Mod 3 was one of my favorite mods. Not only did we get to apply all of the technique we learned in mod 1 and 2, we were studying 3 cuisines that are each unbelievable. Unfortunately I lost the pictures from the Italian series, however Id like to share the type of food we made.
While I was working at Eataly selling fresh pasta, I was counting down till the day we began making fresh pasta at school. It seems as if I'd be sick of it, but in fact I was excited to see how I could transfer everything I had learned to a home kitchen. The machines at Eataly are the size of a standard NYC apartment, and cost a years rent. Therefore, I wanted to learn on the small machines that I could use at home.
The first day of Italian cuisine, we made ravioli and flat noodles by hand. Butternut squash and fettuccine were some of the examples. We made them using the Cuisinart, a machine I later got for graduation (thank you family!). Moving forward, each day we made a different type of fresh pasta to use in our dishes. We made dishes with fresh ragu, tomato sauce, cauliflower sauce, and a ton of other delicious dish.
We also made things such as Ribolita, Tuscan bread soup and fresh mozzarella. Making fresh mozzarella was one of the coolest things of all of culinary school. I knew 'fresh mozzarella' existed, but I never processed the fact that I could personally make it by hand. With a combination of salt, water, cheese curd, and some heavy duty gloves to allow your hands to stay in 160 degree water, you have fresh mozzarella!
Although I don't have the pictures to document it, this whole week was really special. After studying cooking in Florence, Italy, it was really exciting to revisit a lot of the same food I spent so much time cooking and eating throughout Italy. Although I have always loved to cook, it was that semester in Florence that really sparked my passion for food. Although I took some time to get into the culinary career, it was obvious at this point that cooking was something I wanted to do forever.
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Noodles, dumplings, sushi!
The name of this post just makes my mouth water! Talk about culinary school nostalgia..
First off we had noodle day. One of my favorite things in the world is asian style noodles-any which way.
Pad Thai-I requested to make this dish. It is one of the most time consuming dishes to make because there are so many different ingredients, but it was really fun making it. We got to use a large wok to cook everything, giving it an even more authentic feel. The interesting thing we learned about pad thai, and which Ive realized through eating around NYC, is that no 2 pad thai dishes taste the same. While I made one recipe of pad thai, another student made the same recipe but we were told to sample each and see how different they may be, regardless of same ingredients. Indeed it was true-and both were amazing.
Pan Fried Chinese Egg Noodles with Beef and Broccoli
Vietnamese Rice Boodle Bun Salad with Beef. This was kind of like a bulgogi meets salad, win win.
Dumpling day was so much fun, and a nice break from the hustle and bustle of the previous week. After making the fillings for each dumpling, we all worked on shaping them. This was oddly therapeutic as we were all standing still and wrapping up the dumplings in fun shapes. Standing still is not something you hear often in any kitchen, especially when 6 people are making the entire menu so it was a nice break.
Pork and Vegetable Shao Mai
Shrimp Summer Rolls
Shrimp Shao Mai with Cilantro Chile Dipping Sauce
Chinese Pork Potstickers
'Better than Zen Spring Rolls'-truth in the name.
Mu Shu Chicken with Peking Pancakes-This was so fun to make, especially since we got to make our own pancakes!
Sushi Day!!!
We learned a lot about the history and importance of sushi in Japanese culture. In order to be a sushi chef, you need to train for something like 10 years! Our chef helped us by demonstrating a bunch of times and then allowing us to practice until we ran out of ingredients. We prepared vegetables, sliced fresh fish, made spicy mayo, and cooked some duck teriyaki (wow) as our ingredients to choose from. Then we were each given a mat and a bowl of rice, and a lot of room to play. This was such a fun class, allowing each of us to make exactly the type of sushi we like, and getting the repetitive practice. As you can see below we made enough sushi for, Id say 20 people. It was great timing because my mom was coming in to meet me that afternoon. We had a 'free' (minus tuition) sushi lunch!
