Archive for May, 2011

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APPLETON — To say Miranda Peyketewa is a busy college student would be an understatement.

The 27-year-old alumnus of Lincoln High School in Wisconsin Rapids holds three jobs while seeking two associate degrees and two certificates in culinary arts at Fox Valley Technical College in Appleton.

And she’s hungry for more.

Peyketewa, who grew up in a family of five brothers and seven sisters, recently was rewarded for her hard work, taking first place honors in the cold plate competition during the Wisconsin Restaurant Association Expo in Milwaukee.

Entries in the category actually start out as hot dishes but are then covered with an aspic, or gelatin, and served cold. Peyketewa’s award-winning dish had multiple layers.

“The requirements were to use ground veal and beef tri-tip, so I pan-smoked the beef, coated it with a spicy chocolate rub, and then used the ground veal for a chocolate cabernet (wine) sauce with it,” Peyketewa said.

Peyketewa, who graduated from Lincoln in 2002, got the idea to use chocolate in a savory dish while attending a Red Cross fundraising event in Menasha a few years ago.

“There they made prime rib and put chocolate in a (spice) rub,” Peyketewa said. “I thought it was really good because it was surprising; chocolate has so many complicated flavors, but I would’ve never thought to do that before I came here.”

Peyketewa, who enrolled at Fox Valley Tech in 2008 and plans to graduate in December, also helps serve or prepare food at the campus cafeteria, at a nearby Olive Garden and through an internship at Bella Vita, an Italian restaurant in Appleton.

The award-winning chef first made her mark in baking, said her twin sister, Sabrina.

“She always did a lot of baked goods, like cookies and cakes,” Sabrina said. “People would pay her to bake for their potlucks, and we really liked her coffee triple chocolate cookies.”

Peyketewa loves to cook, but her long-term culinary future could be on the management side of the industry because she has carpal tunnel syndrome, which can cause numbing or weakness of muscles, in both wrists.

MAZATLAN, MEXICO–(Marketwire – May 30, 2011) - The Flavors and Aromas of Mexico Culinary Tour will arrive in Mazatlan on June 3rd. The tour explores Mexican culture and history through food, and on this occasion, it will feature the Pacific Coast and Sierra Madre regions of the country. Acclaimed Chef Patricia Quintana- founder of Mexico’s first culinary institute and Executive Chef for the Mexico Tourism Board- will reveal the significance of traditional delicacies in Mexico’s colonial city on the beach and surrounding towns.

The objective of the culinary tour is to promote the virtues of Mexican food in all its variations. “There is no better person to guide a culinary tour of Mazatlan than Chef Patricia Quintana,” noted Julio Birrueta, spokesperson for the Mazatlan Tourism Trust. “She has dedicated her career to teaching the sophistication of Mexico’s 32 distinct cooking styles; and in June she will share our cuisine with the world.”

In celebration of Mazatlan’s roots as a fishing village, the day will begin at the famous “Changueras” – a strip of vendors selling freshly caught shrimp. Afterward the group will visit the traditional fishing corridor on Stone Island before traveling to El Quelite for breakfast. El Quelite is a nearby colonial town known for providing an amazing culinary experience. Restaurants serve locally grown food prepared with techniques that are hundreds of years old. The meal will be put into historic perspective during a cultural exhibition of music, pre-Hispanic dance and an Ulama performance. Ulama is an indigenous ball game that has been kept alive by the region’s communities. El Quelite is the only place in Mexico where the game is still frequently exhibited.

Upon returning to Mazatlan, the tour will continue through seafood restaurants, Marina Mazatlan and the historic center of town. In a recent first-time visit to Mazatlan, travel journalist Anita Draycott expressed her delight with local cuisine. “We’ve had some wonderful food…they know how to make shrimp and fish in so many wonderful ways, from Ceviche to Zarandeado… it is fantastic,” She said. This unique event will uncover secrets of the flavorful meals that enchant Mazatlan’s visitors time and again.

About Mazatlan:

Mazatlan is located on Mexico’s Pacific Coast at the foot of the Sierra Madre Mountains. Founded in the 16th Century, Mazatlan is Mexico’s colonial city on the beach. The city is divided into two main areas: Old Mazatlan and Zona Dorada or Golden Zone, with a seven-mile coastal road between the two. www.gomazatlan.com.

The program will be completed later this year when Chef George Kaslow, associate professor at the John Folse Culinary Institute, will visit eastern China.

