Advertisement

Nosh Pit

Posts tagged with: Cooking Classes

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
Magnolia moments

Smooth Jams: Canning Class at Dish It Up!

Amy Pennington preserves everything—everything except our fear of botulism, that is.

Amy

Amy Pennington, that kind of person.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Amy Pennington, that kind of person.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The canner and her trusty blender.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Knowing is half the battle: we the students work through our preserved-food fears.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Peaches worth preserving.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Amy keeps a jar of pickled carrots in her fridge that she replenishes regularly.

“If I can make it harder for myself, I will. I’m that kind of person.” That was Go Go Green Garden owner Amy Pennington, introducing herself at a canning class at Dish It Up! in Magnolia. Pennington was hand-grinding mustard seeds with a mortar and pestle. She won’t buy an electric spice grinder because she’s “too cheap,” she says, and prefers her trusty blender to the sleek handheld immersion processor the Dish It Up! staff provided—even though it adds about three steps to the canning process.

That kind of person is exactly the sort of person who would run a garden business and can their own foods. I’m that sort of person to, as it so happens, but I had come to the class in order to overcome a fear of food preservation (I had nightmares about botulism after canning with my mother as a kid) And happily, despite her claim that she complicates things compulsively, Amy made it look so easy, I bought a steam canner the next day.

We learned many wonderful things in canning class that day, things like:

You don’t always have to use pectin. Pectin is a natural fruit derivative that’s used as a thickening agent for jam and sauces. Unfortunately, pectin is rather high-maintenance, requiring precise temperatures and timing. Amy showed us how to use lemon peels to thicken a recipe of apricot mustard. She used a vegetable peeler to remove the outside skin, cut it in half, juiced it, and threw all the parts into pot, including the seeds. “That means I have to fish them out later, but like I said, I like to make it harder on myself.”

Pickling doesn’t require a water bath. Usually, you have to boil or steam your jars for 10 or 20 minutes to kill the germs and seal the lids so the food inside doesn’t go bad. But pickles are just veggies drowned in vinegar, and vinegar is acidic enough to kill anything that might have crept into your jar. Amy just keeps an open gallon-sized jar of pickled carrots in her fridge that she adds to regularly. And that’s all there is to it.

Appearance counts for a lot. Amy told a story of looking at jars of gray peaches in her mother’s pantry and thinking canning was the most unappetizing way to preserve food. In her canning life now, aesthetics and taste are equally important. Her demonstration on canning peaches was full of tricks. Blanche and peel the peaches. Add hibiscus to the water to turn it pink and help the fruit keep its color. Face the peach halves inward so you don’t have to look at the pit hole through the glass. When she taught use how to make herb-infused vinegar, she stopped to remove a brown leaf from a stalk of oregano: “It was unsightly,” she said.

All photos by Judy Naegeli

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes, Magnolia Village, Canning and pickling

Openings

Dish It Up! Puts Down Roots in Ballard

Joins the neighborhood’s slew of culinary shops.

L

The current Dish It Up! is located at 2425 33rd Ave West in Magnolia. The second storefront will open at 5320 Ballard Avenue.

Take a gander at our list of favorite new culinary destinations and there you’ll see listed Savour, a twee Market Street stocker of gourmet foodstuffs. A few storefronts down from Savour is Kitchen N Things. A stone’s throw away find Cookies.

The list goes on, but the point is that when Dish It Up! scouted its second location, it seems natural the cooking school and kitchen store would choose culinary hub Ballard. Dish It Up! announced Thursday it is taking over 5320 Ballard Avenue, which is across the street from Bastille.

Owners Andrea and Dave Reith expect the space—outfitted with a 32-foot-wide demo kitchen and more room for classes than the current location in Magnolia —will open in September or October.

There are whispers that the beefed-up kitchen will host cooking competitions between local chefs. Awesome.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Openings, Cooking Classes, Ballard

Farmers Markets

Madrona Farmers Market Opens Today; Queen Anne Opens Thursday

Here’s what’s in store this season.

Seattle_-_maximus_minimus_food_truck_01

Some Pig Maximus/Minimus, now serving up sandwiches at Queen Anne Farmers Market

Madrona’s farmers market opens today at 3pm, and in just six days we’ll see the seasonal debut of the Queen Anne Farmers Market—the one to which local foodies gather like moths to the proverbial flame.

