Puffballs and Shaggy Manes

This fall’s mushroom foraging was a little sparse, but that was probably because we had to leave for Santa Fe in the middle of it.   I only found one patch of shaggy manes.  They were delicious as usual, but the real prize of the season was a puffball.

Raw Shaggy Manes

Raw Shaggy Manes

 It wasn’t me who found it, but my fellow forager, Lee.  He doesn’t like the texture of puffballs, so I was delighted to take it off his hands!

 I’ve only had one other puffball before.  That one actually appeared in my back yard years ago, and I’ve been waiting in vain for another ever since.  I sliced up and sautéed this season’s bounty in butter, and it was as good as I’d remembered.

Whole Puffball, With Quarter For Scale

Whole Puffball, With Quarter For Scale

R. Crumb said, “Never eat anything  bigger than your head,” but this mushroom was just slightly smaller, so I had no qualms.  Still, it was big enough to last for two meals.

Sliced - Beautifully White Inside

Sliced – Beautifully White Inside

Do I need to mention that no one should eat any mushroom that hasn’t been positively identified?  I stick to the species that are fairly common and don’t have any “evil twins,” but I still don’t eat any that are in the least bit iffy.  Nor should you!

Cooking The Puffball

Cooking The Puffball

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The Trip Different: A Week In Santa Fe, Part 1: FUZE SW Conference, Saturday

I went to Santa Fe in November for a non-food-related committee meeting, but expecting to fully appreciate the unique cuisine of northern New Mexico.  Indeed, I had the good fortune to be invited to attend FUZE SW 2013, the first food and folklore festival in New Mexico, organized around the exhibit “New World Cuisine: The Histories of Chocolate, Mate Y Mas.”

Held in the Museum of International Folk Art on November 8-10, the conference saw an ingathering of cooks, farmers, historians, scientists, folklorists, poets, and artists (not always exclusive categories) – all focused on the influences that led to the development of the cuisine we enjoy today.  A wonderful weekend!  Lots of talking about food, and, of course, lots of eating.  Although I missed the opening reception Friday evening, there was still plenty of conference to appreciate.

Saturday started off with breakfast burritos.  There were four varieties, several with the famous green chile there would be a whole lot more of during my stay.

Breakfast Burritos, Red and Green

Breakfast Burritos, Red and Green

The burritos were catered by Posa’s El Merendero Restaurant, locally famous and rightly so.  It was my first confrontation with the Official New Mexico State Question (“red or green?”)  My companion and I split the two we selected, one with red chile and one with green, thus avoiding a premature decision.  They were both delicious.  (The Official Answer will be discussed later in this report.)

 The opening keynote was delivered by Maricel Presilla, a historian specializing in medieval Spanish history and James Beard award-winning author of Gran Cocina Latina: The Food of Latin America.  She had just returned from a chocolate conference in Europe, so could report on the extraordinary quality of microbatch chocolate from guess where?  “We in the New World are doing better work than in Europe!”

Maricel Presilla's Keynote

Maricel Presilla’s Keynote

After a coffee and art break with poetry readings, a session of lightning (FAST Food) talks covering the history and farming of chiles and the tradition of matanza (pig slaughter parties) in northern New Mexico, the mid-day keynote was presented by Gustavo Arellano, author of the blog ¡Ask A Mexican!   in which answers are amusingly supplied to clueless questions, and recently of Taco USA, the story of his quest to explore the origins and current state of tacos in America.  Take another look at the first picture in this article (click on it to enlarge the image).  He’s the cover story on the Santa Fe Reporter, the free local arts paper, portrayed as the Patron Saint of Tacos.

Gustavo Arellano, Also Keynote

Gustavo Arellano, Also Keynote

At the question and answer session after his talk, someone actually asked the Question: “Red or green?”  And yes, he know the Official Answer: “Christmas!”

His talk made us all want to buy his book, but a miscommunication with his publisher had rendered them unavailable.  We consoled ourselves with an excellent lunch catered by the Museum Hill Cafe from their special menu celebrating the New World Cuisine exhibit.  Corn custard, Jalisco sopes (polenta with bean sauce), nopal (cactus) salad, chicken with mole sauce, and chocolate tart.

