New NOMA cook book out for pre-ordering!

 

Finally some exciting news about the noma cook book! René Redzepi has named his new book “Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine” and it’s going to be released this autumn. You can already pre-order it from Amazon.com , There’ll be both an English and a Danish edition. Can’t wait!


 

 

Battle for the Dragon 2010
National Competition

 

 

 

 

The Battle for the Dragon contest, which has been endorsed by the World Association of Chef's Societies (WACS), was introduced for the first time in 2006. Winners to date have been Germany, Wales, Sweden and New Zealand. The Welsh International Culinary Championships, organised by the Welsh Culinary Association (WCA), are sponsored by the Welsh Assembly Government to promote the food and drink industry brand 'True Taste'. Hybu Cig Cymru/ Meat Promotion Wales also jointly sponsor the Battle for the Dragon contest.

Date : 16th Feb 2010 - 18th Feb 2010
Venue / City : Coleg Llandrillo Cymru, Rhos on Sea, Llandudno, North Wales

Contact : Peter Jackson

Email :ptrjck@aol.com

For more information, please visit http://www.welshculinaryassociation.com

 

Last afternoon at Madridfusión 2010: a whole array of fantastic chefs

 

 

Madrid Fusion 2010 - Elena Arzak demo

 

The last afternoon session at Madridfusion 2010 starred two revolutionaries, rebels with a cause - Carl Borg, from Micenplace, and Pedro Monge, the Nomad chef. Both explained how they approach the business of cooking for others. Both are ‘wandering chefs', explorers who have traveled the world to discover that one of the possible paths for haute cuisine leads outside restaurants, to alternative venues, even private homes, making every meal a gastronomic experience, one that goes far beyond the simple act of eating.

 

After this first joint demonstration, the Theater of Ideas featured the Spanish chef who has done most to take Spanish avant-garde cuisine outside Spain, José Andrés. The many awards received by his restaurants in the United States are the best proof of how successful his business management model has been. And this was the subject of his talk on the stage with Luis Solís, a teacher at the IE Business School. The reasons for this success from the business point of view became clear but, in fact, his physical presence explains all. Behind it all are passion, honesty, energy and talent.

 

Following on after José Andrés, the subject matter turned to the Mediterranean sturgeon, a rare and ancient species in which cooks are showing renewed interest. Pedro Chicote, Elena  Arzak and Ramón Freixa all explained the recipes they have devised for this fish, indicating the great future that lies in store for it as a prime ingredient, provided that stocks are properly cared for.

 

And after the sturgeon came Paco Torreblanca, a member of that rare species of great patissiers who are interested in how their creations can be paired with wine. This pastrychef from Tótel in Elda spoke loud and clear about the many possibilities for combining chocolate with red wine.

Then came the moment the Madridfusion audience had been waiting for, the session entitled Icons of a prodigious ageMadridfusión 2010. Some of the most outstanding chefs of recent years, those who have paved the way for Spanish avant-garde cuisine, took their place on the stage to present their most representative dishes. This amounted to a wonderful opportunity to review the achievements of the past few years and closed this year's culinary masterclasses at Madridfusión 2010. The chefs and their dishes were:

 

Ferran Adriá: Potpourri of textures / Melon caviar (represented by Paco Roncero)

Sergi Arola: Bold potatoes

Juan Mari and Elena Arzak: Sea bass in leek ash

Martín Berasategui: Tear of peas with goose barnacles en gelée and salted pea butter toffee / Warm bone marrow salad

Quique Dacosta: Cuba libre of foie gras

Manolo de la Osa: Cold garlic soup

Dani García: Ajoblanco with sardines, figs and herring roe

Joan Roca: Dublin Bay prawn in curried smoke

Marc Singla: Deconstructed potato omelet

Pedro Subijana: Gin tonic and distilled lobster

Alberto Chicote: Tataki of tuna with ajoblanco

Pepe Rodríguez Rey: Veil of chickpeas, dripping and broth

Marcelo Tejedor: Celeiro hake with Padrón peppers and lemon pil pil

Enrique Martínez: Fried eggs with peppers and pan-fried potatoes

 