The QAFM opening celebration begins at 2:30pm on Thursday, May 20 at West Crockett Street and Queen Anne Avenue North. Try to arrive by 4pm, so as to to see Jason Franey of Canlis give a demonstration. There is also a kid’s cooking class at 5pm.

I was excited to see that Maximus/Minimus (the vegan bbq sandwiches are a health food, right? ), Veraci Pizza, and Parfait ice cream will be selling their stuff at the QAFM this year, and that Loki Fish is joining the Queen Anne vendor crew. That crew already includes such stalwarts as Foraged and Found Edibles, Tiny’s Organic, and Full Circle Farms.

Here’s the schedule for all the neighborhood farmers markets. Happy shopping.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes, Chefs, Queen Anne, Farmers Markets, Mobile Food

Deal of the Week

NuCulinary Launches New Cooking Series

and offers 50% off classes to celebrate.

Korean-food

Learn how to make this for $27.50.

I’ve never been to a class at NuCulinary (secrets: I’ve never been to any cooking class), but I’m always intrigued when I receive their monthly lineup of Asian-inspired lessons. Today, that is going to change. Why today? Because the culinary school is offering a mad-good deal.

Tonight NuCulinary launches a new series: Everyday Asian, which will take place Mondays at the Renton Uwajimaya and explores a different country or region each week. To celebrate the launch, chef Toby Kim is hosting a free class at 6pm (the wait list is about 20 people deep—good luck with that) and NuCulinary is offering 50% off an upcoming class, which puts the lesson at $27.50.

The deal is only good until midnight but is redeemable for six months; get in on it here.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes, Cooking, Deals

Good Eats

What’s New at the Corson Building?

A lot.

1

Edible? Find out at the Kitchen Garden Series.

Monday brought the news the Corson Building is now serving Sunday brunch from 9:30am – 2pm and bringing back its popular Thursday– and Friday-night dinners inspired by Angelo Pellegrini. Today: Corson chef Matthew Dillon and Master Gardener Willi Galloway—whose slew of accomplishments include the title of West Coast editor at Organic Gardening magazine—are launching a gardening and cooking series.

Not for the flaky, the Kitchen Garden Series mandates a seven-month commitment. That way participants can “bring food full circle,” from seed to supper.

Things you may learn: How to harvest goods in urban spaces, organic growing techniques, soil care, canning and drying, and, finally, how to utliize garden goods in the kitchen. Of course plenty of wine and noshes will be on hand.

The series, which costs $400, begins April 14 and concludes October 9, with classes taking place once a month on Wednesdays. Only 15 spots are available. You can reserve yours by emailing info@thecorsonbuilding.com or calling 206-762- 3330.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes, Brunch, Locavore News

Foodie Finds

Be Italian

Local restaurants celebrate la dolce vita with dining events and cooking classes.

Carnival-venice-ir1740

Since before the 14th century, masqueraders have taken over the streets of Venice during Carnivale.

Carnivale is Mardi Gras to the Italians. It is celebrated in the days leading up to Lent, culminating in a big blowout party the night before Ash Wednesday. Now through February 16 Tidbit Bistro is offering a Carnevale special: It’s a $20, two-course meal that begins with tofeja—a traditional Piedmontese soup of white bean and pork—and ends with vegetarian lasagna.

Here are other ways to be Italian in Seattle:

On Tuesday, February 9 at La Spiga, you can learn to make homemade pasta and get a tutorial on wine pairing for $75, $85 at the door. The class is cotaught by chef Sabrina Tinsley and her wine-expert husband Pietro Borghesi. They are a very cute couple, prepare to be charmed. Beginning Tuesday, February 23, La Spiga is reintroducing the Italian Night series, each sessions is $25 per person and includes “a light buffet dinner and glass of wine.” The first class covers tips for traveling in Italy. (Careful Spiga, you’re treading into Rick Steves territory now.)

On Thursday, February 11 from 6:30 to 9:30pm at Cook’s World, Serafina Chef Dylan Giordan is teaching “Love in Italy” a cooking class focused on regional Italian dishes that inspire romance. That’s $65, call 206-528-8192 to reserve.

