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Archive for the ‘cooking tips’ Category

The Art of Olive Oil Tasting

Friday, August 19th, 2011

Cat Cora's Olive Oil photo: M D Hill

Wine and food tasting is one of the many pleasures of the life of a travel writer. Olive oil tasting is an art similar to wine tasting in terms of complexity. The Hill Team has been learning about olive oil tasting in Spain, Florida  and the Temecula Valley of California wine country.

Sampling delicious oils is enjoyable way to appreciate the pleasures of this healthful product. Olive oil tasting is also a unique party idea.

Food network’s Cat Cora presents these easy tasting tips at her olive oil tasting seminar.

Tips

Cat points out  that EVOO, extra virgin olive oil, is superior in terms of quality.
The Cat Cora kitchen uses her own award winning D.O.P. Kalamata EVOO from Greece.
She suggests that we look for these qualities when judging a good oil.
Fruitiness is a sensation of freshly cut olive fruits and leaves when smelling olive oil.
Spiciness is a peppery quality at the back of the throat when olive oil tasting.
A pleasant hit of bitterness is often felt on our tongue when tasting.
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Method:
Place about a half ounce of evoo in a small cup or wine glass.
Slightly heat the glass with your hands, then smell to detect the fruitiness or “freshly mown grass” qualities.
For tasting, dip plain bread in the oil. Try to detect the spiciness in your mouth.
As in wine tasting, other flavors may appear such as almond, artichoke,  asperagus or avacado. We sometimes taste hints of green apple or green tomatoes.
Cat points out an easy test that is new to us, called the hot potato test. Simply boil or bake a potato and pour evoo on top. A good quality oil  will have the  pleasant aromas of fresh olive leaves and grass.
You can use the oil scented potato for a tasty and healthy potato salad. Cat adds chives, parsley, white pepper and sea salt.
We are enjoying our bottle of Cat Cora’s Kitchen Olive Oil.
You can learn more about Cat Cora’s Olive Oil and products at www.catscora.com or www.gaeaus.com or join them on FaceBook at “Cat Cora’s Kitchen” page.

Top Ten Flavor Trends with Menus

Monday, March 21st, 2011

Since Brenda and I both always find watching the flavor trends, it seemed appropriate to share what Flavor Trends itself includes in its list. I’ve referred to this magazine in the past as Flavor and the Menu. The new title is just Flavor Trends. Marketed to the hospitality industry, we both find the chef Panel of Experts exceptional–especially since we know two of them personally, Robin Schempp of Waterbury, VT (Brenda’s daughter) and Steve Schimoler of Cleveland. I met them twenty years ago early in their careers. They have both become quite acclaimed.

Let’s move on to the flavor trends. Please remember the following is a quote.

Top ETHNO-CUISINE Trend
THE NEW URBAN ASIAN

Fusion regains respect in a new wave of “urban” cuisine offering re-imagined Pan-Asian fare in casual settings and appealing to a wider demographic.

Top SANDWICH Trend
GRILLED CHEESE

This nostalgic nosh offers a prime opportunity for chefs to apply culinary flair to the sandwich that America grew up with, making it spot on for today’s cravings for inspired comfort foods.

Top TECHNIQUE Trend
MINDING THE GRIND

Burgers have seen plenty of innovation in add-ons like artisan cheeses and buns, toppings and condiments. But fierce competition within the gourmet-burger category has forced a new focus on the patty itself.

Top INGREDIENT Trend
BEANS IN THE LIMELIGHT

The humble bean is the kind of bed-rock food that makes perfect sense in “recessionista” times. Beans bring great value, nutrition and culinary flexibility to the plate while also accommodating nearly every global cuisine.

Top CULINARY Trend
SIDES TAKE THE LEAD

Inspired by a flavor-discerning and health-conscious public, along with year-round accessibility to top-quality produce, chefs are giving veggies the attention typically reserved for protein.

Top GRAB & GO Trend
SAVORY PASTRIES

Savory pastries meet consumers’ demand for portability, affordability and familiarity and offer global and regional culinary appeal, as nearly every culture has some version of a hand-held carb-and-protein package.

Top SAUCE Trend
THE NEW NIMBLE SAUCE

Aïoli, romesco and pesto are among the transformative base sauces more chefs look to for creating a wider variety of flavor profiles in dips, spreads and toppings that satisfy today’s flavor-savvy customer base.

Top COMEBACK Trend
MID-CENTURY MODERN

Patrons can drink only so many Manhattans and Sidecars before they start waxing nostalgic for angels on horseback, deviled eggs and other snacks and appetizers based on classic canapés of the 1950s and ’60s.

