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Posts tagged with: Cooking Classes

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Reservation Watch

Book It: Ravioli Workshop at Il Corvo

Space is limited—even more than usual.

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Learn to make it at Il Corvo. Photo courtesy ilcorvopasta.wordpress.com.

Mike Easton’s ravioli workshops, in which he promises you’ll “make and eat pasta, drink wine, and get dirty,” are limited to ten people, which is probably a good thing—his Il Corvo is a teeny sliver of a space.

The first one happens September 18 at 2pm; future classes are to take place once or twice a month “through the holidays,” Easton writes on his blog. The $75 fee gets you a pound (possibly more) of pasta to take home, and instruction for molding several variations. To RSVP, leave a comment on Easton’s blog and he’ll follow up with details.

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Tags: Cooking Classes

In the Kitchen

Il Corvo Rolls Out Cooking Classes

They’ll also include dinner and wine—lots of it.

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Make pasta like a pro. Photo courtesy Il Corvo.

More kitchen class time for your consideration: Il Corvo announces it will host a pasta-prep session on May 28, the first in what’s to become a monthly shebang.

From Mike Easton’s announcement: “Each class in the series will focus on a specific region of Italy. We will learn to make pasta typical of the region, drink their local wines, prepare sauces using the region’s ingredients, drink wines, and create a lovely Italian meal in the process….Did I mention drink wine?”

Sounds pretty fun. The $125 fee gets you a three-course dinner, recipes and pasta for later, and instruction from the venerable Easton, who just opened the joint not two weeks ago. Oh yeah, wine too.

To reserve a spot, go to the Il Corvo website and post a comment saying “Invite me!” Easton will then follow up with more info. The exclamation point is absolutely mandatory.

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Tags: Wine, Cooking Classes, How To, Cooking

Class Time

Cornish Announces Art of Food Workshops

Another batch of classes to add to your calendar.

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Play with your food during Jessie Oleson’s class “A Sweet Foundation (Let Them Eat Cake).” Photo courtesy cakespy.

What is this, the official week for announcing summer cooking classes?

Yesterday Cafe Lago and Delancey both broadcast schedules for forthcoming fun: Lago is hosting chat sessions centered on Italian culture and the Ballard pizzeria is bringing in local toques for everything from Moroccan street food to whole-hog butchering.

Now this morning, word arrives that Cornish College of the Arts will host several weekend workshops with Seattle notables: Art of the Pie’s Kate McDermott, Cakespy blogger Jessie Oleson, and Good Fish author Becky Selengut.

McDermott will do what she does best—make pie—and field trip it to the U District farmer’s market to help students select fillings. Selengut plans to tour choice spots for purchasing sustainable seafood. And the ever-creative Oleson swaps the usual art tools for cake, frosting, and food coloring.

For details on the Art of Food classes, click here (and scroll to the bottom).

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Tags: Cooking Classes

Holidays

Gingerbread House Decorating with Lisa Dupar

She’s our very own Martha Stewart, people. Come learn from her pastry team.

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Don’t you want to take a class with this woman?

This Saturday, December 5, the Redmond catering kitchens of culinary luminary Lisa Dupar—right next to her terrific Pomegranate Bistro —will be abuzz with all-ages teams of gingerbread house decorators.

You could be one of them.

Using gingerbread house frames pre-constructed by Dupar’s chefs, teams (Dupar’s encouraging child-adult pairings) will learn the finer architectural properties of icing and candies. Decorators will break for sustenance of grilled cheese and tomato soup, then take their masterpieces home.

Class will be held from 1pm to 3pm and costs $65 for a team of two.

(And while you’re there, pick up Dupar’s new cookbook, Fried Chicken & Champagne, a celebration of her down-home Southern aesthetic with recipes aplenty.)

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Tags: Cooking Classes, Holidays, Lisa Dupar, Pomegranate Bistro

Gift Idea

Tom Douglas Announces Family Cooking Classes

Spotlight on nutrition

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Some of the freshness you’ll be learning to cook with.

Tom Douglas and Premera Blue Cross have joined forces to offer a Sunday family cooking class geared toward inspiring healthy, practical meals that families can prepare together.

Students (ages 10 through adult, please) will work directly with the chefs from Tom Douglas’ burgeoning empire (here are the newest two, Seatown Seabar and Rotisserie and Seatown To Go) to learn and practice cooking techniques from grilling to vegetable steaming to making lettuce wraps.

And then…you eat.

