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Showing posts with label culinary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label culinary. Show all posts

3.26.2012

Ryan Tate: Dine, Don't Just Eat

I had the pleasure recently of interviewing a friend who has been a chef on the restaurant scene for a number of years. Ryan Tate spent the last 4 years as chef-de-cuisine at the well-known Soho restaurant, Savoy, creating the menu, helping to source the ingredients with owner Peter Hoffman, and cooking the food so beautifully for customers on a nightly basis. Savoy has since been revamped, and now Ryan as a chef is looking to find his own niche in New York City. I hope you enjoy the interview, and that you see the adventure in his food.

What is one of the most important things to you right now in the world of food, whether an issue, an ingredient, a philosophy?

I guess I don't necessarily have a food philosophy that I feel is important, other than extracting purity of ingredients. As far as the locavore sensibility goes, I don't personally follow that at all times. I just want to get the best ingredients that I can, and make them taste as good as possible. So, locavorism, farm-to-table - they are great things and work really well, but for me, why wouldn't you just get the best stuff you can serve, no matter where it's from? The planes are going to fly from Scotland anyway. Put my langoustines on the plane! The plane is coming anyway. That's the world we live in. We can prevent doing more damage, but a it seems unrealistic in many ways.

Being yourself as a chef is my biggest sticking point. I want to be someplace where I can perform as the chef I want to be. I didn't get into this business to work at a concept restaurant "homestyle" or many of the other catchy terms out there now. That's my philosophy, what is most important to me at the moment.


Duck breast, chiogga beets, scallions, rhubarb, anise hyssop, olive bread


Do you want to talk about the chef you want to be? 

There are a couple people in the city that are getting it right: Wylie Dufresne, the guys at Roberta's, even the Do or Dine guys down the street. They're doing what they want to do. I want to cook the food the way I want to cook it, I want to make well thought-out dishes, well composed menus. I don't want to replace somebody's Tuesday night meal because they don't feel like cooking. I want dinner to be an experience for people. The landscape of the dining scene, especially in New York, is moving more towards replacing cooking in their own homes, rather than seeking a unique experience. Not that those places don't need to exist, but that's not what I see in the arc of my career.


Was your mother a good cook? Did you have adventurous meals or more meat & potatoes style meals as you grew up?

My mom is a very good cook, and we were never hungry. There were four of us in the house: two boys, my dad and my mom, and we ate so much! We were true mid-westerners, overeating at almost every meal. Thankfully we also had high metabolisms and we're still pretty thin people. I really enjoyed the way she cooked when I was younger. The excitement happened, but only on the weekends, really. My dad is a total meat & potatoes guy, and did not like when my mom would step outside the box and try new things. She was always interested to try new things - she wanted to cook what she wanted to cook too, but also knew she had to satisfy the alpha male in the house. There was a little flair here and there, but not a lot.


What was a standard meal that she would make that you loved? And what was a way that she stepped outside of that and was adventurous?

The one thing I would always do - I loved her spaghetti sauce, but when she was frying the beef and the onions and the garlic, I would pull a couple spoonfuls of that out and season it and eat the ground meat and the garlic before the tomato sauce got in there. I liked parts - like anything - but when the tomato sauce got incorporated, I didn't care for it much. We always had family taco night, steaks on Saturdays, we went to fish fries on and off. On Friday nights we'd go out - maybe an old Christian belief not to eat fish before the Sabbath - I'm not sure, but Friday night everywhere where I grew up was fish fry night. We'd do lake perch. Sunday we always ate at 3 or 4 o'clock at my grandparents house. That was usually pretty meat intensive, like roast beef or a pot roast or something. Pretty typical.

Her most adventurous (standard) dish was chop suey with water chestnuts. She'd make the white rice, we had soy sauce, it was like we were at a Chinese restaurant, minus the chopsticks.




When was it that you took a different direction in food? 