Competitions

In addition to the demonstrations, mention still needs to be made of other important news.  Today the winners were announced in the competition for the Best Spanish Wine priced under 30 € (see press release at http://www.madridfusión.net/). Also, the prizes were awarded for the C3 Consagración Círculo de Chefs Second International Competition for Restaurant Desserts, for which the finals were held during this afternoon's session in the Multi-Purpose Hall. The winners were:

 

Press Award: Yannis Janssens, (USA). Viceroy Miami at Icon Brickell, Miami

First prize: Marike Van Beurden, (FR) Restaurant Pic ***, Valence, FranceSecond prize: Kanako Sakakura, (NOR) Restaurant Bagatelle **, Oslo Third prize: Yannick Ferraton, (AUT) Hotel Sacher, Vienna

 

San Sebastián Gastronomika was an astounding success: 68 Michelin stars gathered at a historic conference

 

 

 

 

This past November 23rd through 25th, Palacio Kursaal in San Sebastián, Spain was the destination for a Who’s Who list of chefs from around the world, along with over 5,000 trade show visitors and attendees, all gathering in honor of the 11th annual Spanish gastronomy conference, Gastronomika. There could be no place more fitting for the convergence of so much culinary talent and so many luminary chefs.  On the Basque coast of northwest Spain, the wealthy, seaside town is touted as being one of the best food destinations near France, its restaurants holding more Michelin stars per capita than any other city in the world, Paris included.

 

2009 marked a change in leadership for the symposium, with the Basque Country’s most notable chefs coalescing to take the conference to a new level.  The opening ceremony saw Hilario Arbelaitz of Zuberoa (Oiartzun, Spain) speaking about “working to establish Gastronomika as a world [culinary] reference for many years to come.” As Martin Berasategui promised, their aim would be to “continue to grow and represent the avant-garde” of the global, culinary world. The proof: a combined total of 68 Michelin stars shared amongst the various chef presenters and workshop leaders.

 

http://www.sansebastiangastronomika.com

 

 

 

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Taste & Smell: The Chemical Senses
 
26th september 2009
 
 
Why does an orange taste like an orange?

Explore the science of taste and aroma, with leading food scientist David Jackson, who will take you on a thrilling journey of taste, smell, physiology, psychology and even touch on Molecular Gastronomy!
The morning, from 11-1.30pm, is broken into three themed sessions with engaging short-format presentations, interwoven with breaks for hands on demonstrations and interactive exploration with fellow food fanatics.

Share your favourite scents, meet like-minded people over delicious canapés and sangria provided by Cava Restaurant, and leave intrigued and inspired, with a new awareness of flavours and aromas surrounding you.

Tickets: 18 euro when you book online, including canapes and sangria, 20 euro on the door.
Bring a friend and get 5 euro off!!!
(discounts applied on the door)

P.S: Please be sure to bring along a sample of your favourite smelling object for "deconstruction"
David Jackson is a Chemist (BSc, MSc, HDipBrew, WSET Cert Wines & Spirits) and has worked for the Diageo (Guinness) Research Department for over ten years specialising in Flavour Chemistry and Flavour Analysis. Specific areas of expertise include the Flavour of Roasted & Fermented Products, Flavour Freshness & Ageing and Deconstructing Flavour using Sensory and Instrumental Analysis Techniques. He has successfully developed major new products for Diageo and currently leads a team of scientists where his responsibilities also include Food Safety and Nutrition.

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Cook It Raw:

 

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Eleven of the world's most famous chefs gathered last month in Copenhagen to decide the future of gastronomy.

While business leaders and scientists met in the Danish capital on the weekend of May 24-26 to discuss global warming at the World Business Summit on Climate Change, a different summit took place at René Redzepi's Noma - recently ranked number 3 of the world's top 50 restaurants.

After a day spent tasting and foraging for wild herbs, flowers and plants – including bulrush stems, pine-tree shoots and seaweed pods – each chef set about creating a new dish that encapsulated rawness.

'Cook It Raw' was intended as a workshop where today's gastronomical thinkers could get together and explore how modern food can work within an ecological approach to living.

 

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The chefs aimed to produce the finest dishes with limited electricity, playing with aspects of rawness with uncooked ingredients and wild and local foods.

'The results were amazing,' event organiser Alessandro Porcelli said. For Albert Adria, brother of Ferran and co-founder of El Bulli at Rosas on the French border, now running a tapas bar in Barcelona, that translated into a 40-second microwaved 'natural sponge' cake.