Top DESSERT Trend
ICE CREAM INNOVATIONS

Given the current happy combination of high-quality ingredients, soda-fountain nostalgia and small indulgences, the time is right for ice cream to come to the fore in new forms and grown-up flavors.

Top BEVERAGE Trend
MINDFUL MIXOLOGY

Driven by maturing palates and a less-is-more mentality, drink developers are taking a more mindful, enlightened approach to beverages, offering cleaner, more-refined flavors and lighter, better-for-you ingredients.

Sirha 2011 Sets the Trends and The Tandem Tasters Will Cover It

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

As many of you are aware, Brenda and I, The Tandem Tasters, covered Sirha 2009 which included Bocuse d’Or. Our long time friend, French Master Chef, Herve Laurent, accompanied us. He had been inviting us ever since we co-authored a book with him in 2005. We first met Herve in the late 90′s when he was Master French Chef at Le Cordon Bleu in London. He then moved on to that role at the Bocuse Institute. Finally, in 2009, we took him up on his invitation. We were hooked. We thought once would be enough, but it is just a teaser.

In addition to Bocuse d’Or, it covers so much more. The Sirha trade show that accompanies this event is a food lovers dream and a chef’s utopia. We are going to be sharing with you some of the events that will be taking place in 2011.

Sirha 2011 sets the trends:

A stage set for discoveries, dedicated to all the trends

at the leading edge of the catering sector

The world hotel and catering exhibition 22-26 January 2011 at Eurexpo, Lyon, France

With consumers’ eating habits changing constantly, it is essential for professionals to look for new products and high‐performance equipment and, above all, anticipate the consumption trends of the future. Presenting quality products is no longer enough. Consumers now want to eat appealing, healthy or surprising products. Depending on their mood or the time of day they may want a take‐away meal or a snack, to cook for themselves or simply take time to savour a meal.

To meet consumers’ ever‐changing expectations, keeping a step ahead is hence vital for professionals in all branches of the catering industry – from institutional caterers to gourmet restaurants, fast‐food outlets and hotels. In 2011, Sirha will be a “trends laboratory” inventing the food service of tomorrow.

This is how Marie‐Odile Fondeur, exhibition manager, describes the 15th Sirha: a stage set for discovering trends, dedicated entirely to innovation and catering in all its forms.

Sirha: bringing together all the catering trends!

With an even more extensive and constantly renewed range of products, equipment, technologies and services (more than 2,000 exhibitors in 2011, including more than 570 from outside France, 17 international pavilions and a 9% increase in floor surface, including 25% more for the bread & pastry‐ making sector), Sirha will offer a complete overview of the catering, hotel and food world.

Demonstrations, events, contests, round‐table sessions, forums to exchange ideas & know‐how: we pull out all the stops during the five‐day show to fire up and inspire creativity, provoke thought and generate business opportunities in a friendly, relaxed atmosphere.

An astonishing programme dedicated to innovation

With each successive show, Sirha has built up a network of renowned chefs, visionary designers and leading industrial R&D players who are all exploring various paths to innovation. These paths converge at Sirha, and the programme for the 2011 show is specially designed with this in mind.

Sirha sets the food service trends for the next 4 years, in collaboration with Loeb innovation Sirha and Loeb Innovation have undertaken an in‐depth study of the consequences of the profound changes occurring in consumers’ eating habits. This analysis by market sector incorporates all the elements of the “marketing mix”: concept, offering, decor, services and price. Obviously, the key themes of this study were organic food, nutrition, health, the pleasure of eating, sustainable development, etc. During the Sirha meetings, taking place on 22 September 2010, the Sirha Trends Book sponsored by a famous chef will be unveiled. An event with a surprise in store that will offer attendees an unexpected sensory experience.

August 2010En K de soif et de faim”, the 2011 version of the Sirha Food Studio The 2011 Sirha Food Studio will round off the programme and reveal some surprising, innovative ideas for foodservice professionals. The five stands, representing a real trends laboratory and grouped together under the name “En K de soif et de faim” (a play on words around “a little something to eat and drink”), will reveal an urban foodservice concept for people on the move, integrating issues such as a balanced diet, well‐being, eating for pleasure and sustainable development. The Food Studio is a forum for talking and experimenting, where visitors will be encouraged to play an active part and explore a new vision of culinary innovation.

