Katy Severson / en Back to School with the Latest Cookbooks by 91ĂŰĚŇßą Alumni /blog/fall-cookbooks-by-ice-alumni <span>Back to School with the Latest Cookbooks by 91ĂŰĚŇßą Alumni</span> <span><span>aday</span></span> <span><time datetime="2018-09-05T10:43:04-04:00" title="Wednesday, September 5, 2018 - 10:43">Wed, 09/05/2018 - 10:43</time> </span> /sites/default/files/styles/width_1400/public/content/blog-article/header-image/cookbooks%20header%20dan-gold-265213-unsplash.jpg.webp?itok=T5lSoSCR courtesy of Dan Gold, Unsplash Five food books for gelato lovers, moms and everyday cooks to read this fall. <time datetime="2018-09-05T12:00:00Z">September 5, 2018</time> <div class="byline-container column small-12 medium-10 large-8"> <div class="byline-details"> <div class="byline-author"> By <span class="byline-author-name"><a href="/taxonomy/term/1701"> Katy Severson </a></span> </div> </div> </div> <p>It’s been a big year in publishing for 91ĂŰĚŇßą alumni – five graduates of the Culinary Arts program have released cookbooks since January. Kitty Travers (Culinary, ’03) shares recipes from her long-celebrated London ice cream company, La Grotta Ices; Suzy Scherr (Culinary, ’10) gives us more than&nbsp;100 uses for a common household product; Jennifer Clair (Culinary, ’98) writes a home cook’s manual with tricks from professional kitchens; and Aurora Satler (Culinary, ’10) and Jenna&nbsp;Helwig (Culinary, ’07) both bring nutritional advice and simple recipes for busy parents feeding young children and families.</p> <p><strong><img alt="La Grotta Ices book by Kitty Travers" data-entity-type data-entity-uuid height="477" src="/sites/default/files/inline-images/La%20Grotta%20Ices%20cover.jpg" width="335" class="align-right" loading="lazy">&nbsp;“La Grotta Ices” by Kitty Travers </strong></p> <p>Kitty Travers’ acclaimed London ice cream company, La Grotta Ices, makes its in-home debut with <a href="https://www.amazon.co.uk/Grotta-Ices-Kitty-Travers/dp/1910931373/?tag=prhmarketing3377-21&amp;utm_source=t.co&amp;utm_medium=referral" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">this book</a> of more than&nbsp;75 recipes for ice cream, sorbet and granita. Her ice creams are famously inventive and fruit-forward, often relying on obscure ingredients like peach leaves, fig leaves, even capers, and enticing combinations like white grapefruit and pale ale. The book is wildly colorful and inviting; it not only teaches us to make ice cream at home, but inspires us to be bold and creative with flavor. Travers teaches ice cream making at The School of Artisan Food in the U.K.</p> <p><strong>“The Baking Soda Companion” by Suzy Scherr</strong></p> <p><a href="http://www.countrymanpress.com/category/home-garden/book/5935fe91e516eb1304413663" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Suzy Scherr’s new book</a> is a sequel to “The Apple Cider Vinegar Companion” and follows suit with a myriad of recipes, remedies and tricks for using baking soda, from teeth whitening to household cleaning to culinary applications like softening chickpeas (for the creamiest hummus) and making fluffy scrambled eggs. Scherr is a personal chef, culinary instructor and writer based in New York City.</p> <p><strong>“Six Basic Cooking Techniques: Culinary Essentials For The Home Cook” by Jennifer Clair</strong></p> <p>Jennifer Clair, who runs <a href="https://homecookingny.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Home Cooking NY</a>, gives us a succinct and detailed companion for the home cook in her <a href="https://homecookingny.com/cookbook/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">new book</a>. First, she outlines the book’s namesake – six essential cooking techniques – followed by simple recipes that utilize each technique. The book provides an excellent overview of restaurant-chef tricks like how to quickly remove kale stalks and properly blanch green vegetables. There’s also a great list of recommended kitchen tools that will make your home kitchen feel professional.