An Austrian’s Adventures in Midcentury America: My Organic Life by Nora Pouillon, with Laura Fraser

If you could sum up Nora Pouillon in one word, would it be “stubborn?” She is known for her single-minded determination to run her professional and personal life the way she sees fit. How about “obsessed?” everything in her restaurant, down to the seasonings, must be as organic as she can make them.

No. It’s unequivocally “European.” From her reaction to the wretched state of available ingredients when she first moved to America in 1965, to her candid description of her florid personal life, her book reveals a psyche foreign to the good citizens of mid-century America (and possibly to those living here still today).

She did open the first completely organic restaurant in the US, in Washington, DC. In fact, she was instrumental in the establishment of certification standards for organic restaurants. But it was a gradual process, from her earliest awareness of how good simple food, cooked well, can be, to her education as a chef and restaurateur.

She describes herself as a “war child,” born 18 months before VE day. Her Viennese family spend much of the war on a working farm. The bounty of those fields impressed her even at an early age. Later, she attended a French school which served three-course lunches to all the students. These meals, not the coursework, are her clearest memories of school!

A meeting with a dashing but married Frenchman, Pierre Pouillon, lead to a romantic courtship and marriage – before Pierre was divorced from his first wife. But his papers came through just before they left for Washington, and Pierre’s new job at a radio station.

Despite the appalling lack of fresh vegetables in Washington, Nora started cooking for small dinner parties as a way of reciprocating the invitations from their friends. She relied on books like Elizabeth David’s excellent series for the most part, along with one short course on Asian food. When it became clear that they couldn’t make ends meet on Pierre’s salary, Nora decided to try offering classes herself – and so her career in food began.

It was about this time she discovered that Pierre was having an affair with their au pair. Although Nora was aware that he had been sleeping around during the course of their marriage, she had tolerated his behavior (how European!) for the sake of stability and their two sons. The au pair, however, was too much. In retaliation, she deliberately set out to seduce her contractor. From then on, she and Pierre led separate but conjoined lives. Even when Nora eventually moved out of the house, they never actually divorced.

Her first professional job, running the restaurant in the Tabard Inn, led to her second long-term relationship and business partner for Restaurant Nora. Together with Steven Damato, Nora formed the “additive-free” philosophy she was to evolve into organic cuisine, and carry on through many dreams, enterprises (remember City Cafe and Asia Nora?) and years. But, after many years and two children together, Steven fell in love with their daughter’s piano teacher, and he and Nora split.

Now, as Nora writes, “I am a mature European woman…I have my mission, my passion, my friends, and my children, who are following in my footsteps in their own ways.” And acknowledgment as one of the doyennes of the organic movement in the United States. Not a bad place to find oneself.

My Organic Life
My Organic Life by Nora Pouillon, with Laura Fraser, Knopf, New York, 2015

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Jose and Carla and Joan and Alice: Saturday Night Sips 2015

I don’t usually start an article by dropping names, but I couldn’t help myself. So many shining lights of the local and national firmament in one place! They almost outshone the food. Almost.

The View From Above

The View From Above

And That Helicopter Is Still There!

And That Helicopter Is Still There!

New this year at Sips: alcoholic elevators. If you’ve ever been to the Newseum, you know that there are huge elevators to convey museum-goers to the top floor, from whence they process downward to street level. The Sips planners decided to take advantage of the space by installing bars in each of them.

Did The Room Just Move Or Have I Had Enough?

Did The Room Just Move Or Have I Had Enough?

On the third floor, a reception with book signings was held where one could schmooze with and take very good pictures of the aforementioned lights,

Alice Waters

Alice Waters

Carla Hall

Carla Hall

and partake of games such as corn hole, and strange-looking food.

Dipped Fruit On Sticks

Dipped Fruit On Sticks

Unfortunately for me, the bar elevators went directly from the third floor to the Concourse level, where dispensers of sweets were grouped. I am a strict believer in “life is short, eat dessert first,” so I was easily distracted from one of my main objectives for this event, which was to arrive at Rappahannock Oysters’ table, on the first floor, before they ran out.

There was way too much to pass up. The Great Pyramid of Macarons at the Sweet Lobby’s display, for instance.

Well, Maybe Just One

Well, Maybe Just One

And Shake Shack, which offered one of my favorite things in the world: affogato! They made theirs with Stumptown coffee, their own frozen custard, and shortbread cookie crumbs from Baked and Wired. I had more than one. They didn’t mind.

