All the best resources to find a New York Culinary School

Archive for June, 2010

LaZat Malaysian Home Cooking Class

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Learn to make roti canai and teh tarik, Malaysian menus, Thai menu, authentic dishes, fresh ingredients, small classes in home environment, hands on, individual workstations, cooking is fun,

Duration : 0:4:55

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Greek Food Tv? Tzatziki Garlic Dip Greek Recipe

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

This is the Greek Food Channel http://www.dianekochilas.com/ Well-known Greek food expert and award-winning author DIANE KOCHILAS and photographer VASSILIS STENOS own and operate the THE GLORIOUS GREEK KITCHEN COOKING SCHOOL and DV FOOD ARTS CONSULTING. We run cooking classes and organize culinary tours in Greece for recreational and professional cooks. We produce specialty books and other food-and-wine-related literature for a wide variety of clients and independently for the tourist and other markets. Diane consults on Greek cuisine for restaurants, retail outlets and producers of fine Greek foods. Vassilis Stenos offers an extensive archive of food and travel photographs of Greece. Name: Diane Kochilas Well-known Greek food expert, consultant, chef, and author Diane Kochilas has written 12 books on Greek and Mediterranean cuisine. She is the consulting chef at Pylos, one of New York’s top-rated Greek restaurants. Diane divides her time between Athens, Ikaria, and New York. In Athens, where she’s lived for the last 15 years, she is the weekly food columnist and restaurant critic for Ta Nea, the country’s largest newspaper. Diane writes frequently for the US food press and appears regularly on American television. Her books: The Food and Wine of Greece, The Greek Vegetarian, The Glorious Foods of Greece, Meze, Against the Grain (good carbs), Mediterranean Grilling, Mastiha Cuisine. Forthcoming: The Northern Greek Wine Roads Cookbook and Aegean Cuisine. Greek Food and lots of Greek feta!

Tzatziki is traditionally served as an appetizer and can be left on the table as an accompaniment to foods throughout the meal. The key to great tzatziki is the thick creamy texture that allows it to be eaten alone, as a dip, as a spread, and as a condiment.

Tzatziki is one of the classic sauces in Greek cuisine, and there are as many versions as there are cooks who make it.

Tzatziki, tzadziki, or tsatsiki (Greek: ????????) is a Greek meze or appetizer, also used as a sauce for souvlaki and gyros. Tzatziki is made of strained yoghurt (usually sheep’s-milk or goat’s-milk in Greece and Turkey) with cucumbers, garlic, salt, usually olive oil, pepper, dill, sometimes lemon juice and parsley, or mint added. The cucumbers are either pureed and strained, or seeded and finely diced. Olive oil, olives, and herbs are often used as garnishes.
In touristy restaurants, and outside Greece and Cyprus, Tzatziki is often served with bread (loaf or pita) as part of the first course of a meal. Greeks, Cypriots and those from all over the Middle East use this dish as a side dish to a meal with meat. The acidity cuts the fat, thus Tzatziki is also used as a sauce for souvlaki and gyros, in which case it may be called cucumber sauce (especially in the U.S.).

Duration : 0:2:20

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Go Philanthropic at the New York Times Travel Show

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

http://romanotravelonline.com/View/V2325/ Go Philanthropic is an innovative socially-conscious travel company committed to helping individuals and small groups create meaningful life experiences through Travel Philanthropy in some of the worlds most inspiring destinations. We are also committed to leaving a positive footprint in each region—helping to preserve the past and enrich the future.

The Difference During your travel, contribute to the empowerment of communities by visiting and supporting their social, conservation, and economic development programs. Spend an afternoon donating a fresh water well, school supplies and books, or meeting candidates for scholarships or micro-loans. Come away having had meaningful and authentic exchanges with local communities.

Explore each exotic country with a private local guide. Enjoy exceptional accommodations from locally run B&Bs or Eco-Conscious Inns, to Intimate Boutique and Luxury Hotels. Indulge in activities unique to your interests – from walks to cooking classes, bike or boat tours, to cultural experiences or extreme adventure, anything is possible.

Travel Responsibly every trip includes a contribution to offset the pollution created by your travel.
Travel gives us a unique chance to see the world from a different perspective it opens the door for change

Let the Travel Agents of RomanoTravelOnline.com arrange your philanthropic adventure! More info at Go Philanthropic.

Duration : 0:2:50

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Where can I take cooking classes in the Sacramento area?

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

I’m not looking to become a professional chef, I just enjoy cooking and baking. I’m especially interested in baking classes.

Here are a few: http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=sacramento+ca+cooking+schools&ygmasrchbtn=web+search&fr=ush-ans

What to make for an All-American meal in France?

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

I’m spending my semester with a host family in France and they all really want me to cook an American meal. I want to, but I have no idea what to make. I need a main course, side dishes, and a dessert.

So what do you all think would be a unique, typical, American meal? (fyi: I’m from New York State, I know the region frequently matters on this. For example, though awesome, I’m not going to make creole food, that’s not something I would have back in the states.)