</p> <p></p><figure role="group" class="align-center"> <img alt="A preview of Jennifer Clair's &quot;Six Basic Cooking Techniques&quot; book." data-entity-type data-entity-uuid src="/sites/default/files/inline-images/JnteriorSpread4.jpg"> <figcaption>A sneak peek inside "Six Basic Cooking Techniques."</figcaption> </figure> <p><strong>“The Ultimate New Mom’s Cookbook” by Aurora Satler</strong></p> <p>This is an excellent <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Ultimate-New-Moms-Cookbook-Nutrition/dp/1624145663" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">manual for new moms</a> looking to feed their babies (and themselves) with whole foods and proper nutrition from pregnancy through toddlerhood. Glean nutritional advice and corresponding recipes along the way – with everything from pregnancy mocktails to homemade baby food to simple meals for the entire family like minestrone, cornbread and a quick coconut curry. Satler is a mother and photographer with experience food styling and catering.</p> <p><strong>“Baby-Led Feeding” by Jenna Helwig</strong></p> <p>Jenna Helwig partners with registered dietician Natalia Stasenko in this <a href="http://www.jennahelwig.com/books/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">step-by-step guide</a> to introducing good nutrition to young babies and teaching them to be strong, independent eaters. The book has a number of helpful charts that detail nutritional guidelines and how to meet those numbers with common foods, along with easy-to-prepare, freezable recipes that can be made in advance and reheated. Helwig’s easy-to-follow guidelines and approachable recipes offer confidence to new parents for giving babies what they need for proper growth and development. Helwig is the food director of Parents and Health magazines.</p> <p><strong>More alumni cookbook news</strong></p> <ul> <li>Gail Simmons’ (Culinary, '99) released, “Bringing It Home: Favorite Recipes from a Life of Adventurous Eating,” in October 2017. It was nominated for a general cookbook award from The International Association of Culinary Professionals&nbsp;in February.</li> <li>Stacy Adimando (Culinary, '10) co-authored “Nopalito: A Mexican Kitchen,” which won a 2018 James Beard Foundation Book Award in the International category in April.</li> </ul> <p><em>Develop your writing and photography&nbsp;skills at the <a href="https://recreational.ice.edu/Home/FoodMedia" rel="noreferrer">Institute of Culinary Education's&nbsp;food media classes</a> and read more about <a href="/blog/all?blog_tag=Cookbooks" rel="noreferrer">cookbooks on D91ĂŰĚŇßąD</a>.</em></p> Cookbooks Culinary Arts Alumni <div class="row align-center blog--comments"> <div class="column small-12 medium-10 large-8"> <section> <h2>Add new comment</h2> <drupal-render-placeholder callback="comment.lazy_builders:renderForm" arguments="0=node&amp;1=12066&amp;2=field_blog_article_comments&amp;3=blog_article_comment" token="aQLSXrBGC3Sae-rQYKOBBxvSBgAuQLHKSW6eWNLySJs"></drupal-render-placeholder> </section> </div> </div> Wed, 05 Sep 2018 14:43:04 +0000 aday 12066 at Why Buy When You Can Forage For Free? One Chef Explains /blog/why-buy-when-you-can-forage-free-one-chef-explains <span>Why Buy When You Can Forage For Free? One Chef Explains</span> <span><span>CRaux</span></span> <span><time datetime="2018-07-05T01:48:22-04:00" title="Thursday, July 5, 2018 - 01:48">Thu, 07/05/2018 - 01:48</time> </span> /sites/default/files/styles/width_1400/public/content/blog-article/header-image/j-a-y-j-a-y-66427-unsplash_1400x680.jpg.webp?itok=VIpkpYnW Checking in With Chef Tom Coughlan <time datetime="2018-07-05T12:00:00Z">July 5, 2018</time> <div class="byline-container column small-12 medium-10 large-8"> <div class="byline-details"> <div class="byline-author"> By <span class="byline-author-name"><a href="/taxonomy/term/1701"> Katy Severson </a></span> </div> </div> </div> <p>91ĂŰĚŇßą alum <a data-entity-substitution="canonical" data-entity-type="node" data-entity-uuid="61fc1b7d-9486-4c0d-94d4-88b906102d25" href="/blog/how-two-ice-alumni-put-welsh-cuisine-map" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Tom Coughlan</a> (Culinary Arts/Culinary Management, 2012) is never not adding to his culinary repertoire. Just a few months after graduating from 91ĂŰĚŇßą, he started hosting pop-up dinners in Brooklyn, creating bold dishes using hyper-seasonal products, some of which he foraged himself. Raw mackerel with foraged pears and handmade pasta with foraged acorns were a couple of the crowd favorites. Since then, he’s competed on <em>Chopped</em>, worked for a number of high-end restaurants and spent a year as head chef of Brooklyn’s beloved Sunken Hundred.