When I decided I was going to be a professional cook, I was living in Michigan and went to a place called the Food Dance Cafe - Julie Stanley was the chef and owner, and was like the Alice Waters of southwest Michigan. I always worked at restaurants growing up and this place was different. It was still homey and had meat and potatoes, but she always used the best ingredients that were nearby. She bought tomatoes and berries from the local producers and knew them by name. It taught me not to just reach for canned food. How do I get more of an experience this way, I asked myself? Julie said I needed to get out of the country[side]. "Pick a city and go work there", she said.

Being a small town boy, I stayed close to home and moved to Chicago. It wasn't a risk really, but I found a place that was renown - chef  Ted Cizma had just won a Food & Wine 10 best new chefs award. But in retrospect, the menu was meat and potatoes. It was wild game: antelope, buffalo, interesting fish I'd never seen before - in the Friday night fish fry, you don't even know what you're eating half the time. I was seeing whole, real ingredients, but at the end of the day it was roasted venison with potatoes and glazed carrots, and that was the make-up of most of the dishes.

Roasted rabbit, adzuki beans, moo radish, sweet potato molasses


I worked at a very busy place called Spring, only for two months while I waited for another job to open, but it was my first exposure working with asian ingredients on a regular basis. That became a way to make more interesting combinations without it being "meat and potatoes". I learned you can have an interesting menu that integrated world flavors. Then, I helped open a restaurant called Fortunato, which was my first dealings with northern Italian style food. No red sauce! I don't necessarily go-over for Italian food, but I admire the approach to the ingredients: don't weigh the food down, let the product sing - like raw artichokes with chestnut honey and fennel. Simple - that was a dish! I didn't stay there very long either (laughs), but it was a great way to see how you could buck traditional French techniques and still have quality food to bring to people. That was an influential restaurant for me, even though things didn't end well for me there. You can never go wrong as long as you're paying attention to what's going on and formulating opinions on what you see, whether good or bad. If it doesn't work, don't do it. If it does, then do it!

What are five ingredients that are indispensable to you?

Anchovies, bottarga, butter, olive oil, - or some sort of fat. I love animal fat, so some kind of fat would need to be represented. Cheese is another ingredient. Any type of cheese - I love lactic flavor. From Cato Corner, they have one that is so funky and so good, called Hooligan. It's available at the farmers market. Saxelby's carries that cheese as well. Basically, if it is coming from a good cow, it will make an amazing product. Fennel, licorice, anise, hyssop - any would be my last of the five ingredients. I love licorice flavor, and I think it's gotta be a genetic trait passed on from my father. He used to munch on black licorice candies all the time.

Flounder roe, brown butter pudding, carrot dashi

What are five things you would have at your last meal?

I would love to eat the quail egg raviolo I ate at Schwa again. It was one of the most perfect bites of food I've had, ever. And, a really well-aged duck. Duclaire duck, aged, roasted whole. The intensified meat flavor is great. A glass of sparkling water - I love sparkling water. Also, a really light red from northern Italy's Alto Adige region - like a blaufränkisch or such. I'm not wine smart enough to tell you, but something from around there is great. And then lastly, Alaskan crab... maybe with fennel and bottarga, like from above.

What's one of your favorite all-time recipes?

Vegetable custards. I love them, always include them, and it's an easy thing to do. The custards deliver a lot of flavor for comparatively small effort. I made a cauliflower custard last year with gruyere broth and trout roe, with burnt leeks. We did a green garlic custard, too, with fava beans, baby carrots, and peas. It is something I continue to return to.

Candy cap mushroom tofu, favas, baby carrots, peas, asparagus and black trumpet mushroom broth

Who in your experience has been a role model? Why?