Lunch Line

Lunch Line

Lunch Plate With Menu

Lunch Plate With Menu

After lunch we were treated to a guided tour of the exhibit given by the curator.  In a weekend full of highlights, this was one of the best!  Nicolasa Chavez, in addition to being a curator at the museum, is a student and practitioner of tango and flamenco dance.  I had to concentrate mightily on her words, to avoid being distracted by her graceful gestures, as she described how the exhibit traced the path of ingredients and cooking methods from Old World to New and vice versa.

The exhibit is not to be missed.  Any foodie traveling to Santa Fe before it closes on April 13, 2014, should plan a trip to Museum Hill.  You won’t be disappointed!

Nicolasa Chavez, Almost Not Moving

Nicolasa Chavez, Almost Not Moving

Three kitchens and a parlor full of artifacts, as well as vitrines and wall displays tell the story of ingredient migration and adaptation.  A table of recipe cards for taking and blank cards for contributions invites interaction with museum visitors – and it’s on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewWorldCuisine

One Of The Kitchens In The Exhibit

One Of The Kitchens In The Exhibit

After lunch, there were more panel sessions, and more food (!): a paella tasting break.  James Caruso, a chef and author, made a paella with just about everything: sausage, chicken, mussels, shrimp.  Delicious.

 Then another panel, and yet more food.  “Cooking Culture” focused on empanalitas: small, stuffed savory pastries made at holidays by all the women in the family together.  Each family has its own filling recipe, usually containing raisins, brandy, and pinones.  Afterward, there was a tasting of empanalitas and pork belly tacos.

Serving The Paella

Serving The Paella

Then, just in case we hadn’t eaten enough during the day, there was a tasting hosted by the Santa Fe Culinary Academy with drinks from the local Santa Fe Spirits distillery.

We staggered out (not drunk, you understand, but sated), looking forward to returning on Sunday.  Stay tuned for Part 2: FUZE SW Sunday.

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A Fowl Theme For This Weekend

It was a fun weekend for foodies!  It’s bazaar season again, and one of my sheros was in town.  Two of the best bazaars were held yesterday.

I found an addition to my tea towel collection at one.  This towel is a two-fer: a souvenir of a place I have visited but did not buy a towel in, and a recipe for Sacher Torte, which I ate while there – at the Hotel Sacher no less.  I could hardly call myself a foodie if I had missed the opportunity to try it at the source!

Torte Tea Towel

Torte Tea Towel

We went to the Christian Academy‘s bazaar, to get our yearly allotment of olliebolen and banket.  The students were all wearing felt antlers, but my attention was captured by Kristin Sprigg in her turkey hat. 

Kristin In Her Turkey Hat

Kristin In Her Turkey Hat

Now, I’ve seen several chicken hats, and I’ve seen a turkey hat before, but those were all birds with all their feathers intact.  This is the first cooked turkey hat I’ve ever encountered!  Kristin had a great sense of humor about it (well, she’d have to, wouldn’t she?)  Turns out she works at the Germantown Wegmans, so we found an instant bond.

We also stopped by the Lutheran Church of St. Andrew, where this espresso set was on offer.  Each cup has a different facial expression on the outside, and verbal expression on the inside.  Expresso espressions, or something. 

Espresso expressions? Expresso Espressions?

Espresso expressions? Expresso Espressions?

I found  a tablecloth that had been made by sewing tea towels together.  Most of them were the kind with calendars printed on them.  You have to admire this example of re-purposing – you can’t just throw out a tea towel like last year’s paper calendar, after all.  After a while your drawers are full.

On Sunday, we got up early and went down to the DuPont Circle Freshfarm Market, where Alice Waters was signing her latest cookbook, The Art of Simple Food II.   She was a little later than announced, and I imagine the delay might have been caused by the need to borrow warm clothes!  Even with the bright sunshine, the temperature hovered around freezing and the wind gusts were fierce.  Her fans were not discouraged.  She gamely signed books for a long line of folks.

Alice Waters Signing Her Latest Book

Alice Waters Signing Her Latest Book

Colin King, the chef from Oyamel (one of Jose Andres’ restaurants) was there, not with a demo per se, but handing out hot pumpkin soup and assembling tacos from the meat of a suckling pig.  Just the thing for warming up on a frigid day.  His folk-art props included a chicken.