</p> <p>Now he’s returned to hosting pop-ups, this time with a focus on using as many foraged ingredients as possible —&nbsp;from the New York region and sometimes even the city itself.</p> <p>Tom’s part of a growing movement of chefs who choose foraged plants over store- or even market-bought — you’ve probably noticed an upswing of ramps, nettles and wild mushrooms on menus all over the country. But Tom takes it a step further, using obscure ingredients with short, near-impossible-to-catch seasonality: feral summer squash, wild Szechuan peppercorns and pineapple weed, to name a few.</p> <p>Recently, we caught up with Tom to chat about his upcoming pop-ups, how he learned to forage and why cooking with wild ingredients inspires him to be more creative as a chef.</p> <img alt="Sunken_Hundred_5.12.17_edited-40-550x367.jpg" data-entity-type data-entity-uuid src="/sites/default/files/content/blog-article/header-image/Sunken_Hundred_5.12.17_edited-40-550x367.jpg" class="align-center"> <p><strong>We interviewed you back in 2017. What have you been up to since then?</strong></p> <p>I’m just doing a little bit of everything. I started my own office catering brand and took some jobs as a private chef. I do private dinner parties and have been teaching classes at Cookspace in Brooklyn. I’m focusing on pop-ups dinners in the city and also starting to work on a cookbook.</p> <p><strong>Tell us about your pop-up dinners.</strong></p> <p>I try to do a pop-up at least once a month. My pop-ups are always forage-inspired. I would love to do a fully-foraged meal, but for now, there will be plenty of wild plants on the menu. My next one is June 21st at Branch Ofc. in Crown Heights. It’ll feature a lot of seasonal wild greens — like foraged mallow root that I’ll use to thicken a "wild green jelly."</p> <p><strong>How did you start foraging?</strong>&nbsp;</p> <p>I’ve actually been trying to figure out what got me into it. I remember picking raspberries in the summer as a kid by my grandmother’s house. My grandmother would pick dandelions and eat them, and I think that’s when I started realizing that there was food all around me. In college, at Fordham University, I started noticing things growing in the city. When you grow up around a lot of green space, everything seems green — but when there’s concrete everywhere, you start to notice it more. I remember walking down the street in the Bronx and seeing lamb quarters growing along the sidewalk. That’s my first real memory of thinking about foraging.</p> <p><strong>What excites you about it?</strong></p> <p>I like going for a walk in the woods or in the park and coming across something new and thinking about what I could do with it. The flavor of wild plants is so unique, too. We’re all so used to the grocery store produce, the classic French cooking techniques and ingredients, and the flavors of a handful of herbs and spices. But there are thousands and thousands of edible plants around the world — so much opportunity to make something different.</p> <p><strong>Are there rules for when it’s okay to pick something?</strong></p> <p>I wouldn’t mess with national or city parks, or climb into people’s yards and yank fruit off their trees — but if it’s hanging off onto the sidewalk I consider it fair game. New York has a lot of invasive species — weeds that choke out the native plants. I think it would be great to teach people how to pick those weeds and make them taste delicious — it could be a great urban conservation effort.