The 15-day program, sponsored by the Southern United States Trade Association and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, kicked off May 15.

The training series features culinary demonstrations, lectures and field trips designed to expose the visiting chefs to the traditions of Louisianan, Southern Soul, Latin American, Native American and Appalachian cuisines, as well as Cajun culture.

Kaslow said the objective of the annual exchange program is to encourage the visiting chefs to introduce featured American dishes to China’s culinary markets.

In September, Kaslow will travel to China, where for 15 days he will conduct demonstrations at trade shows and universities, furthering the overseas exposure of American culinary traditions.

“I am delighted that this program has been so successful,” Kaslow said. “The economic and cultural benefits are enormous. The fact that the program has continued for 11 years shows what a good job we at Nicholls have been able to do. Other schools have tried to replace us in this effort, but they have always failed.”

In the program’s previous years, Nicholls has welcomed chefs from India, Russia, Hungary, Mexico, Thailand, Canada, Croatia, Taiwan and several Latin American countries.

b654e Wendy Roscoe Clive e1306517098993 The culinary couple behind Berkeleys Corso and Rivoli

Roscoe Skipper, Wendy Brucker and Clive the dog, of Rivoli and Corso. Photo: Clay McLachlan

This is a story about a little neighborhood restaurant opened in 1994 — a shared vision between two partners in work and life, who built an acclaimed destination dining space serving up fresh, homey food with complex flavors and nods to Italian, French, and Californian cuisine.

And it’s the story of how this culinary couple followed the success of their first eatery by opening an authentic Tuscan trattoria nearby three years ago. That place proved popular with critics and customers too.

This is also the story of the enduring power of friendship and love. Friendship, respect, trust, admiration, and love in the face of the demise of a long-term marriage, where two people who see the essential good in each other decide it’s a bad idea to stay together. And so they go their separate ways personally but manage, despite the initial challenges of seeing the ex every single day, to keep working together as partners in a labor of love.

Six years post-separation, and chef Wendy Brucker and general manager Roscoe Skipper, who run the restaurants Rivoli and Corso, are the proverbial poster pair for people whose commitment to each other remains solid in the face of the end of their marriage. Some regulars don’t even know the two aren’t an item anymore; while it’s no secret, it’s not like the restaurateurs go out of their way to tell diners.

The couple met in the early days of their careers, when she was a line cook at Square One in San Francisco and he worked as a waiter. This year, both their restaurants made San Francisco Chronicle food critic Michael Bauer’s Top 100 list. (The third year in a row for Corso Trattoria, where chef Rodrigo da Silva runs the day-to-day operations. Rivoli’s been a regular on the list since 1996).

At a table overlooking the lush garden at Rivoli, Brucker, 52, who grew up in Berkeley and lives, with her boyfriend, in the home she and Skipper still own together near the restaurant, talked about working with the man she calls her best friend. Not to be outdone, Skipper, 53, who lives in Oakland, quoted poet Thomas Gunn to describe his feelings for Brucker.

How do you do it?

Skipper: We need each other. I couldn’t do what I do here without Wendy, she feels the same way, and we wouldn’t want to keep doing this without the other.

Brucker: He’s the biggest fan of what I do with food and he’s the best general manager I’ve ever worked with. I don’t want to work with anyone else. And I still laugh at his jokes.

b654e 04 360x265 The culinary couple behind Berkeleys Corso and Rivoli

Corso offers rustic, simple, Tuscan-style food. Photo: Courtesy Corso.

How would you describe your restaurants?

Skipper: Rivoli is not a concept restaurant, it’s an expression of who we are. I think of it as Gary Danko on a budget. Anyone who has been to Italy knows there is no such thing as Italian food, it’s regional cuisine, and that’s what we’re doing with Corso, bringing a Florentine eating experience to Berkeley.

Brucker: Of course I want people to enjoy our food and service but I also want them leaving our restaurants feeling better than when they came in. The world out there is often hard, we strive to provide a soft shoulder.

Does the Chronicle‘s Top 100 List carry the same weight in the age of Yelp and citizen food reviews?

Skipper: It used to be you’d see an uptick in diners after the list came out, that doesn’t happen any more. But Michael Bauer’s opinion of what a quality restaurant is still matters.

b654e rivoli.clay .mclachlan 360x240 The culinary couple behind Berkeleys Corso and Rivoli

The dining room at Rivoli. Photo: Clay McLachlan

What have you learned from experience that might be instructive for a new generation of restauranteurs?

