Chef-instructor Bill Sharpe appeared on CHCH's Morning Live show on April 3 to promote Catelli Pasta's Feed the Hope campaign.
http://www.chch.com/morning-live-blog/item/12812-under-$10-meals
Up to June 30, Catelli will donate one box of pasta to a Canadian food bank for every box of pasta you buy, and one serving of pasta for every 'like' they get on their Facebook page.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Nourishing body and mind …
Chantelle presented on Korea, and treated her classmates to fiery kimchi (spicy pickled vegetables) and galbi (spiced beef). |
Before our Cook Basic students head into the kitchen for the first time, they are assigned the task of highlighting a country of their choice – its history, geography, socio-political environment, and of course, its culinary traditions. Some people build their project and presentation around their own country of origin, while others use the opportunity to explore regions in which they have a keen interest. Recent presentations from Chef Bill’s morning and afternoon classes have taken students on a virtual tour of the world, from the far east to the Middle East, with stops in Europe and the UK too. Feeding colleagues was optional - a much appreciated addendum to the spoken word, and a chance for students to share their passion for cooking.
To see more photos, visit us on Facebook.
Labels:
chef school,
cook training,
international food,
presentation
Thursday, April 25, 2013
It takes a whole school ...
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(L to R) Chef Dan Notley (instructor), Nicole Mallette (administrator) and Chef Daniel Slat (admissions counselor) working the Food & Drink Fest booth. (photo by Terry Asma, 2020studios) |
We had a great time at the Food & Drink Fest in Hamilton April 12th, 13th and 14th at the Careport Centre. In the week leading up to the event, it was all hands on deck: chefs, students and staff helped to bake, roll, dip, decorate and wrap almost 700 cake pops to sell throughout the weekend. Check our Facebook page for more photos. You will find the recipe for these irresistible little treats on our Recipe page.
Labels:
#hamont,
community events,
food festival,
promotion
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Chef Bill helps with Catelli Pasta food bank donations
Chef Bill starts cooking Catelli pasta while Gary Yokoyama shoots photos for the Hamilton Spectator. |
We had a Hamilton Spectator
photographer in last week, taking photos while Chef Bill prepared the simplest
of food: pasta. Why is The Spec interested in this incongruous match? Our chef
was one of sixteen chefs across the country to contribute to an online cookbook
from Catelli Pasta entitled Gourmet Family Meals for Under $10.
The cookbook is part of the
company’s Feed the Hope initiative; Catelli is donating up to one million servings
of pasta to Canadian food banks - one for each ‘like’ on their Facebook page, and one for each box of their pasta sold in Canada between April 1 and June 30. Chef Bill’s contribution was a recipe (‘Long noodles and Special Meatballs’) that has a bit of a twist, yet is simple to make with
ingredients that are common household staples.
To learn more about Catelli’s
campaign, visit their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/catelli.
Once you hit the ‘Like’ button, you will be able to download the recipes and read
about the chefs that contributed to the cookbook. Watch the Hamilton Spectator
for their coverage of the Feed the Hope campaign too.
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Can you guess what sauces are cooking?
Daniel is working on a Chausser sauce. |
They are a big part of French Classic Cuisine, so the
first full week of Advanced Class is dedicated solely to building a sauce
repetoire.
Students review the five mother sauces, and learn at least forty more small sauces derived from these basic building blocks.
Take a look at some of the ingredients that were prepped for the first sauce test last month. Can you guess what type of sauces were in the works, and with which kind of food they would be served?
Mike reaches for the salt to finish off his cream sauce. |
Susan separates eggs to start a Hollandaise. |
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Gone Fishin’
How does your food go from this... |
It’s not what you think. We’re not kicking back with a line
in the water, or nursing a hot toddy over a hole in the ice. And there’s no
catch and release policy. It is ‘Catch and Kill’ day at Liaison, and there is
not much nostalgia involved.
It is a city kids’ fishing trip, as our students trek over
to the nearby Asian market, a cooler full of water in tow. The merchants might
think we are strange (they have never said), but are always happy to scoop a
dozen or so tilapia from their live tanks and deposit them unceremoniously into
the cooler. They handle live fish every day, so this non-event is a contrast to
what lies in store back in the classroom.
One by one, the students, with varying degrees of
trepidation, dip into the cooler to catch a fish with their bare hands, while
trying to avoid the spiny back and dorsal fins. For most, it is the first time
they have ever handled a whole fish, dead or alive. Some are repulsed at the
prospect of knocking it on the head to kill it: others find filleting to be the
greatest challenge.
The chef-instructors focus on the latter, but there’s a
secondary message that they want to relay. Every piece of meat, fish or poultry
that budding cooks and chefs will serve to their customers was at one time, a
living, breathing being. We must respect and honour that life, and the process
involved in bringing it to the table.
......to this? |
Visit our Facebook page for the whole story in photos.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Building a strong foundation with food...
At Liaison Hamilton, we’re all about food. For other
businesses, what’s cooking in the kitchen comes second to what’s up in the
workplace. But some companies know how to mix food and fun, and build a strong
team in the process. Last Friday, staff and board members from The John Howard Society joined Chef Greg and some of our students in the kitchen for an
afternoon of cooking and corporate team building. You can find one of the recipes here on our Recipe page. For more photos of the event,
visit our Facebook page.
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