Espresso Over Frozen Custard: Dynamite!

Espresso Over Frozen Custard: Dynamite!

And They Brought Their Sign With Them

And They Brought Their Sign With Them

Then there was Sonoma, offering uni panna cotta with preserved lemon. Admittedly a savory take on custard, similar to Japanese chawanmushi, it still pulled me away from my briny objective.

Savory Panna Cotta

Savory Panna Cotta

Then, just as I was about to board the escalator up to the first floor, there was Chef Tee (Terrell Danley) with his students from DC Central Kitchen.

Chef Tee's The Tall One

Chef Tee’s The Tall One

He’s one of our favorite demo chefs at the Olney Farmers and Artists Market. He assured me he’d be out again with us this summer season, and bring some of his students with him.

Finally, I was borne upward towards those oysters. But as I made my approach, there was yet another display of panna cotta! Ghibellina had the classic sweet vanilla custard flavored with almond cookies. I just had to see how it compared with Sonoma’s.

Panna Cotta 2.0

Panna Cotta 2.0

And then I was finally there – but the oysters were not! All that was left was a cruelly mocking empty bed of ice. Skunked again!

No Oysters For Me

No Oysters For Me

I consoled myself with some more food and drink. I said hello to the Catoctin Creek crew,

Catoctin Creek Distillery

Catoctin Creek Distillery

admired Tico’s display at their table,

Tico's Table

Tico’s Table

and joined in the accolades for the three Honorary Chairs of the event: Jose Andes, Joan Nathan, and Alice Waters.

Joan, Jose, Alice

Joan, Jose, Alice

Afterward, Chef Jose had a great time with his fans and friends.

Smile!

Smile!

Hug!

Hug!

Schmooze!

Schmooze!

Another great event this year, and for a terrific cause: ending food insecurity and providing job training towards eradicating poverty.

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Can There Be Too Much of a Good Thing? NMAI: The Power of Chocolate

The Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian and Mars Chocolate North America sponsored an evening program and reception in advance of the Power of Chocolate Festival in March. In the interest of testing the theory that there can never be enough chocolate (only a week after the chocolate tasting event at the Italian Embassy), we were in attendance.

The Evolution of Chocolate: A Special Chocolate Lecture and Tasting, featured Rodney Snyder, Chocolate History Research Director at Mars Chocolate North America. The big open space at NMAI was filled with tables and exhibit stations, giving a little preview of the weekend’s activities.

NMAI Gathering Place

NMAI Gathering Place

Exotic Chocolate-Making Equipment

Exotic Chocolate-Making Equipment

First, we were introduced to Chef Will of the Mitsitam Cafe, who described the dishes we would sample after the lecture. Among them: pork marinated with chocolate and chili, grilled with a chocolate rub, and chocolate and cherry mousse (in honor of Cherry Blossom season).

Chef Will Describes the Dishes

Chef Will Describes the Dishes

Then Mr. Snyder treated us to an amusing treatise on the evolution and uses of chocolate in the New World. For instance, did you know chocolate can be found in the periodic table of the elements?

Elemental Chocolate

Elemental Chocolate

(But seriously, folks,) the cultivation of cacao trees began 3,000 years ago and spread to an area 20° north and south of the equator. Native Americans fermented the pulp surrounding the beans and drank the liquid, in addition to harvesting the beans.

Rodney Snyder, Our Guide

Rodney Snyder, Our Guide

They had a bouquet of ingredients to flavor their chocolate drinks, including agave nectar and bee honey, annatto, allspice, and red pepper. One of the samples was mixed to be very close to what the Aztecs would have drunk. It was so rich, just a little was quite enough!

Chocolate Tasting

 

It was almost as thick as the chocolate at the Spanish Crafts event. Another “flavor expression” of chocolate, this time as a solid, contained the same ingredients as the drink, but provided a completely different experience in the mouth.

Chocolate for Tasting

Chocolate for Tasting

The last taste, providing a contrast to the historic style, was a Dove dark chocolate miniature. We were asked to notice how the Dove provided a “silky smooth melt.” It did indeed!

Then we were welcome to try the dishes prepared by Chef Will and his team. In addition to the pork and mousse, there was some mole and chili made with chocolate, fruit and cheese (nice complements), and sparkling wine. A truly sweet event!