Pascal Barbot, of l'Astrance in Paris and another of the event's 3-Michelin-starred chefs, made his dish of marinated mackerel, nasturtium leaf, raw turnip and puréed angelica.

Davide Scabin of Turin's Combal.Zero used hours of manpower to turn the cheapest, hardest cut of beef shoulder into the costliest steak tartare.

Massimo Bottura, of Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy, produced an edible parable on the future fate of the seas in his dish, 'Pollution': a green sea of raw oysters and sea asparagus purée inhabited by squid and seaweed was topped with what looked like toxic foam - actually made from aromatic Amalfi lemon froth.

'Eating raw is less a trend than a politically correct approach to today's ecological dilemma,' he said. 'We have a responsibility to use wild and well-grown ingredients well, not to spoil them by bad cooking. Saving energy and appreciating the pure flavours of natural ingredients is an antidote to the disastrous effect we're having on our planet, and points a way forward.'

 

Link : Read more

 

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The Spirit of Competition

 

Source: HKCA Newsflash April 26, 2009

 

Despite the global economic downturn, culinary competitions are still going strong this year. During Hofex, from May 6th to 9th, we have the Hong Kong International Culinary Classics, one of the biggest international competition events in the region. The last HKICC saw hundreds of competitors come to compete from all around the world, in a wide range of categories, both individual and team events. The Hong Kong Young Chefs Club will also be sending a team to compete in the Gourmet Team category.

 

In June 1st and 2nd, we also have the 2nd Hong Kong Norwegian Seafood Young Chefs Challenge. Last year’s event saw 21 teams of chefs, aged 25 and under compete for the ultimate prize, an educational trip to Norway and a chance to see the European Bocuse d’Or finals. This year, the format will be adjusted to bring us in line with our fellow international competitors, turning this event into an individual competition. The time limit is still 5 hours, including plating and cleanup, with 4 courses featuring Norwegian cod and salmon. Further updates will be provided.

 

In September, during the Restaurant & Bar show, we have the 2nd Tabasco Hot Chefs Team Challenge. Last year saw six 3-man teams compete for the chance to go to Singapore and battle against the hottest young chefs in Asia.

 

My own first competition experience was in the United States when I was still in college. A classmate and I applied for the Accellis Culinary Arts Challenge in 2000. Somehow, both of us were selected among the 20 finalists from over 150 culinary schools in the country, and a fancy write up on yahoo.com tauted us as the top 20 student chefs in America. There was nothing that could puff up a young student’s ego than telling him he was special, and unfortunately I bought my own press. I was in the unique position in that I had already had a few years of industrial experience, and that simple cooking was something I should be more than able to handle. So, I made the ultimate, most critical mistake you can make when competing. I didn’t practice.

 

The Accellis Culinary Arts Challenge featured a brand new type of convection-microwave oven. It sounds like familiar technology these days, but back then, it was something really special. The oven temperature was held at a base temperature of 500 degrees Fahrenheit, with 100 kilometer per hour air currents helping to brown food on the outside whilst the microwave steams the interior. Just to give you an idea of its performance, this oven could roast a whole chicken from raw to fully cooked in under 3 minutes! A whole roasted Boston lobster could be cooked in 90 seconds, and my own entry, a roulade of pork tenderloin stuffed with lychees and dates took 45 seconds to cook it to medium doneness.

 

You’d think with such a fast oven, finishing four portions in 75 minutes should be a breeze. But because I didn’t practice, didn’t properly organize my thoughts and processes, I ran into problems. The competition was a major media event. Charlie Trotter, famed for his namesake restaurant and beautiful cookbooks, was one of the judges, along with six of the thirty or so American Culinary Federation Certified Master Chefs. The competition was held in the Culinary Institute of America’s Greystone School in Napa Valley, California. While we were cooking, a team of journalists armed with notebooks and video cameras poked and prodded at our work, got in the way of our stoves, even messed around with our ingredients! The allotted time flew by in a blink and I realized I was barely even halfway done. I asked the floor judges if I could just give up and quietly disappear, but they informed me that Charlie Trotter wanted to see my finished product.

 

In the end, I didn’t even get a medal, understandably. I had gone 45 minutes over my time limit. However, during my critique, the tasting judges told me they were more interested in seeing if I would finish what I started. Charlie Trotter later told me that being willing to go back in after admitting defeat showed strength of character he would like to see in more chefs today. I later shared a glass of champagne with him and sent the photo to my mother.