Class dates are Sunday, December 5 or Sunday, January 9 (it’s not a series), 11am-1:30pm; cost is $50 per person. Sign up here.

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Tags: Cooking Classes, Tom Douglas, Palace Ballroom

The Nosh Pit Edible Gift Guide 2010

Edible Gift Guide Idea #3: A Cooking Class with Where Ya At Matt

The food truck founder will teach the basics of Creole cuisine.

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Restaurants-roving

Cook Creole cuisine with Matthew Lewis, founder of Where Ya at Matt.

Category Friends and family ($30-$100)
Best For NOLA natives; food truck fanatics

OK, so technically this cooking class happens before the holidays (it’s December 15), but do keep in mind St. Nick’s is December 6. Go big and skip the bonbons this year.

The instructor for the $65 session is Matthew Lewis, who will prepare barbecued shrimp, jambalaya, and bananas foster, plus demo “the basics of Creole cooking from trinity to rouxs and desserts.”

Anyone who frequents Lewis’s truck Where Ya at Matt will tell you his is some of the best Creole cuisine Seattle’s seen—not to mention a game changer when it comes to street food. You want to know his secrets. Plus, the guy’s a total charmer. Look at that smile. Cooking with him for a couple hours is a guaranteed good time.

Time, cost, sign-up information: it’s all over here.

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Tags: Cooking Classes, Street Food, Edible Gift Guide

Freebie File

Cafe Lago Hosts Free Cooking Classes

The Montlake restaurant “would love to teach you a little bit about making pasta.”

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Cafe Lago leads free cooking classes starting October 4. Photo courtesy Cafe Lago

In an October article for Bon Appetit, local scribe/pizza wunderkind Molly Wizenberg goes giddy for the meatballs at Cafe Lago. Over the course of seven years, she writes, she’s tried many meatballs, both at restaurants and from recipes, but “none could nail both taste and texture….I never found one that got it all right until I ordered the fettuccine and meatballs at Cafe Lago.” Makes you wonder what they’ve got going in that kitchen, no?

Find out next week when the Lago folks let diners backstage and teach them to cook like Lagos cook. As part of an ongoing twentieth anniversary celebration, chef and co-owner Jordi Viladas and several toques are leading four free classes. The focus, several of the Montlake restaurant’s favorite dishes.

Each session starts at 5pm and lasts one hour. Space is limited, so call 206-329-800 to secure a spot. Here’s what Viladas is making and when:

October 4: Eggplant and mint ravioli and Lago marinara.
October 5: Carbonara and putanesca sauces and pasta to go with both.
October 11: Butternut squash ravioli.
October 12: Bolognese sauce with fettuccine. Promised to “make you famous among your friends and family.”

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Tags: Cooking Classes, Montlake

Sushi and San Fran Jam: Two Very Cool Cooking Classes

There are lots of cooking classes in Seattle. These two look especially enticing.

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Jam on it with Rachel Saunders at Dish it Up.

1. Did you know that sushi chef Hajime Sato, a guy we consider to be one of the most fascinating food people in Seattle, teaches classes on sushi-making at Diane’s Market Kitchen in Post Alley Downtown? It’s true. The next class is on Sunday, September 26 and costs $125; the price includes sake samples as well as the box of sushi you go home with. Register here.

2. Seattle foodies are crazy for jam. Making jam. Talking about making jam. Jam. So it’s a bit of a big deal that Kim Ricketts Book Events has invited jammer extraordinaire Rachel Saunders, author of The Blue Chair Jam Cookbook, to come up from San Francisco and give us a demo. The event takes place at Dish it Up on Tuesday, September 28 at 6:30pm. You pay $65, a price that includes the demo, wine and apps, a jar of jam, and a signed copy of the cookbook. Get your ticket here.

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Tags: Downtown, Cooking Classes, Sushi, Canning and pickling

Magnolia moments

Smooth Jams: Canning Class at Dish It Up!

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

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Amy Pennington, that kind of person.

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Amy Pennington, that kind of person.

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The canner and her trusty blender.

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

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Peaches worth preserving.

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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. As she said this, 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 like gardening and old-timey kitchen techniques too, 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 us 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

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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.

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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.

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Tags: Seattle Restaurant Openings, Cooking Classes, Ballard

Farmers Markets

Madrona Farmers Market Opens Today; Queen Anne Opens Thursday

Here’s what’s in store this season.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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Tags: Cooking Classes, Cooking, Deals

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