Blue Cheese Goes Very Well With Chocolate

Blue Cheese Goes Very Well With Chocolate

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The 2014 Governor’s Buy Local Cookout: Silver and the Watermelon Queens

Silver Queen. How evocative is that phrase? For your faithful correspondent, it conjures the corner farm market, whose produce came from the fields down the road. Every day at 6 p.m. in corn season (stretched out by serial plantings), a flat of Silver Queen arrived behind a tractor. The second picking of the day, timed to catch the home-bound traffic.

You walked down to the end of the driveway when the line of cars backed up past your house because the tractor was making its slow progress down the two-lane road. Put a dollar in your pocket and came back with six ears, which you husked and placed in the pot of water that you had put on the stove to boil just before you left the house. Ate some off the cob, stripped the rest for next day’s lunch.

It wasn’t anything special; Silver Queen was what was planted for eating corn in Maryland forty years ago. It was everywhere, in every farm stand on New Hampshire Avenue from the Silver Spring line to Damascus.

It had great corn flavor, but its sweetness was ephemeral. It had to be cooked as soon as picked, or it would turn starchy. Nobody grows it anymore. It’s been supplanted by a thing that looks like corn, but tastes of nothing but sugar.

Now, this was meant to be a report on the state of agriculture in Maryland, as represented by the 2014 Governor’s Buy Local Cookout, but I see it has turned into an exercise in nostalgia. Bear with me. There was Silver Queen at the cookout, because at least one farmer in Maryland is still growing it.

Silver Queen and Heirloom Tomatoes

Silver Queen and Heirloom Tomatoes

Goat Cheese and Silver Queen Corn Cake with Smoky Tomato Ginger Jam, it said on the sign, and indeed, it was a fine goat cheese and corn cake, and the jam was nice too, but I would have been just as happy (happier!) with a just-picked ear, freshly shucked and plainly boiled, with a little butter and salt.

Chef Bryan Davis, of The Classic Catering People in Owings Mills, told me that the retro-farmer responsible for the corn was Nick Bailey of Grand View Farm in Forest Hill. I’m planning a field trip for the 2015 corn season.

Meanwhile, on another part of the Governor’s lawn, the crowd of folks involved in food production and distribution in Maryland were milling around the tables trying samples of our state’s bounty. There were patriotic shorts,

O Maryland, My Maryland!

O Maryland, My Maryland!

local and state-wide personalities,

Sandy Heiler of Brookeville With Gov. O'Malley

Sandy Heiler of Brookeville With Gov. O’Malley

State Senator Karen and Harry Montgomery With Sandy

State Senator Karen and Harry Montgomery With Sandy

and, of course, the Watermelon Queen.

Watermelon Queen Shelby Hurley

Watermelon Queen Shelby Hurley

The tables offered delicious food prepared by local chefs

Have A Taste!

Have A Taste!

Crabby Garnish

Crabby Garnish

and tipples by local distilleries and wineries.

Lyon Distilling

Lyon Distilling

including the Olney Farmers Market’s own Mark Mills of Chocolates and Tomatoes Farm.

Governor O’Malley entertained not only by reading a Proclamation, as one would expect from a governor, but by singing and playing, as well.

Gov. O'Malley Proclaims

Gov. O’Malley Proclaims

And Then He Entertains

And Then He Entertains!

As the sun set over Annapolis, another successful Buy Local Cookout concluded. And I left with the taste of Silver Queen on my palate.

Sunset

Sunset

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Truck On Down To The Food Truck Convention

The food truck scene in our area has exploded in the last few years. Time was, if you wanted more than a hot dog when dining al fresco in downtown DC, you were out of luck. And try finding food on wheels in the ‘burbs! But those were the bad old days.

It’s a different scene now. Food trucks of all descriptions are blossoming in the city and even out here in the trackless wilderness of Montgomery County. And with proliferation comes organization. The DMV FTA, the DC, Maryland, and Virginia Food Truck Association, is stepping up.

The Capital City Food Truck Convention will be held on Sunday, April 19 at the One Eight Distillery in Washington, DC. This is the first event for food truck operators, aspiring food truck owners, industry purveyors, and service providers in our area. Education and networking are promised. There will be workshops, inspirational talks, and an exhibit of products and services. And, according to FTA Executive Director Che Ruddell-Tabisola, there will be awards to “unsung heroes” – pioneers and local leaders of the industry.

Although aimed mainly towards those already or potentially involved with food trucks, the general public is invited to join and attend. See the link above for details.