Peter Hoffman, obviously. He spent a lot of time familiarizing me with the business aspects of the workings of a restaurant. He was always comfortable with my level of cooking and acumen, so we ended up spending a lot of time understanding managing people, and how we evolve in approaching what we can do in a space. That was valuable. Mike Gaspard, one of my closest friends, was the first chef who spoke to me in a way that didn't make me feel like a total idiot. He was chef at that meat & potatoes place in Chicago (which has since become modern American cuisine focused). He was a hard guy, but when it came to speaking about the food, he would speak in a language that you could understand. No punching in the neck....  "Here, you need to do it like this, let me show you". Simple, right? I have friends whom I admire so much too. You never get to say it to them because you see them - you're in the business working - but my friend Blake Joyal is the chef at Wong, and he's doing amazing work there. My really good friend Stephanie Isard in Chicago is doing great things at her restaurant The Girl and the Goat. She's just been nominated best chef for the 2012 James Beard Awards. We don't ever get too intimate and say "hey buddy, I'm proud of you"...


Rabbit liver, hedgehog mushrooms, brandy cream, dried figs, black walnuts, red wine

In the time you have been in New York, how has the culinary landscape changed? What observations do you have?

This is where I get all whipped up and foam at the mouth. (pause) I'm clearly frustrated with the landscape at the moment. I know I'm smart enough to realize the world changes. The economy changes. And therefore all the things that go along with it change as well. What people want to eat, how they want to eat it,  when they want to eat it, how much they want to pay for it. I think 2008 ruined anything high-caliber in this city and instantly changed how restaurants do business and how to make food. It's a fair realization for these business owners, I just don't have to like it as a culinary professional. I don't think everyone wants a cheeseburger all the time. Yet, we are feeding people cheeseburgers everyday all the time in this city. Enough already. It's a business, I know. Why can't we be what we want and do what we want? Not every chef is a restaurateur, chefs still want to be chefs. That becomes complicated in a financial environment. When you wear both hats, you have to make hard choices, and I don't agree with them all. I think there is some good stuff. Torrisi delivers, without a huge cost to the diner. You don't need all the pageantry of fine dining, but it's important to retain fine dining! You don't have have crystal to have a good meal, but you don't have to choose meatloaf either. I think we went too far to one side without pausing in the middle ground. Maybe as things improve financially, as the world stabilizes a little more, things will push back again. That's what I want.

Veal tongue, smoked apples, mustard seed caviar, rye crisps, baby mustard greens

Whiting, green chili purée, meyer lemon conserve, 60 degree egg yolk, capers


It's like the automatic de-cultivation of things - whether food, manufacturing/making of goods and objects, every single thing you can look at, expectations, refinement, and lack of education, are all intertwined.


It seems like there is too much easy satisfaction going on. We are all different, why should the restaurant scene be so homogenous, with $12 being the price point and ... I want to charge a fair price, pay my rent, pay my bills, and deliver an amazing experience (regardless of those things). Don't let your worries creep into the dining room. People should dine, not just eat. We're well trained people, let us do what we do and deliver an experience. I want people to relax and enjoy that.


3.04.2012

Best Food Photography Finalist - Vote for Me!


Thanks to lots of determined people, I am one of 6 finalists  for best food photography in the Homies awards! I hope you'll agree that my images are gorgeous - real food that is lovingly prepared, with an elegant-rustic touch. Thank you all for bringing me this far!!! Now, the work is to get everyone together to vote me to the top!!!!! We have until Friday, March 9th, and I think we can do it. :) XO



Confused by the voting process? Here's how it's done:
If you haven't registered,
1. Click on the image above and then scroll to very bottom of page and click on "register".

2. Add your email and make a password.


3.Click here, sign-in, and VOTE!


 Here are some of my favorite pictures from various stories I've produced - enjoy!

This food makes me happy

A birthday story

desserts make everyone happy.....!


fresh, beautiful food is what living is all about








































































































Thank you all sooooooo much!!! Have a great week and see you on Friday!

1.27.2012

Winter Reds, and Tomatoes, too...






I have a gazillion recipes that I say to myself, "One day I'll make this". That, somehow I am going to just dedicate time to special (and strange) recipes from my grandmother and my mother - and other places in my history - and share them with you all. Usually, it's an idea tucked way far away in the back of my head. I comb through books and the internet and usually end up creating from what's right in front of me.

