Washington, DC.  This recipe calls for a cedar plank, make sure the cedar you get is untreated cedar.  You don’t want to be inhaling creosote or some other preservative as the plank heats up on the barbecue.  Many grocery stores are now selling cedar planks especially made for this purpose.

Maple-Soy Planked Salmon

Ingredients:

One boneless fillet of salmon per person, 4 to 6 ounces each

One cedar plank, 6 inches wide, and long enough to hold the salmon pieces in one layer

Maple syrup

Soya sauce

Freshly ground black pepper

Soak your cedar plank in enough water to cover it for at least half an hour.  I don’t give exact amounts for the syrup and soya, since it will vary with the number of fillets you are marinating.  Place the salmon fillets in a zip loc bag large enough to hold the fillets and pour in equal amounts of soya sauce and maple syrup, just enough to coat the surface of the salmon.  You don’t have to marinate the salmon long for it to pick up the flavour of the soy and maple.  15-20 minutes is plenty. Turn your barbecue on high, then take your cedar plank out of the water and place in directly on the grill.  Close the lid.  When the plank starts to crackle and smoke, lift the lid and place the salmon fillets skin side down on the plank.  Close the lid.  The salmon is done when it turns opaque and flakes easily.  Don’t overcook!  I like my salmon medium rare.  Turn off barbecue, and lift salmon from the cedar with a metal spatula.  Serve immediately.

The following recipes were chosen from a review of recipes available from various maple syrup producer websites, but all of them were tested in the PacificPalate.com test kitchen with good results.

Maple Corn Bread

Ingredients:
1 1/3 cups (325 ml) sifted all-purpose flour
4 tsp (20 ml) baking powder
1/2 tsp (2 ml) salt
2/3 cup (150 ml) cornmeal
2/3 cup (150 ml) milk
1/3 cup (75 ml) maple syrup
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1/4 cup (50 ml) butter, melted
1/4 cup (50 ml) maple syrup
1/2 cup (125 ml) walnuts, coarsely chopped

Heat oven to 375°F. Grease 9 inch square cake pan. Sift flour, baking powder and salt into a large mixing bowl. Stir in cornmeal with fork. Combine milk, 1/3 cup (75 ml) maple syrup, butter, and eggs; add to dry ingredients. Stir in just until blended. Spoon into pan and smooth. Drizzle remaining 1/4 cup (50 ml) maple syrup over batter. Sprinkle with walnuts. Bake for 25 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean.

Maple Chicken

Ingredients:
2 lb (1 kg) chicken pieces
1/3 cup (75 ml) all-purpose flour
1/4 cup (50 ml) vegetable oil
1/2 cup (125 ml) maple syrup
2 Tbsp (30 ml) cider vinegar
2 Tbsp (30 ml) sherry
2 Tbsp (30 ml) soya sauce
2 tsp (10 ml) ground ginger
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 tsp (2 ml) pepper
1/4 tsp (1 ml) paprika

Coat chicken pieces well with flour. In large nonstick fry pan, add vegetable oil. Cook for 5 minutes, browning well, turn often. Arrange in 9" x 12" baking dish. In small bowl, mix together maple syrup, vinegar, sherry, soya sauce, ginger, garlic, pepper and paprika. Pour over chicken evenly. Bake at 350°F for 45 minutes to 1 hour, turning once during baking. Cover with foil, if browning too quickly. Garnish with freshly chopped parsley.

Caramelized Maple Popcorn

Ingredients:
½ cup popping corn
½ cup butter or margarine
¼ cup maple syrup
1 cup brown sugar
½ tsp salt
¼ tsp baking soda
½ tsp vanilla extract

Pop enough corn to make 10 – 12 cups. Place popped corn in a buttered mixing bowl and set aside. In a small saucepan melt butter then mix in syrup, brown sugar and salt. Boil for five minutes without stirring. Remove from heat then stir in baking soda and vanilla extract. Pour mixture over popcorn and mix well. Turn into large casserole dish or roasting pan and bake in 250F oven for one hour, stirring every 15 minutes.  Cool.

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All You Can Eat featured in Seattle newspaper

CpnlogosquareMy podcast, All You Can Eat, was featured in a column by Seattle Post-Intelligencer food editor Hsiao-Ching Chou.  Hsiao-Ching, whom I’ve met a few times, was writing about, and is a fellow member of the Culinary Podcast Network that was launched earlier this week.  I’m proud to be part of this network, which features some of the best food podcasts in North America.

To read her entire column, click here.  I’ll be in Seattle next week for the annual convention of the IACP, International Association for Culinary Professionals, and will be sure to get plenty of material for future All You Can Eat episodes.  Hsiao-Ching and I plan to get together so she can show me part of her Seattle food scene.

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Food For Thought – Dinnerworks

Dinnerworks4This week on Food For Thought, I featured an easy way to make dinner, and you don’t even have to be in your own kitchen.  A team does all the chopping, dicing and sauce-making.  You do the assembly.  Dinnerworks is the first easy meal preparation business in Vancouver.  Apparently there is one in Kelowna, and only seven such businesses in all of Canada.

Dinnerworks9 Each work station is spotless, and looks just like a commercial restaurant prep counter.  You consult the menu online before you make an appointment, and let the staff know which recipes you want to create.

You follow the recipes posted at the station, and pack them into oven-ready containers.

Dinnerworks8 Dinnerworks decor is quite modern, a combo of trendy pastels and stainless steel.  Owner-operator Chris Roscoe encourages people to come in for a private party…chat and listen to music while making meals for days down the road when you just don’t have the time to spend in the kitchen.

Oh, if you’re looking for The Devil’s Picnic contest, click here.  If you want to listen to this week’s item in Real Audio, click here.

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