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Two Lessons on Italian Food: Francine Segan on Pasta, Coffee, Chocolate and Other Delights

“She’s prettier in person,” the middle-aged man next to me whispered. He was right. Francine Segan, cookbook author, host of the TV series Americans who Love Italy, expert on Italian cuisine, stood at the lectern wearing a beautifully-embroidered coat. She was ready to deliver a complete history of Italian cuisine in a little over an hour. A neat trick, especially with the audience distracted by the ornate decorations of the European Reading Room.

Ms. Segan on a Slide, and the Ceiling

Ms. Segan on a Slide, and the Ceiling

Ms. Segan in Person, and a Mural

Ms. Segan in Person, and a Mural

We were seated in between the rows of bookcases in this remote section of the Library of Congress’ Thomas Jefferson Building (usually open only to scholars), to hear Ms. Segan deliver a talk rather grandiosely titled “Italian Gastronomic Traditions and Innovations: The Historical, Cultural and Social Importance of Food in Italy.”

The European Reading Room

The European Reading Room

Introduced by Grant Harris, the Head of the Room, she proved to be warmer and more engaging than her talk’s title. Concentrating on pasta, desserts and coffee, she provided a dizzying tour through many types and shapes of pasta I had never before seen, then transitioned to desserts by way of pasta combined with sweet cheese (cannoli, cassata), and gelato in brioche for breakfast (!)

Panettone, that sweet, raisin-filled bread ubiquitous around the winter holidays, is traditionally made with natural yeast which must be nurtured for 30 to 40 days before the bread is made. Ms. Segan told us how she decided to test the claim that it would keep for six months without preservatives. She tucked several loaves away in her closet and – lo and behold! it’s true!

Did you know that there is a tradition of caffè sospeso, or “suspended coffee,” by which one pays for two coffee drinks but receives only one, and that other one is later served free to a patron who would not be able to afford it?

And then there is Caffè alla valdostana, coffee and grappa passed around in a communal cup after a long day skiing in the Valle d’Aosta. La dolce vita.

After her talk, Renato Miracco, Cultural Attachè at the Embassy of Italy, presented one of Ms. Segan’s cookbooks to the Library. He also reminded us that the next day Ms. Segan would be speaking at the Embassy about chocolate. Indeed!

Ms. Segan, Mr. Miracco, Mr. Harris

Ms. Segan, Mr. Miracco, Mr. Harris

The Book Presentation (and That Ceiling Again)

The Book Presentation (and That Ceiling Again)

“Italy’s Sweet Chocolate History,” a talk without a colon but with just as much culinary content as the day before, had a bigger audience and a more accessible venue – and tastings as well.

At The Lecturn

At The Lectern

Before the history, Ms. Segan (in another beautiful coat) gave a lesson in tasting chocolate, which we were to save for later. We must snap, smell, feel and taste the chocolate “just like wine, except you don’t have to spit!”

She had spent some time in a cacao-growing region, and took us through each stage in the preparation of chocolate: harvesting the pods, fermentation, drying, shipping, toasting, grinding. The cacao was consumed at this stage for centuries by the Aztecs and others, dissolved in water.

In Italy, it was sprinkled on polenta and combined with game, and used in a dish that sounds so good I can’t wait to try it: Tagliatelli al cacao con salsa gorgonzola (Chocolate Tagiatelli with Gorgonzola Sauce, and walnuts).

It was the first food containing caffeine brought into Europe, before tea and coffee. It must have had quite an effect on those who could afford it!

And then in 1865, gianduia was invented; and in 1964, Nutella. Both are chocolate and hazelnut confections, and both were responses to chocolate shortages. Nutella made gianduia spreadable, and thus popular as an after-school snack on bread. Now, gianduia is considered the fourth flavor of chocolate in Italy. There’s milk, dark, white, and gianduia.

Among many desserts using chocolate in regions of Italy is melanzana chocolato: layers of fudgy chocolate sauce and eggplant, served cold – another one I want to try. Chocolate tarts, chocolate-topped couscous, cocoa-dusted pasta shells filled with pudding, four-foot-tall chocolate eggs, and La Befana

La Belfana in Chocolate

La Befana in Chocolate

an old woman who delivers gifts to children throughout Italy on Epiphany Eve (January 5). You can take gifts to chocolate-makers and they will put them into hollow eggs for you. There are chocolate tools to make work sweeter. It was starting to make my head spin, but I had to keep it together for the tasting.