And on Wednesday, February 17 Cascina Spinasse is hosting a four-course wine dinner featuring a barolo and and dolcetto from centuries-old Pecchenino vineyards in the Piedmont. Call the restaurant for price details and reservations.

If all this is too much trouble and you simply want to stuff your face with spaghetti, check out critic Kathryn Robinson’s recs for best pasta-twirling spots around town here.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes, Special Dinners, Italophiles

Cooking Classes

To Learn The Secret to Making Miracle Pies…

…you’ll need four hours and $135. Are you ready?

Kateruth

Kate McDermott, master of miraculous crusts, shows Ruth Reichl how it’s done.

Does $135 seem like a lot for a pie-baking class? That’s how much a four-hour session with Art of the Pie’s Kate McDermott costs. McDermott has spent years perfecting her crust, however, and her alums swear she can teach you to make a miracle pie.

Jill Lightner took a class for an Edible Seattle article and wrote this:
“Velvety, sweet filling and a perfectly flaky top and bottom crust. I take a few minutes to marvel at it, as this pie is quite literally marvelous. My brain is swirling with the startling names of apple varieties (Winter Banana? Horneburger Pancake?), with historical facts, with vague ideas about how confidence and emotion can be transferred to inanimate ingredients. As the scent of the baking pies fills the room, I approach sensory delirium.”

“Sensory delirium?” That’s quite a recommendation.

The school recently relocated to Diane’s Market Kitchen, just off Spring Street along Post Alley. To find out whether the McDermott crust experience is all it is cracked up to be, sign up for a class here.

Photo by Chloe Kaplan

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes, Cooking, Desserts

Cooking Classes

This Week in Cooking Classes

Stir things up with dishes from Italy and Provence, desserts that tame your sugar demons, and steamed clams drenched in (burp!) beer.

Cours

Resolved to cook more in 2010? Check out one of these upcoming culinary classes and events:

Dish It Up: Luigi’s Little Italy, Wed Jan 20, 6-8:30pm, $70
Chef Luigi DeNunzio demonstrates dishes from his Italian kitchen, featuring roasted pork loin with oregano lemon sauce, vegetable stew with eggplant, potatoes, and peppers, penne pasta with roasted cauliflower and pine nuts, octopus with red onions, capers, basil and garlic, and fried dough topped with honey. Call 206-281-7800 for reservations.

Sur la Table Kirkland: Winter in Provence, Tue Jan 19, $69
Step across the Italian border into southeastern France, where port-braised duck legs with dried cherries and creamy polenta is on the menu. Augment the savory entrée with a Belgian endive salad, topped with pears and blue cheese, and a tarte à la moutarde. Anne Haerle, formerly of the Herbfarm, hosts the cooking class, closing the course with a chocolate mousse with salted praline langues de chat. Call 425-827-5541 for reservations.

Whole Foods Roosevelt Square: Health Fair, Sat Jan 16, 12-3pm and The Smarter Sweet Tooth, Wed Jan 20, 6-9pm, $35
PCC Issaquah: Tame Your Sugar Beast, Wed Jan 20, 6:30-9pm, $40

Start with Whole Foods’ free health fair, complete with vendor samples and healthy living gift basket raffles. Then tame your sugar beast with Birgitte Antonsen and Karen Lamphere at Issaquah’s PCC, where you’ll learn how to kick those cruel (albeit sweet) cravings with gourmet substitutes like French lentils and wilted greens topped with lemon miso dressing, black bean and yam quesadillas, and raw coconut truffles. Or sweetly sidestep those glycolic sugars with the Smarter Sweet Tooth class, where you’ll learn to make vanilla Brazil nut ice cream with cinnamon pear compote, flourless chocolate cake, and coconut flan and pumpkin pie tarts.

Bon Vivant School of Cooking: Cooking with Beer, Wed Jan 20, 7-10pm, $78
Enhance the flavor of your favorite meals with Conni Brownell’s hearty winter menu: steamers in beer, rib eye steak with Guinness, ale and cheese soup, braised apple and sausage stuffed pork chops, with an oatmeal stout gingerbread finish. Call 206-525-7537 for reservations.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Cooking Classes

Advertisement