I can assert now, however, that things have moved more in the other direction as I write about this wonderful jam-syrup creation. My friend David calls this sandalwood jelly, from somewhere in his own history, and it hails from 1948, come my way by another dear friend, Bluejay. I love the idea of savory-sweet preserves, and so tucked this into my files for that down-the-road-someday time. When ripe tomatoes were abundant a few months ago I took to making the preserves. A bit labor-intensive, it was entirely worth it. I wish I'd made three times as much, in fact.

Tomato Preserves
Select the smallest plum tomatoes you can find, so you can leave them whole.

plum tomatoes - Make at least 3 pounds of tomatoes - gives you a good starting amount, and also makes the math simpler

for each pound of cored, peeled tomatoes:
1/2 lb sugar - I used organic brown cane sugar
3 cloves
1 stick cinnamon
1 1/4-inch peeled fresh ginger, cut into thin slices
1/4 lemon, thinly sliced and seeds discarded
cheesecloth and kitchen twine

Select slightly underripe tomatoes. Core and then peel off their skins by cutting a shallow X at the rounded end and dipping them in boiling water for 30 seconds. Slice tomatoes in half across the middle if they are large, and remove their seeds. Layer tomatoes and sugar in a deep, enameled pot (or other heavy saucepan). Cover, and let stand overnight (do not refrigerate).

The next day, put the spices in cheesecloth and secure with string. Add the spice bag to to tomatoes, along with the sliced lemon. Over medium heat, bring pot to a simmer. Cook, stirring often, until the tomatoes have become slightly translucent and the syrup is think and begins to gel. This will take a while and is the most labor-intensive part. Do not boil the syrup, or the tomatoes will fall apart. If the tomatoes finish first, remove them from the pot and reduce the syrup over medium-high heat. Discard the spice bag. Meanwhile, sterilize enough jars to accommodate the preserves. Fill the jars 3/4 full with tomatoes and lemons, cover with syrup, and seal using your preferred method.

Eat the preserves with a creamy or bold, nutty cheese on bread crisps or crackers. I promise you it won't last long...


Savory Winter Rock Shrimp & Sausage Pies, Cast Iron Skillet Tri-tip Steak, Black Pepper Tomato Focaccia....
































Savory Winter Rock Shrimp and Sausage Pies
Serves 4

pie filling:
2 tbsp butter
2 leeks, quartered, rinsed, and chopped - I used the whites and light green parts, and saved the dark green for stock
2 medium potatoes, cut into 1/2-inch cubes - I used yukon gold
2 spicy pork sausages, quartered and chopped into small chunks - you may use sweet sausage, or even another meat - I liked the subtle heat that the spiciness imparts
1 lb (raw) rock shrimp
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 tbsp all-purpose flour
1/2 cup dry vermouth
1 cup fish or shrimp stock

shortcrust for pie tops:
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp sugar
1 cup cold butter, cut into small cubes
1/4-1/2 cup ice water
1 egg plus 1 tbsp heavy cream, lightly beaten, for egg wash

Pulse dry ingredients for the shortcrust in a food processor a couple times to combine. Add butter and pulse until mixture looks like a coarse meal. All can be done by hand, using a whisk to combine, and 2 butter knives to cut the butter into the flour mixture. Slowly pour in 1/4 cup ice water and pulse just until mixture begins to hold together. Add more water if dough is too dry, a spoonful at a time, and pulse again. Divide dough into four mounds, gather into balls, and place (each) wrapped loosely in saran. With your palm, lightly flatten into disks. Refrigerate until firm, about an hour (or overnight).

Remove from saran and roll each disk of dough out to just under a 1/4-inch thick on a lightly floured surface. Cut out a circle from each using the ramekin sizes as a guide, allowing for some overhang. Using a small cookie cutter or tiny glass (a shot glass is perfect here), press into center of circles and remove cut-out, for steam to release. Mound scraps together and save for a separate use (keeps frozen for a few months). Refrigerate again to firm, while filling is cooked and then spooned into dishes.