</p> <p><strong>Do you forage in New York City?</strong></p> <p>I have before [in the city]. It’s is a great place to learn about and identify plants, but I probably wouldn’t serve anything I find here — there are people and animals everywhere, and I also worry about herbicides. It’s amazing what you can find when you’re looking, though. In New York, you’ll &nbsp;find a lot of runaways and rogue plants. I’ve seen corn growing, tomatoes, wild shiso, wild lemon balm; in my neighborhood I know of three peach trees, a pear tree, a persimmon tree and apple trees. Williamsburg is covered in fig trees, grape vines, acorns, black walnuts… once you start being aware of it, you can’t not see it.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Any favorites?</strong></p> <p>It varies so much by season. That’s one of the most exciting things about it — the window for wild plants is so short. Some plants and flowers just bloom and then fall. You have to catch them within a day or two.&nbsp;</p> <p>I get excited about things because of their rarity, too. One of the coolest plants I’ve found is called paper mulberry fruit — it’s like a bright orange gelatinous ball. The center of the fruit is hard and it grows slimy orange hairs. Once it hits the ground, it’s gone — you have to catch it at exactly the right time. It tastes artificially sweet, almost like an orange starburst. My other favorite is American persimmons; they’re nothing like the Asian persimmons that we know. It’s the size of a ping pong ball and it’s only edible once it’s fallen off the tree and begun to ferment. (Ed. Note: both of these come into season around late summer/early fall). In general, though, my favorites are the greens: dandelions, lamb’s quarters. Also a lot of the mushrooms that grow around here: hen of the woods, pheasant’s back.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Yeah, there’s some danger there, right?</strong></p> <p>There definitely is, but once you know, you know. If I find something I’ve never seen before I make sure I know what it is before I go further. Before I serve it to anyone, I always taste a little bit and wait a few hours before eating the rest of it.</p> <p><strong>You’re braver than I am. How did you learn to properly identify plants?</strong></p> <p>I learned almost entirely on Instagram. I follow a number of accounts for plant identification: @66squarefeet and @mallorylodonnel are both very active. I also follow @brandonbaltzley and @tmgastronaut — they post a lot of fermentation techniques as well.</p> <p><strong>So what can we expect to see on the menu for your upcoming pop-up?</strong></p> <p>I don’t know yet! That’s the fun of it. We’re in the best time of year right now; we’re finally out of the depths of winter and everything is green and growing. I’m excited to think outside the box and come up with something different. We’re often so stuck when we’re working in restaurants. If I have my own space for one night only, I can be more myself and share something unique and different. I may never cook that same thing again — it’s for that moment, in that space, in that time: it’s what I want to cook. I love that I get to do my own thing. I’m in full control.</p> <p><em>Tom’s next pop-up is June 21st at Branch Ofc. in Crown Heights, 6pm-10pm. It will feature locally foraged ingredients. No reservations required.</em></p> <p><em><a href="/blogalumni" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Click here</a>&nbsp;to learn about 91ĂŰĚŇ߹’s career programs.</em></p> Alumni Restaurant Management Culinary Arts <div class="row align-center blog--comments"> <div class="column small-12 medium-10 large-8"> <section> <h2>Add new comment</h2> <drupal-render-placeholder callback="comment.lazy_builders:renderForm" arguments="0=node&amp;1=11701&amp;2=field_blog_article_comments&amp;3=blog_article_comment" token="rrdBQV46Mo23SRc6u-SIdf0JjTRpRXE2khGSyFikbMw"></drupal-render-placeholder> </section> </div> </div> Thu, 05 Jul 2018 05:48:22 +0000 CRaux 11701 at