But first, there was a drawing for two of Ms. Segan’s cookbooks. I didn’t win. But Mr. Miracco did invite us to enjoy the tasting and soft seats in the hall. “Don’t hurry out!” And when we discovered that, in addition to two kinds of chocolate, there were strawberries and prosecco, we were delighted to obey him.

Cookbook Won and Autographed

Cookbook Won and Autographed

Tasting

Tasting

Not Hurrying Out

Not Hurrying Out

There was an Italian chocolate I had not seen before, Antica Lavorazione a Bassa Temperatura from Antica Dolceria Bonajuto, the oldest chocolate factory in Sicily, a tablet with cacao nibs included, good for the snapping-smelling-tasting routine we had been schooled in; and Ferrero SpA’s Ferrero Rocher, the round, chocolate-covered whole hazelnut candy that has become very familiar (but has far from worn out its welcome).

The chocolate from Dolceria Bonajuto is made by a process very similar to the one brought back to Sicily from the New World by the Spaniards. The ingredients are still only cocoa, spices and sugar. It is very close to the version of chocolate known to the Aztecs – a fitting historical note.

These events were sponsored by the Italian Cultural Institute, the Italian Embassy, and Italy in US in advance of EXPO MILANO 2015, the Universal Exhibition in Milan, Italy, running from May to October. Its theme is providing food for the world’s population, while respecting the equilibrium of the planet. There will be coffee and chocolate pavilions, programs by world-class chefs, and many other attractions.

Italy in US

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So Good! Cooking with Chestnut Puree

I don’t usually use this blog to brag, but I just made such a good supper that I couldn’t resist.

I had a spaghetti squash that I needed a sauce for, and some cooked chicken, half a can of diced tomatoes, and some leftover coconut milk. How to season it to make it other than bland?

I took a bag of frozen chestnut puree from my freezer (from last fall, remember?). In a small saucepan, I brought the tomatoes to a boil, and broke in about 1/2 cup of the puree, then added about the same amount of coconut milk. Added 1 cup of diced, cooked chicken; heated just through, poured over the squash (which had been sliced and baked for 20 minutes, then forked into strands); garnished with chopped parsley, then sprinkled with finishing salt, it was amazingly good.

Spaghetti Squash With Chestnut Puree

Spaghetti Squash With Chestnut Puree

You could probably do this with commercially-packaged chestnuts, as well, but mine came from my backyard. It makes all that effort last fall worth it.

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Whisky Makes Us Frisky: Whisky Live DC

At the Whisky Live DC event at the Grand Hyatt Washington, an underground ballroom was full of tables. Behind them stood jovial purveyors of cheer, happy to pour a tot or two of their products.

View of the Tasting

View of the Tasting

There were small, local distilleries and large conglomerates, and many companies in between, among the 40 or so different brands represented. I noticed Lyon Distilling Co. from St. Michaels, with a line of small-batch whiskey and rum;

Two Lyons

Two Lyons

and Catoctin Creek Distillery in Purcellville, VA, with their rye, both part of the new distillery movement in the DMV.

Pouring From the Creek

Pouring From the Creek

Then there was a whole row occupied by tables from the Beam Suntory organization. From Jim Beam to Maker’s Mark Bourbon,

Mark That Hat!

Mark That Hat!

with a stop for Japanese whisky along the way, they circle the globe for spirits. Their Alberta Rye “Dark Batch” was particularly nice.

But the prize for conviviality for the evening went to Laphroaig and their two verry friendly men in kilts. They were pouring tiny tastes of Laphroaig 25 Year Old Single Malt, with tasting lessons and Scots toasts thrown in for local color.

A Wee Dram?

A Wee Dram?

And lest the drink overtake one before dinner, a full buffet was provided. The star of the chafing dishes was some excellent beef.

Some Excellent Beef

Some Excellent Beef

There was a band and singer offering jazz-age standards. The singer was wearing a wonderful dress, the kind only an entertainer or red-carpet walker can wear.

Cool Jazz and Sequins

Cool Jazz and Sequins

But she was rivaled for remarkableness by a woman in a shiny, plastic-looking dress.

Was It Plastic?

Was It Plastic?

For dessert, we wandered over to the Parfections table, where there was a generous spread of truffles to sample, as well as whisky pairings to drink with the chocolate.

Bad Spelling, Good Chocolate

Bad Spelling, Good Chocolate

Enough! We are sufficed for whisky for awhile. Not saying how long.