Yes, The Fowl Theme Again!

Yes, The Fowl Theme Again!

 We headed home with a stop at Trader Joe’s, and wouldn’t you know it, Kelly completed our fowl weekend with his turkey hat, this one with feathers and a silly expression.  Kelly was having a great time with it, too.

Handing Out Tacos Over The Pig

Handing Out Tacos Over The Pig

Kelly and Turkey

Kelly And His Turkey Hat, With Coworker

Have a great Thanksgiving!  I will be having turkey, though I don’t expect to be wearing it on my head!

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Pati Jinich Stars at the Last Seasonal Farmers Market

It was chilly, sunny and windy at the Olney Farmers and Artists Market last Sunday.  Some of the artist vendors had to take their tents down because of the wind, but in between gusts, the sun shone down.  Between the brilliant blue sky and the red-brown oaks, our last Market day of the fall was beautiful!

There was a lot going on.  In addition to the usual vendors, we had a visit from the Washington Animal Rescue League and some very adoptable dogs.

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Take Me Home!

The Pat O’Brien Band kept it lively with an infectious beat.  Several couples were inspired to dance.

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Dancing – Band View

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Dancing – Market View

Wandering among the artists, I noticed that both our glassblower Ryan Eicher and the Terrapin Pottery had turtles on offer.

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It’s Turtles All The Way Down

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Is it a thing?  Or a theme?

Pati Jinich,  host of the public television series Pati’s Mexican Table, cooking teacher, food writer and chef of the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., was a wonderful guest chef for our final demo.  She prepared Triple Orange Mexican Wedding Cookies while regaling us with the history of the cookies as well as her own experience with them.  Originating in the Middle East, the cookies migrated to Spain with the Moors and then landed in Mexico with the Conquistadors.

Despite growing up in Mexico City and attending many weddings (including her own), she had never heard of “Mexican wedding cookies” until she moved north of the border – where she got numerous requests for them.  She realized that these mysterious cookies were really an everyday affair in Mexico, sold in every bakery, called “Polvorones.”

The recipe for them can be found in her cookbook, Pati’s Mexican Table: The Secrets of Mexican Home Cooking.

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Orange Peel Goes In The Cookies

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Kneading The Dough – Not Too Much!

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The Audience Watches Closely

Rosario from Canela Bakery watched Pati’s demo and then introduced herself.  They got on like old compadras!  (In Spanish!)  But I do know Pati signed a book for her. She sold some others as well.

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Rosario and Pati

Turid Knutsen let me take a picture of her sweatshirt.  She is one of the “regulars” in the chef demo audience.  She received the sweatshirt when she retired from NIH.  How cute is it?

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Mouse-roscope of NIH

 We finished up the 2013 Market season with the traditional rendition of “Country Roads” by the volunteers.

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Y’all Sing!

The Holiday Market will be held December 8 at the Old Hospital Grounds, and then the indoor Winter Market season will start on January 12 at the Sandy Spring Museum.  Don’t be a stranger!

 

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It’s a Rough Job, But Somebody’s Got To Do It!

I was asked to keep this under wraps for a while, but now it can be told: I was a judge for Tulkoff’s Seasonal Spotlight Recipe Challenge.

Readers of the Olney Farmers and Artists Market blog will remember that Linda Anselmi, the company chef for Tulkoff Food Products, gave a chef demo at the Market a few months ago.  She was accompanied by Tulkoff’s Food Service Sales Director, Karen Suter.  Karen contacted me and asked if I would be a judge for their contest, which is open to their customers and encourages creative use of their products.  It took me about a microsecond to accept.

Chef Linda

Chef Linda

We found the Tulkoff factory with a little difficulty.  It’s in the Dundalk neighborhood of Baltimore.  That’s the working port, not the touristy Inner Harbor, but a neighborhood all the same. There are people who have lived there for generations – blocks of houses built right up to factories, railroad lines, truck routes, and shipping docks.