I promised myself that if I ever competed again, I would practice myself to death, and I nearly did just that.

 

A year later, I was asked to join the college competition team to compete in the ACF Junior Culinary Olympics. We practiced 2 or 3 times a week, every week for a year. For the first component, we had to refine our knife skills to be able to produce with absolute precision a wide range of knife cuts within an hour. The exact knife cuts were determined by a draw, so we had to know all of them. These included tournée (7 faces, 2 inches long, 3/4 of an inch in diameter), fine brunoise (1/16th of an inch fine dice), paysanne (1/2 inch squares, triangles and circles, 1/8th of an inch thick), along with concassé of tomato, finely chopped parsley, minced garlic, and rondelle of carrot.

Now, I like to think that Hong Kong chefs have some of the finest knife skills in the world. Still, it took a lot of time and commitment to achieve these exacting standards. The judges really do go around and measure your cuts with a ruler!

 

The main part of the competition though was the 4-course meal, 4 portions of each. We had developed our own dishes in collaboration with our team coach, Michael Edrington, a big, rough-yet-dignified Southern fella, who also happened to be a hell of a chef. My own part to play in this was a piña colada bavarois, a creamy coconut and rum-scented dessert filled with pineapple compote, placed on a tempered chocolate coated sable cookie, with a thin layer of pineapple and vanilla jelly on the top. As an accompaniment, I had included a caramelized sugar cage in the shape of a pineapple, placed over marsala-macerated berries on toasted macadamia sand, along with two sauces (one a berry jus, the other a kiwi fruit purée). Oh, and a tempered chocolate filligrie; all this to be done in 75 minutes!

 

The exact layout of the plate, the components, the flavours, textures, etc. took the better part of a year to develop. I actually lost sleep over this plate, to the extent that I would be playing with the arrangement in my mind’s eye whilst driving on the Southwest Freeway at over 85 miles per hour at 2 o’clock in the morning. I almost got thrown out of school because I began missing classes. I went from one extreme to the other, but my commitment eventually paid off in big ways.

 

The first competition we had was for the Texas state title. Texas is a big state, about the size of Western Europe, and our chief rival, a team from Dallas was led by a master patissier from France. Our practice prevailed however. The 75 minutes went by in a blink and I was wondering if I’d even started yet when the results were announced. A gold medal!

 

In last year’s WACS Congress in Dubai, I met a chef from South Africa who gave a talk about the spirit of competition. He said that getting your first gold medal is “…better than sex, but he pretty much summed it up though. That first medal isn’t about you beating all the other competitors, but about besting yourself. I always hate it when cooks tell me they’re doing the best they can, because you really have no idea what your best is until you push yourself beyond what you think is your limit. Competition is all about besting yourself, bettering yourself, discovering just how much more there is to you.

 

I’ve been in a total of 4 competitions, not a great number when compared to individuals like our HKCA competition guru, Mak Kam Kui of Disney Hollywood Hotel. I had the chance to team up with him in Penang, Malaysia along with Ken Chow and Martin Lam (an old HITDC classmate of mine) for the 3rd Penang Chefs Challenge. It was one of the most intense competitions I’ve ever seen, let alone competed in. For five rounds, 28 teams from around the world were faced off against each other, one on one. The winning team proceeded to the next round, sort of like in Wimbledon. Each round saw a host of chefs racing to fight over ever-dwindling (and decomposing) supplies of ingredients, plus two mystery ingredients provided at the last minute. Limited refrigeration and work space, domestic stoves and stifling heat made for a truly challenging environment. Gelatine, chocolate and sugar work was made next to impossible due to the heat and humidity. To top this off, the competition took place in a public area where hundreds of spectators milled about. We managed to place 1st runner up in the end, and made a lot of new friends too.

 

Culinary competitions are probably the worst place to try new things. There are so many variables, so many unknowns, so many things that can go wrong at the last minute that you want to eliminate as many as you can before you go in. Know your equipment, your ingredients, your methods, everything. I see so many young chefs try to “reinvent the wheel”, create new flavour pairings and then try to justify their wild choices to the judges. You want to make sure of as many things as possible when you go into that arena because competition is all about execution. Creativity comes and goes long before you first pick up that knife after the timer starts.