First off we had noodle day. One of my favorite things in the world is asian style noodles-any which way.
Pad Thai-I requested to make this dish. It is one of the most time consuming dishes to make because there are so many different ingredients, but it was really fun making it. We got to use a large wok to cook everything, giving it an even more authentic feel. The interesting thing we learned about pad thai, and which Ive realized through eating around NYC, is that no 2 pad thai dishes taste the same. While I made one recipe of pad thai, another student made the same recipe but we were told to sample each and see how different they may be, regardless of same ingredients. Indeed it was true-and both were amazing.
Vietnamese Rice Boodle Bun Salad with Beef. This was kind of like a bulgogi meets salad, win win.
Dumpling day was so much fun, and a nice break from the hustle and bustle of the previous week. After making the fillings for each dumpling, we all worked on shaping them. This was oddly therapeutic as we were all standing still and wrapping up the dumplings in fun shapes. Standing still is not something you hear often in any kitchen, especially when 6 people are making the entire menu so it was a nice break.
Pork and Vegetable Shao Mai
Shrimp Summer Rolls
Shrimp Shao Mai with Cilantro Chile Dipping Sauce
Chinese Pork Potstickers
'Better than Zen Spring Rolls'-truth in the name.
Mu Shu Chicken with Peking Pancakes-This was so fun to make, especially since we got to make our own pancakes!
Sushi Day!!!
We learned a lot about the history and importance of sushi in Japanese culture. In order to be a sushi chef, you need to train for something like 10 years! Our chef helped us by demonstrating a bunch of times and then allowing us to practice until we ran out of ingredients. We prepared vegetables, sliced fresh fish, made spicy mayo, and cooked some duck teriyaki (wow) as our ingredients to choose from. Then we were each given a mat and a bowl of rice, and a lot of room to play. This was such a fun class, allowing each of us to make exactly the type of sushi we like, and getting the repetitive practice. As you can see below we made enough sushi for, Id say 20 people. It was great timing because my mom was coming in to meet me that afternoon. We had a 'free' (minus tuition) sushi lunch!
India
Although Indian cuisine isn't my favorite, it was really fun getting to learn about all of their spices and techniques. We used an enormous amount of spices this day, some of which I have never used. We also made a lot of spice combinations, formally known as Masala. For example, a masala known to southern india contains: coriander seed, poppy seed, black peppercorns, cumin seed, turmeric, fennel seed, fenugreek seed, caraway seed, black mustard seed, cinnamon, clove, and cayenne. Talk about a lot of flavor. This entire series of recipes began with making different curries, masalas, and other blends of ingredients that are the base to many indian dishes.
Moti Matal Shrimp-this uses a traditional ingredient called Chaunk. To get chaunk, you brown onions with ghee (Indian version of clarified butter), ginger, garlic, and chiles.
Coconut Jasmine Pullao, a type of rice.Red Chicken Coconut Curry
Thai Green Vegetable coconut curry
Naan-Indian Flat bread. We made a ton of different chutneys as well. Usually the bread acts as a mode of transport for the dip, however both the chutneys and naan were amazing.
Asia
Hello everyone! I apologize that I stopped posting on my blog. Between school, a job and an externship, I had no time to keep up with this. Fortunately, I want to record everything that I made in school so I will be going back and writing about all of the cuisines we did in any free time I get.
During mod 3, we spent a full week covering different Asian cuisines. We studied, Thai, Chinese and its different regional cuisines, and Japanese.
Some of my favorites are below.
Braised tofu and turkey-this was my chef instructors favorite, and instantly became my favorite as well.
Steamed white rice-Lots of it.Crisp Velvet Shrimp with Walnuts and Shitakes-velveting is a marinade using kosher salt, chinese rice wine, egg whites, and cornstarch.
Stir Fried vegetables
Peking chicken with cabbage salad
Egg drop soup
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