Sirha, the finest setting for some exceptional contests

Projected on to big screens, the skills, creativity and know‐how of the chefs and pastry makers competing in these thrilling contests will inspire the spectators. The brand new Paul Bocuse Hall (10,500 m2) will be mostly dedicated to the Chefs Area and also host a completely redesigned contest area, with spectator seating capacity doubled to nearly 1500. More open contest kitchens will also give spectators an enhanced view of the events.

In 2011, the concept for this area will focus on sustainable development, which will also provide the theme for the decor in the Village and the fittings in the contest kitchens.

The “Bocuse d’Or”, the best of international cuisine Tuesday 25 and Wednesday 26 January After an 18‐month worldwide selection process, with 56 national selection competitions and three continental events in Latin America, Asia and Europe, 24 finalists head to Lyon to go head‐to‐head in a unique competition where they will have to create their personal interpretation of a set dish, watched by an enthusiastic audience. Above all, this is a human adventure calling upon the candidates’ personal experience, culinary heritage, technical skills, creativity and ingenuity, reflecting the passion they all share. The next Bocuse d’Or will be staged in the new setting and awarded in the presence of Yannick Alleno, honorary president (three Michelin‐starred chef at the Meurice restaurant, 1999 Silver Bocuse winner), Geir Skeie, president of the international jury (2009 Bocuse d’Or winner), and, of course, the founding president Paul Bocuse.

The World Pastry Cup, the art of all things sweet Sunday 23 and Monday 24 January The 2011 edition of this contest, created and presided over by one of the leading French pastry chefs, Gabriel Paillasson, will have two honorary presidents: Usuke Takahashi and Kazuaki Takai. Over its 20‐year history, the World Pastry Cup has transformed pastry‐making into an art form. Twenty of the best pastry‐ making teams on earth will vie with each other as they strive to lift the coveted trophy. The finalists come from 38 countries, where national selection competitions (continental events in the case of Asia and Latin America) were held over the past two years. It is also a human adventure with passion and creativity at its heart, where teams comprising a pastry chef, a chocolate specialist and an ice‐cream specialist battle to take creativity to new heights.

All segments of the catering trade will find inspiration at Sirha

The Gargantua competition

Institutional catering professionals will also have their special events, a highlight being the crowning of the Best Institutional Catering Chef during the Gargantua competition. An opportunity to see how this segment of the catering trade is changing, along with its prospects and constraints.

A brand new competition: the European Catering Cup

For the first time the Sirha Chefs Area will be the venue for the European Catering Cup, organised at the initiative of the Confédération Nationale des Charcutiers Traiteurs et Traiteurs (CNCT) and the Association pour la Promotion de l’Image de la Charcuterie (ASPIC). Twelve teams from across Europe will take part in this new competition, where they will face the challenge of creating a savoury and sweet buffet for an event on the theme of “the New World”. A highly visual event.

The Gastronomic Creativity Festival

40 creative chefs will battle it out in a friendly gourmet contest showcasing the creativity and technical skills behind French cuisine. “Le Chef” magazine will organise demonstrations interspersed with debates to foster even more dynamic interaction with the audience.

In 2011, baking will be on the rise at Sirha

With 25% more exhibition space, the bread and pastry‐making sector of Sirha is growing and developing, and will become the National Bakery Show in 2011. Intersuc, a quality brand name familiar to Europain visitors, will bring together the Confectionery and Chocolate‐making sectors. The Sirha Bakery Trends Area will be the venue for professional contests showcasing bakers’ knowhow, such as the Louis Lesaffre Cup, the European selection event for the 2012 World Bakery Cup, and the French Bakery Cup.

The bakery sector will have a higher profile than ever before at Sirha 2011! And since the 2011 show will place a definite focus on all that’s new, it will include a new professional show

called Place des Vins, shining a spotlight on wines from south eastern France.

2009, a record‐breaking year!

At Sirha, all the trades and sectors of the catering industry are represented under one roof. Year after year, show after show, the event keeps on growing. The 2009 figures prove it!

‐ 141,380 visitors (more than 11% international) ‐ 2,098 exhibitors (20% international) ‐ 13 international pavilions ‐ 1200 demonstrations every day

‐ 600 innovations presented including 150 exclusive world premiers ‐ 10,000 chefs from 136 countries ‐ more than a thousand journalists representing the major media from 136 countries.

As you can see, we will be busy with so much to write about when we return. Best of all, Herve and his wife Nadia will be joining us again is Lyon. You can read more about Herve if you’d like. He has a great cooking school now.

Big Blend Magazine NoraLyn Ltd.
Member: Society of Professional Journalists

“Success” was Indie Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards















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