Practice is the key, and with it comes commitment. You shouldn’t get into competition if you aren’t going to give it your all. Don’t give a mediocre performance or you’ll regret it for the rest of your life. You’ll constantly be asking yourself, “Could I have taken gold if I’d tried that little bit harder?” Even if you don’t win, you can take away a tremendous learning experience.

 

Also, always remain humble. Don’t fool yourself into thinking you’re always right. Get second and third opinions. Socrates said that the only thing he knew was that he knew nothing. If you start thinking you’re smart, you’re going to find yourself in a slugging match with the judges, and that’s a truly embarrassing position to be in. When you get a critique, take notes and learn from it. The beauty of being a chef is that you can never know it all. There’s always something you can learn from someone else.

 

 

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Sweet Taste of Success - The Baileys Euro-toques Young Chef of the Year 2009

 

    


23 year old James Devine from Dungannon, Co Tyrone has beaten four other finalists from across Ireland to win the title Baileys® Euro-Toques Young Chef for 2009, plus a cash prize of  €1,250 and a two week stage at renowned London restaurant Pied à Terre.  

‘Baileys® Euro-Toques Young Chef’ is one of the toughest and most prestigious culinary competitions to win. Entrants, who must be under 25 and show exceptional potential, are first nominated by a Euro-Toques member. They then submit their CV and a seasonal menu to the Euro-Toques Secretary General. An interview in front of an adjudication panel of professional chefs follows, after which the finalists are selected. The final stage is to cook against-the-clock in a culinary skills test under the scrutiny of a second panel of professional chefs. Finally, in advance of the announcement, they prepare a 5 course meal for specially invited guests hospitality industry and food media.


This year the grand finale was held on 6th April, at Ireland’s leading fine dining establishment, Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud in Dublin, where Peter O’Connor of competition sponsor, R&A Bailey & Co, addressed guests with his legendary combination of relaxed humour and thoughtfulness, urging everyone to share ideas on how we can help each other through this difficult time – and reflecting on the way in which the Baileys® Euro-Toques Young Chef of the Year competition (now in its 19th year) brings together the best professional chefs in the country with the next generation of top talent. “And we are delighted to be able to play a role in nurturing the rising stars of the Irish culinary world” he said.

Judges at this year’s skills test were Australian Chef Shane Osborn of Pied à Terre; Neven Maguire of MacNean House, Blacklion, Co Cavan  (a former Baileys® Young Chef winner); Lorcan Cribbin, of  Bang Café in Dublin; and Consultant Chef,Neil McFadden. The event and prizes are sponsored by R&A Bailey & Co in association with Gilbeys - both Diageo companies. Past winners of the competition include Gearoid Lynch (The Olde Post Inn) and head chefs Trevor Cunningham (Restaurant 23, Warrenpoint) and Padraig Hayden (The Still at Dylan Hotel).

 



The winner, James Devine, works at Deli on the Green, in Moygashel, Co Tyrone, where he assists his Euro-Toques mentor & Head Chef Bob McDonald.  After completing his A levels, James turned down the chance to study Law at university and travelled to North Carolina for his first taste of working in a professional kitchen at a Children’s Summer Camp. On returning home, he embarked on a Foundation Degree in Culinary Arts at Belfast Metropolitan College, which he successfully completed this year. His dream is to one day open a restaurant of his own in his hometown of Dungannon.

The other four finalists this year were 23 year old Patrick Powell (Knockranny House Hotel) ,who was also a finalist in 2007; 22 year old Luke Flinter (Waterford Castle Hotel); 22 year old Eric Matthews (L’Gueleton, Dublin); and 24 hear old Mark Treacy  (L’Ecrivain, Dublin), who is also a finalist in 2007. Commenting on the competition, Feargal O’Donnell, Commissioner-General, Euro-Toques (Irl.) noted ‘the great talent and passion for what they do’ showed by all finalists, and judge Shane Osborn (who is Australian but has strong Irish connections) said the Baileys® Young Chef is particularly beneficial because it emphasises the role of the mentor, which is essential to succeeding in the industry.

 

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Scothot 2009

  

 

Junior Culinary Team Ireland placed 2nd in the scothot world cu;linary grand prix 2009

 

Full Results : http://chefsden.yuku.com/topic/453

 

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