Any suggestions are welcome!

All of the people who answered have very creative answers, but fail to realize that some if not all there suggestions are impossible in France, they do sell the crap that is normal in the US, I would go for the apple pie, but use a selection of french apples, fried chicken is another idea, even a spaghetti with meat sauce, Europeans are not familiar with the US style meat sauce or meatballs.

I am a former chef from Canada and cooked in Hotels and was in France for awhile in the mid 1990′s, and try something that is easy and you can handle, if you could get you hands on some smoked deli meat to make a reuben sandwich there is another idea, but US style corned beef and pastrami is hard to come buy but french cooked ham would be a good substitute.

how can i find culinary arts school in upstate New York?

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010


The Culinary Institute of America has a campus in Hyde Park, NY but I’m not sure if there is any well known schools farther upstate.

Vietnamese Cooking Classes

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Vietnamese Cooking Classes Hoi An.

www.cookingclass-hoian.com
www.lighthousecafehoian.com
www.facebook.com
www.flickr.com

Duration : 0:3:30

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Greek Food Tv? Saganaki Meze Greek recipe

Monday, June 28th, 2010

This is the Greek Food Channel http://www.dianekochilas.com/ Well-known Greek food expert and award-winning author DIANE KOCHILAS and photographer VASSILIS STENOS own and operate the THE GLORIOUS GREEK KITCHEN COOKING SCHOOL and DV FOOD ARTS CONSULTING. We run cooking classes and organize culinary tours in Greece for recreational and professional cooks. We produce specialty books and other food-and-wine-related literature for a wide variety of clients and independently for the tourist and other markets. Diane consults on Greek cuisine for restaurants, retail outlets and producers of fine Greek foods. Vassilis Stenos offers an extensive archive of food and travel photographs of Greece. Name: Diane Kochilas Well-known Greek food expert, consultant, chef, and author Diane Kochilas has written 12 books on Greek and Mediterranean cuisine. She is the consulting chef at Pylos, one of New York’s top-rated Greek restaurants. Diane divides her time between Athens, Ikaria, and New York. In Athens, where she’s lived for the last 15 years, she is the weekly food columnist and restaurant critic for Ta Nea, the country’s largest newspaper. Diane writes frequently for the US food press and appears regularly on American television. Her books: The Food and Wine of Greece, The Greek Vegetarian, The Glorious Foods of Greece, Meze, Against the Grain (good carbs), Mediterranean Grilling, Mastiha Cuisine. Forthcoming: The Northern Greek Wine Roads Cookbook and Aegean Cuisine. Greek Food and lots of Greek feta!

Saganaki dishes take their name from the pan in which they are made. A sagani is a two-handled round pan that is made in many different materials. In the market, look for a small paella pan, small cast iron skillet, or even an oval au gratin dish.

Serve this as an appetizer, as an hors d’oeuvre, or as part of a meal made up of a varied selection of mezethes. The key to success with this dish is to get the oil hot (before it starts to smoke) before frying.

Saganaki (Greek ????????)(meaning flaming cheese, sometimes translated as fried cheese) is a salty and aromatic cheese-based Greek appetizer of fried or grilled cheese.

The cheese used is usually Kefalograviera, Kasseri, Kefalotyri, or sheep milk Feta cheese. Regional variations include the use of Formaella cheese in Arachova and Halloumi cheese in Cyprus.

Related saganaki recipes include shrimp saganaki (Greek ??????? ????????) and mussels saganaki (Greek ????? ????????), which are typically Feta-based and include a spicy tomato sauce.

In some United States and Canadian restaurants, after being fried, it is flambéed at the table (typically with a shout of “opa!”) and the flames then extinguished with a squeeze of fresh lemon juice. This practice reportedly originated in the 1960s at The Parthenon restaurant in Chicago’s Greektown

Duration : 0:2:2

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Womens Forum: What’s Cooking?: From School Cafeterias to Restaurant Row

Monday, June 28th, 2010

The Duke Club of New York Womens Forum presented an evening with a distinguished panel of Duke women —Sharon Parrish Bowers ’90,
a cookbook author/editor/literary agent, Janet Poppendieck ’67, a leading scholar of food, and Danyelle Freeman ’96, a celebrity restaurant critic — for a
discussion of the culture and industry of food.

Duration : 1:16:3

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

Do anyone know of any cooking classes in the Metro Alanta area?

Monday, June 28th, 2010

I’m looking for cooking classes besides kroger in alpharetta. I need help bad before I run my fiance and kids away with my bad cooking…LOL. I live in Smyrna
I mean personal cooking classes not for a degree..

Take your pick, all are culinary accredited:

Albany Technical College
Atlanta Technical College
Augusta Technical College
Coastal Georgia Community College
East Central Technical College
Gwinnett Technical College
Savannah Technical College
South Georgia Technical College
The Art Institute Of Atlanta
Ursula’s Cooking School Incorporated
West Georgia Technical College