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What Chefs Talk About When They Talk To Each Other: Chef Connect: Baltimore 2015

Every profession has professional associations, and most professional associations have get-togethers. Meet and mingle, network, see the latest gadgets and raw materials, learn the trends and how to exploit them; in short, become better at what you do – that’s the aim of a professional conference or symposium.

And that was the scene at the American Culinary Federation’s Chef Connect: Baltimore last month. A sea of white jackets engulfed the meeting areas at the Marriott as hundreds of chefs and culinary students met to talk, eat, and learn from each other, speakers, and vendors. We were there, too.

How did we know we were in the right place? Why, by the ice sculpture sign at the hotel entrance, of course!

Ice Sculpture Sign

This Must Be The Place!

In the general sessions, the chefs listened to a motivational speaker

Speaker Karen McCullough and a Sea of White Jackets

Speaker Karen McCullough and a Sea of White Jackets

and saw a demo of Indonesian cooking by Steve Jilleba, from Unilever Food Solutions of Chicago. Chef Steve gave a tutorial in the ingredients and cooking methods of this exotic cuisine, together with tips on how to adapt them to the modern restaurant kitchen.

Chef Steve (right) and Assistant

Chef Steve (right) and Assistant

After the demo, chefs and students alike crowded around to take pictures of the plated dishes.

Dishes Pictured

Dishes Pictured

Gordon Food Service presented Chef Gerry Ludwig, their corporate consulting chef, speaking about menu trends for 2015. But first, he spoke in tribute to one of his favorite places in Chicago, Hot Doug’s, which recently closed. And there was one of my favorite chefs, Tony Bourdain! Alas, not in person.

Chef Gerry and Chef Tony

Chef Gerry and Chef Tony

And what are the trends, you ask? Here they are: Lamb “scrumpet” (deep-fried lamb breast fingers, a la April Bloomfield; burrata, especially domestic; kohlrabi, cold – raw or pickled; craft sodas (even Starbucks is pushing them!); and, sharing plates on wheels, aka “American dim sum.”

On the way out, we passed a table where one of the attendees had spread out her booty so far. Knives, notes and nibbles, among other swag.

A Nice Collection

A Nice Collection

Outside the ballroom, there was a small exhibition set up. There were chef’s tools and clothing vendors, product purveyors, and services for sale.

The Vertical Farm's Microgreens

The Vertical Farm’s Microgreens

Mercer's Knife Display

Mercer’s Knife Display

And an amazing coffee bar with every type of brew: ready-made for those who couldn’t wait for the pour-overs, French-press or espresso drinks; also tea – three types of brewed iced and many kinds of hot, courtesy of Royal Cup.

Coffee Any Way

Caffeine Any Way

The afternoon sessions were educations in beer and food pairings, beef and wine pairings, cooking veal and, my favorite, pairing Wisconsin blue cheese and port. Sponsored by the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board, Sara Hill led us through a tasting of five different blue cheeses paired with two ports. She directed us to take sips of port, tastes of the cheese, and augment those with dried fruit or chocolate. Very shortly I perceived a great big umami party going on in my mouth.

Sara Hill Guided the Tasting

Sara Hill Guided the Tasting

Plate of Umami, With Port

Plate of Umami, With Port

Who knew there were so many kinds of blue cheese made in Wisconsin, and that they were so good?

Then there was the oyster-shucking contest. A chef from Johnson and Wales University won. The trophy? A gold-plated oyster mounted in a box, and bragging rights.

The Shucking Contest

The Shucking Contest

There was a reception where those oysters, provided by the True Chesapeake Oyster Company, an oyster farm in Maryland, were enjoyed by all. Oh, there was other food, as well. Chefs do generally like to eat!

There was another day of program to the conference (as well as workshops the day before, and a chef’s Knowledge Bowl competition, and awards galas), but we only managed the trip on Monday. We did get the flavor of the event, though (no, I couldn’t resist the pun). For professional chefs and students, attendance at Chef Connect would be an excellent way to advance one’s career.

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Whisky Live DC Coming on March 7

DC’s premier tasting event, featuring the finest scotches, bourbons and whiskies from around the world, will take place this Saturday, March 7 at the Grand Hyatt Washington. It will include a full dinner buffet, master classes, music and chocolate pairings. You can get a 15% discount off the ticket price of $129 when you use the code WLDRAM. A discount deal with Uber is also in the works. For more details, and to buy tickets, visit http://www.whiskylivena.com/. The Facebook page is Whisky Live USA.

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