Brucker: There’s something to be said for just putting in the work. We did it the hard way: our own money, long hours, and a commitment to quality, integrity and just serving up really good food, which is why we’ve lasted as long as we have. I also worked for others and learned from others for about 15 years. That’s important. There’s a lot of technique that goes onto the plate at Rivoli and Corso, even stuff I learned at culinary school comes back to me.

What’s missing in the Berkeley dining scene?

Skipper: Anchor businesses like Pixar that can support high-end restaurants like ours. In San Francisco, people are spending other people’s money; when they go out for a meal they’re often on an expense account. In Berkeley, people are paying out of their own pocket.

Where do you like to eat out around town?

Brucker: I don’t eat out much. I do like the fried chicken and burgers at 900 Grayson. It’s simple food but it’s good quality and well done.

Skipper: I eat out a lot, mostly in San Francisco and Oakland. I like Great China in downtown Berkeley. The Peking duck is good, the Chinese banquet is something; there’s a reason there’s a line out the door.

What’s next?

Skipper: A French restaurant.

Brucker: A vacation in France.  You know what I’d love to do? I’d love to open a tiny place, maybe eight tables, I’d cook and Roscoe would work the floor and it would just be us, like it was 30 years ago, without all the frou-frou stuff. There aren’t many people our age still doing the work, like breaking down chickens and cleaning out the walk-in. But we are, and we’ll probably do this for 10-15 more years, if our bodies allow us. It’s what we do.

Sarah Henry is the voice behind Lettuce Eat Kale. You can follow her on Twitter and become a fan of Lettuce Eat Kale on Facebook.

Related:
Ippuku enters Top 100, 5 Berkeley names make cut [04.04.11]
Five Berkeley Restaurants Make Top 100 [05.04.10]
Bauer speaks: Rivoli thrives [21/01/10]

Living Light Culinary Institute launches the “5 in 5″ Hot Raw Chef Video Recipe contest June 1st. Contestants are invited to submit recipes containing five 100% vegan (90% raw) ingredients, prepared on camera in 5 minutes or less. Submissions deadline is Midnight Pacific Time June 30, 2011. A total of $2150 in prizes will be awarded. Contest details and sample 5 in 5 recipe demo with Cherie Soria at HotRawChef

Mendocino Coast, CA (PRWEB) May 26, 2011

Living Light Culinary Institute, a gourmet raw food school in Northern California, launches the “5 in 5″ Hot Raw Chef Video Recipe Contest June 1. Recipes for the contest must contain only five 100% vegan ingredients, with a minimum of 90% raw ingredients by weight, and must be prepared in five minutes or less. The $1450 Grand Prize includes a Food Styling for Photography class, taught by Denise Vivaldo, professional food stylist and author of The Food Stylist’s Handbook, and Living Light founder and director Cherie Soria, author of The Raw Food Revolution Diet. Grand Prize winner will also earn a place as one of twelve featured chefs during the Living Light Chef Showcase, Hot Chefs, Cool Kitchen August 26-28. Deadline for submissions is Midnight June 30, 2011 Pacific Time. Runner up receives $450 in prizes, and the People’s Choice Award, valued at $250, goes to the aspiring chef who wins the most votes online. A total of more than $2150 in prizes will be awarded.

The contest is open to both professional and amateur chefs who submit a five minute video demonstrating an original raw vegan recipe. Entries will be evaluated on presentation, teaching style, recipe quality, and adherence to judging criteria. Deadline for submissions is Midnight June 30, 2011 Pacific Time. Visit HotRawChef.com for contest guidelines and details.

“This is our third video recipe contest and the focus is to show the public that making raw food recipes can be fast, easy, and fun,” says Soria, “our goal is to demystify raw food preparation.”

Cherie Soria started Living Light Culinary Institute 14 years ago. She and her staff have inspired students from over 45 countries, teaching them how to make healthy gourmet, mostly gluten free raw vegan foods. The 5 in 5 Hot Raw Chef Video Recipe Contest will highlight step-by-step demos of quick and healthy dishes with a gourmet spin-everything from dairy-free vegan “cheeses” and pates, to appetizers, soups, entrees, breads, crackers, sauces, dips, and desserts.

Living Light International has four eco friendly businesses on the Mendocino coast of Northern California: Living Light Culinary Institute, Living Light Café, Living Light Marketplace, and Living Light Inn. The Living Light Chef Showcase takes place every fourth weekend in August.

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For the original version on PRWeb visit: www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2011/5/prweb8467537.htm

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