Tulkoff Factory With Houses In Foreground

Tulkoff Factory With Houses In Foreground

There’s a spotlessly clean, bright, airy factory full of giant mixers, bottling lines, and storage areas fronted with a set of offices and a beautiful kitchen complete with tasting bar.  Unfortunately, before our tour of the factory area we were cautioned that pictures were not allowed, so, dear reader, you will just have to use your imagination as I report that one room held two million pounds of stacked horseradish roots!

Yes, it seems that horseradish loses potency quickly when ground, so Tulkoff stores it in root form and grinds in small batches.  Bottled horseradish is one of their retail products; they make many other sauces and seasonings for the hospitality and restaurant trade.

One of these was the subject of the contest: Chipotle Chili Aioli is a piquant mayonnaise-like sauce which can be used to add a little character to many dishes – as we found out!  There were ten entries, ranging from Grilled Vegetable Pizza to Chipotle Hawaiian Wings.

The Kitchen With Sampling Bar

The Kitchen With Sampling Bar

We gathered in the kitchen to taste each one.  Spike Gjerde of Woodberry Kitchen, Chef Linda, Jill Schnoeller of Victoria Gastropub, Karen Suter and I worked our way through a sample of each entry, ably prepared and served by Tulkoff’s staff.  Most of the dishes were good, although some were too fussy or obvious.  It was hard to single out the best from the top three or four, but I did my duty and marked my ballot.

Score Sheets and a Food Sample

Score Sheets and a Food Sample

 

The winner was Steve Shirley from Paramount Marketing Group, Carolinas for his Chipotle Pulled Pork Sandwich. The recipe is here: http://www.tulkoff.com/recipes/details/chipotle-pulled-pork-sandwich/

 

Thanks go to the Tulkoff’s employees who cooked and served us: Ruth Bohls, Erin Smiley, Danielle Hauserman, Angela Guss, and Renee Frantzen.  They were great!

 

Order Up!

Order Up!

And to top off the experience, Phil Tulkoff, namesake, scion, and owner of the business, joined us for a group picture.  Look closely and you will see the award bestowed upon the winner: The Golden Spoon of Deliciousness!

Phil Tulkoff and the Judges: Chef Linda, Chef Spike, The Spoon, Me, Chef Jill

Phil Tulkoff and the Judges: Chef Linda, Chef Spike, The Spoon, Me, Chef Jill

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Feast on Ice and Fire: Eat the Game of Thrones

The Game of Thrones has a tie-in cookbook, and I have reviewed it for SFRevu.  See http://sfrevu.com/php/Review-id.php?id=14929

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Green and National Book Festivals This Weekend

I’m about to go down to the Convention Center for a press preview of the Ninth Annual Green Festival, which will be held this weekend. It will have an expanded variety of food programming, demonstrations and displays.

Joe Yonan will do a workshop based on his newly released book Eat Your Vegetables September 22 at 1 PM. DC vegan baker and two-time winner of the Food Network’s “Cupcake Wars,” Doron Petersan will also share recipes to make her vegan creations at 3 PM.  Both have been guest chefs at the Olney Farmers and Artists Market, so expect good things from them!

 The event also features an Organic Food Court and a Sustainable Beer & Wine Garden.  There are also dozens of booths, demos and displays on the show floor itself that can be explored through the event’s website: www.greenfestivals.org.

I will be dividing my time this weekend among this event, the National Book Festival, and the farmers market.  I intend to rest on Monday!

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Another Area Wegman’s Opens This Sunday

The new Wegman’s store will open in Germantown on Sunday!  I met Jo Natale and Cynthia Glover, the PR folks in charge, for a guided tour.  They were just as gracious as when they showed me around the Columbia store, and this Wegman’s promises to be just as fabulous as that one.

Opening Sign

Opening Sign

We pulled into the covered parking, and noticed that the aisles are marked with vegetable signs like those in Columbia.  I got an arty shot of a reflection.

Rearview Eggplant

Rear View Eggplant

I asked Jo and Cynthia if there are any differences between the two stores.  One big one is that this store is all on one level; the seating which Columbia has on the mezzanine is on one side of the main floor.  This allows the new store to have a large patio with a pergola for outside dining.  Altogether, this store will have seating for 200.

