Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Culinary Bootcamp will whip your kitchen skills into shape


The atmosphere in the college can feel a little tense as the afternoon Advanced class nears their final exams. At the same time, afternoon Basic class is approaching their deadline for their all-consuming, research- and calculation-intense menu project.

Culinary Boot Camp, in contrast,  helps offset the intensity of the diploma programs. The weekly recreational classes lend levity and balance to the school. Laughter spills from the kitchen as amateur cooks -from 18 to 80 years young – share their love of food while learning knife skills,  recipes and new techniques.
Mushroom ragout in the works
 at Culinary Boot Camp.

Our current Boot Camp is fully booked through mid-December. We have just introduced a 10-week springtime program, though, to run from March 13 to May 15, 2013. There’s nothing quite like a warm and fragrant kitchen on a 
cold and rainy spring evening, but you’ll have to start planning now. Classes fill quickly. Hope you can join us.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Food dreams come in all shapes and sizes....



Graeme Smith graduated from Liaison College Hamilton in 2009.
photo courtesy of Terry Asma, 2020studios


Gorilla Cheese was not the first food truck business in Hamilton, but owners Graeme Smith and Scott Austin might have been the first to announce their ever-changing location on Facebook and Twitter. It’s this urban-savvy marketing combined with their innovative curbside menu that attracts great crowds wherever they set up shop.  

The inspiration for Gorilla Cheese’s gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches took flight while Graeme was studying at Liaison College Hamilton.

“Originally I developed the project as a restaurant,” he recalls. After graduation, he was ready to follow through with his plan until his long-time friend got him thinking outside the box. “Scott came up with the idea of a food truck. We started researching the same day. I had no idea until then that they were such a massive trend in the United States.” 

Gorilla Cheese’s popularity is no accident. With a small crew of employees they work long hours in a hot truck, producing comfort food with a twist. Who would have thought a grilled cheese sandwich could create such buzz? By adding things like bacon, apples and maple syrup (the Lumberjack), or turkey, pear and cranberry sauce (Quirky Turkey) to the requisite cheese and bread, they have elevated the status of North American street food to a new level.

After just one year in business, the demand for their portable menu has outstripped their one-truck capability. “It kills me to turn down so many functions,” says Graeme. Their second truck is on order, and should hit the streets in late 2012. “Another truck will let us travel out of town, or be in two places at once in Hamilton.”

That’s great news for fans who check their phones before deciding on lunch, and for the rest of the Golden Horseshoe hungry for a twist on tradition.

You can follow the Gorilla Cheese schedule or check out their imaginative menu at http://gorillacheese.wordpress.com
Twitter: @gorilla_cheese


There's always a crowd waiting in line for Gorilla Cheese's
gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Baking week... sweet!



Focaccia with caramelized onion- one of
the bread techniques that students learned during 
their baking week.
When Cook Basic students move from classroom to kitchen, Chef Bill Sharpe puts them through their paces with baking, sugar work and chocolate work. The first hands-on week is chock-a-block making a variety of breads, fruit tarts and pastries. The lessons are fast-paced and fun, incorporating a number of formulas, techniques and principles that will follow students throughout their careers. 

Chef makes it all look like child's play, but kneading and proofing doughs, hand-whipping creams and batters and getting just the right temperature to bring sugar to a pliable, caramel state all take patience, practice and good timing. The outcome on first attempt is rarely perfect, but is usually delicious, and the lessons are always priceless. 

See our Facebook page for more photos.

Spencer works on a garnish of
caramelized sugar. 



Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Chef's Table - September 27, 2012

Nathan, Devon and Resti created a six-course meal that was big on fall-harvested vegetables and fruit (five of the courses featured apples). They served a dozen guests, invited to join Liaison's chefs in critiquing each course and the overall presentation and creativity of the meal.

The entree for the evening: Braised stuffed veal breast,
served with a warm Brussel sprout salad and root vegetable chips,
placed on top of a scallion mousse. 
Check out more of Nicole's photos on Facebook.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Chef Greg Singh at GO Cooking


Chef Greg Singh at GO Cooking


The table is set for guests to enjoy wines
chosen for each course by the evening's sommelier.
Chef Greg Singh filled the house on Tuesday evening at GO Cooking in Hamilton.  Guests reserved their spot months in advance to learn how he adds his own twist to the comfort foods of our autumn harvest.  Potatoes, butternut squash, carrots, sweet potatoes; they all conjure memories of festive dinners and family gatherings. Our chef-instructor turned up the heat, though, adding chili oil to his soup, chorizo and jalapeño to the crown roast stuffing, garlic and caraway to the brussel sprouts and, best of all, bourbon to the sweet potato pie. 

The menu:
Butternut squash soup with candied pecans and chili oil
Crown roast of pork, stuffed with chorizo and cornbread
Yukon Gold mashed potatoes with garlic and buttermilk
Braised fennel
Brussel sprouts with garlic and caraway
Glazed carrots
Sweet potato, maple syrup and bourbon pie


Check our recipe page for a couple of Chef Greg's creations. 



Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Spinning veal into gold

 Chef Dan instructs on how valuable good butchery skills can be to the bottom line. 

With his gloved hand, Chef cuts carefully
around the knuckle and along the bone.
 
The leg of veal was courtesy of Delft Blue Veal. The entertainment value was added by Chef Dan Notley. With practiced skill, a sharp knife and an alchemist’s outlook, he demonstrated how to transform a $200 primal cut into steaks, roasts and cutlets, and bits and bones for burgers, osso bucco, soup, stews, sandwiches and sauces. Those can translate to at least $1200 at the till in an upscale restaurant: not bad for a one-hour date with a skilled butcher. 
After the demonstration, this hindshank was braised for a couple
of hours until it was melt-in-your-mouth tender.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The secret's in the sauce...and the soup, and the appetizers.

       
Where Cook Basic classes hinge on foundation and technique, Advanced students spend a lot of time expanding on those fundamentals and nurturing their creativity. With Advanced classes following on the heels of Basic level, students are thrown right into a series of days that test their memory, concentration, creativity and organizational skills.

The challenge starts with sauces: reviewing the five mother sauces that are spun like gold into dozens of delectable smooth-as-velvet, sweet, savory, fiery or tangy finishes that can make a well-crafted dish pop, sizzle and sing.

Simon whipped up a Hollandaise sauce
over hot water.
During Week Two they revisit a number of soups and breads, and learn a few new ones along the way. The process of making a sparkling clear consommé is reviewed, from its birth as a full-flavored stock through its clarification. With a list of 15 different soups- everything from purees and cream soups to clear broths- they build their repertoire of breads alongside. The week culminates in a two-hour demonstration of their skills, with five soups and five breads to show for their efforts. 

Nathan made crispy chips from paper-thin
slices of  candy cane beets.
Appetizer week finds the budding chefs turning out progressively more imaginative and abundant morsels. The final day finds them absorbed in the kitchen, their concentration casting a blanket of silence save for the muted thud of knives against the cutting boards. This deceiving stillness, though, gives way to the clatter of china plates with the call from Chef Dan, “Five minutes to service, folks!”