Sphere and Kids Corner

Sphere and Kids Corner

While we talked, there was suddenly a loud crowing noise from overhead.  Above the gleaming counters and prep areas of the new store, there is a mural with a model of a barn; the barn doors had opened, and a wooden rooster was crowing to mark the hour.  This clock is a replica of the barn at Wegman’s organic farm in New York – a symbol, to remember the source of the produce on offer in the store.

View of Wegman's From Front Door

View of Wegman’s From Front Door

We walked through the store, noting the stocking and training activities going on.  The sushi department was huddled around a sushi master, down the counter from a group which included Executive Chef Kevin Grenzig.  He told me that the prepared foods section will feature Italian specialties for the grand opening.

 Rooster Crowing

Floor With Barn

Barn Overhead!

That won’t mean other kinds of food will be slighted, however.  Wegman’s usual array of choices will be present in all their wonderful variety.  The store manager, Phil Quattrini, described a daily special bar featuring rotating regional offerings, such as crab cakes.

 The cheerful bustle of preparation for opening day was all around us.  From the seafood, to the housewares, to the food bars, to the sign guy, everyone was getting ready for the show.

Sign Guy Mike

Sign Guy Mike

Sushi Trainees and Tocques

Sushi Trainees and Toques

The ethnic diversity of Germantown was reflected in the local people hired as staff.  Maybe they will influence the selection of prepared food and groceries?  One thing they have already installed is a kosher deli.  And – another difference from Columbia, and only the third one in the chain – an affinage case.  This is a specially-designed place to hold unwrapped (“naked:” I swear this is the term of art) ripened cheese at perfect temperature and humidity until it is sold.

Chef Kevin

Chef Kevin

Store Manager Phil

Store Manager Phil

Jo showed me the meat aging case, then mentioned that somehow Wegman’s has acquired a reputation for being expensive!  But there’s a selection of merchandise at differing price points.  Many of their staples are sold at prices 10-15 % lower than average supermarkets, on a par with club stores.  I speculated that the sheer abundance and diversity of merchandise in the store might contribute to the impression of priceyness.

Pricey Meat Dry Aging

Pricey Meat Dry Aging

We Steam

We Steam

We walked towards the front, passing the fruit and vegetable cutting stations (cut to order on request, while you wait), the organic salad bar (the first in the Maryland stores), the pizza with the hand-stretched crust, the bakery (everything baked from scratch in the store), the bulk-food section (still there, when other stores have eliminated theirs as a passing fad), and other features too numerous to mention.

Low Meat Prices

Low Meat Prices

Cheese Affinage Case

Cheese Affinage Case

Balloons

Balloons

And just as we concluded the tour and were about to leave, a trolley full of food samples appeared before us and we were encouraged to try it all.  It was the result of a morning’s training session run by representatives of Melissa’s World Variety Produce, Dave Blaich and Frank Afleck.  They were spending a week showing the store employees what could be done with the exotic produce which will be for sale, so that the Wegman’s employees can pass ideas along to the customers.

There was watermelon, edamame, and feta salad; roast kaboucha squash; chocolate brownies with pomegranate arils; young coconuts drilled for their water; dragon fruit and mango salad; a dip made with Hatch chilies and Greek yoghurt; fingerling potatoes with truffle oil; a kimchi grilled cheese sandwich; and a new variety of green, seedless grapes called “cotton candy,” so sweet that they bore the same resemblance to ordinary grapes that super-sweet corn bears to field corn.

Dave and Eaters

Dave and Eaters

Melissa's Food

Melissa’s Food

It was all good – a terrific way to end the tour! 

Frank and Eaters

The Employees Are Happy To Eat Exotic Foods

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Metropolitan Cooking and Entertaining Show 2012, Part 2: Some Selected Products and Exhibitors

The show floor was filled with many and varied exhibitors.  Here are just a few of them, chosen purely by whim.  Three impressed me as earnest entrepreneurs, and one just had a really cool visual.

South Mountain's Tony and Gabriel Brusco

South Mountain’s Tony and Gabriel Brusco

South Mountain Veggies is a delivery service which aggregates the products of over 150 farms and small producers and delivers weekly, directly to area households. It’s sort of a farmer’s market without the market; a consolidated CSA of many producers.  A great idea for those who want to eat healthfully and locally, but don’t have the time or inclination to do their own shopping.

Floury Apron's Fadia House

Floury Apron’s Fadia House

Crackers flavored with exotic spices were the attraction at the Floury Apron booth.  Fadia House started her business to escape from her “empty nest.”  Her Lebanese background provided the recipes for Zaatar crackers; India inspired those flavored with Ajwan.  She also had a spicy tomato sauce open for tasting.

Only Two of the Three Little Pigs: Daniel and Carolina

Only Two of the Three Little Pigs: Daniel and Carolina

And a very local business, Three Little Pigs, is selling charcuterie and salumi from a storefront in DC’s Petworth neighborhood.  They also sell at several area farmers markets.  They were sampling salami, duck prosciutto, and smoked salmon – just a few of the goodies available for sale.  They offer daily sandwiches and soups made with their cured meats at the store.  I wish it was closer to my house!

And the cool visual belonged to the folks from Avocados from Mexico, who drove a big panel truck onto the floor and dispersed tasty samples from its hatch.

Avocado Truck

Avocado Truck

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Metropolitan Cooking and Entertaining Show 2012, Part 1: The Father-Daughter Act and Other Chefs

When Jacques Pepin had to cancel his appearance at this show in 2011, I was disappointed.  In my opinion, he is one of the more influential chefs of the last few decades, both for his partnership with Julia Child and his own elegant, restrained take on classical French food.

So I was glad to see him and his daughter, Claudine, at the MetroCooking Show last November at the Washington Convention Center.  They did not disappoint, both cooperating on the cooking of a many-course meal.  Jacques started on the chicken in vinegar and polenta with vegetables and mushrooms, while Claudine contributed most of the patter and audience interaction.

Jacques and Claudine Cook

Jacques and Claudine Cook

They has a stage set up in an enormous room, with a screen showing them and the cooking action so everyone could see.  Fortunately, the show runners allowed the press to move closer to the stage to take pictures.

Jacques and Claudine Closer

Jacques and Claudine Closer

One lucky little girl, Payton, got to assist them.

Payton, Too

Payton, Too

While Jacques cooked, Claudine took questions from the audience.  What is their opinion of the new crop of chefs? “We love them all!”  What was Jacques’ inspiration for cooking?  “I’m always hungry!”  What is Jacques’ favorite thing to eat?  “Free food!”

They finished the chicken and went on to  potato and turnip puree.  Jacques was asked if  his family has cooking in its background? “There were seven restaurants in  my family, all run by women.”  How did you and Julia work out the process for your collaborative cooking show?  The producers wanted them to cook for a certain amount of time for every show, but he and Julia told them, “We are going to cook, and when it’s finished, we’ll tell you!”

Jacques also cooked Eggs Jeanette, a devilled egg dish named for his mother.  The recipe is available here.  They finished up with dessert: fritters in beer batter.  After the show, some folks milled around.  Jacques left the hall (understandably tired by all the cooking), but Claudine stayed to talk, pose for pictures, thank the culinary students who had helped with the prep work, and sign jackets.

Claudine Signing Jacket

Claudine Signing Jacket

While the Pepins were the highlight of the show for me, they were far from the only chefs there.  I missed the other high-powered stars at the Celebrity Theater, but I did manage to catch some of the other demos at the smaller stage on the show floor.  They represented quite a variety of cooking styles and cuisines.

There were Bonnie Benwick and Tim Carmen of the Washington Post food section, cooking breakfast pupusas Americanas, a recipe from the new Washington Post Cookbook (reviewed here.)

Bonnie Benwick and Tim Carman Cook

Bonnie Benwick and Tim Carman Cook

Scott Drewno from the Source cooked dan-dan noodles with marinated pork belly.  He showed off a really impressive knife he bought in Singapore.  Tim liked it, too.

Tim Admires Scott's Knife

Tim Admires Scott’s Knife

Francois Dionot of L’Academie de Cuisine demonstrated two dishes: garlic flan with eggplant soup, and panko-crusted salmon with mirepoix.  When asked, what makes a dish taste good? he replied, “A balance of sweet, sour, bitter and salt tastes.” A universal principle, in my opinion.

Francois Dionot

Francois Dionot

Next: The Met show’s products and exhibitors.

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