Melt butter in a deep cast iron skillet over medium heat. Sauté leeks until softened, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes or so. Add the sausage and brown on all sides, about 3 minutes. Add garlic and sear until fragrant, a minute or two. Stir flour in to combine, and then the vermouth, incorporating liquid to leek-sausage mixture. Add stock and potatoes and cook until potatoes are just tender, about 5 minutes. Add the shrimp, stir to incorporate with the rest, and set aside.


Preheat oven to 400 degrees (F). Divide the filling into 4 four-inch ramekins, and top with the cold shortcrust dough, pressing slightly the along edge to adhere. Brush egg wash over tops, and bake until pastry is golden and filling bubbles, about 18 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool on wire rack for 10 minutes before serving. 
These were delightful both as an easy supper, as well as a savory breakfast pie the next day... :-)

Tri-tip Cast Iron Steak
Serves 4

1 1/2 lbs grass-fed tri-tip steak
1 clove garlic, cut in half
1-2 tbsp large flake sea salt - I used Maldon
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup medium bodied red wine, such as Côtes du Rhône or Sangiovese
1 tsp butter

Tri-tip steak is relatively uncommon, and is far less expensive than similar cuts of meat. Only two per cow, it is the tip of the sirloin. This cut is superbly flavorful due to its nicely marbled flesh, and makes an excellent candidate for grilling, broiling, and roasting. Are you drooling yet...?

Bring steak to room temp, rinse it and blot it dry. Dry-age it on a wire rack (use one from a toaster oven, or for cooling cakes, etc.) and set over a plate overnight in the refrigerator, or on the counter for an hour. Rub meat all over with the cut side of the garlic. Heat a dry cast iron skillet over high heat, and scatter sea salt over its surface. When the salt begins to pop, press the steak into the pan, and sear it on both sides until brown, about 9 minutes total, for medium-rare. You may want to turn a fan on or open a window, as this process will make the kitchen smoky.

Transfer steak to a cutting surface, top with freshly ground pepper, and let meat rest for 10 minutes or so. Pour the wine into the skillet and scrape any bits stuck to the bottom of the pan. Reduce the liquid by half over medium-high heat. Remove from the flame and add the butter, swirling it in the pan to incorporate. Serve the steak in slices, pouring the sauce liberally over, and accompany with fresh, crisp veggies.

I used pira cicaba, seared just briefly in the empty pan. It is an heirloom green similar to broccoli which I discovered at the market one day. Delicately floral and with a sturdy crunch, it made a nice counterpoint to the rich, juicy flavor of the steak.

I must confess I did not make the delightful black pepper-tomato focaccia. I only harvested the airy, oil-rich flatbread from its shelf so that I could nibble away at it immediately. I discovered this bread on a rainy Sunday morning, on one of my habitual trips to a neighborhood farmers' market called the Foodshed. My bags overflowing with organic and local produce, eggs, bread, honey, and other delicious things, it is a uniquely great experience that nourishes on every front. So, you can't fault me, right? You'll agree that it looks good enough to steal away with, and maybe challenge me to actually make focaccia soon. Keep your eyes peeled.... :) 

And that brings me to the last recipe in this soothing story...




























Apple Bourbon Bundt Cake
from The New York Times 

for the batter:
2 sticks unsalted butter, at room temperature, plus extra to grease pan
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus extra to dust pan
4 free-range eggs, at room temperature
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 3/4 cup light brown sugar
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp sea salt
1/2 tsp freshly grated nutmeg - I add more, as I love the spice it imparts

additions to the batter:
3 tbsp bourbon
1/2 cup candied ginger, chopped
1 cup sour cream
1 tbsp good vanilla extract
1 1/2 tsp finely grated lemon zest
2 medium granny smith apples, peeled, cored, and coarsely grated
1 cup pecans, toasted and finely chopped

for the glaze:
1/2 cup sugar - I used organic cane sugar
Juice from 1/2 lemon
1/2 cup bourbon

This multi-staged cake is well worth it: moist, subtly nutty, and fragrant with liquor. The only difficulty is its numerous components, so dive in!

Grease and flour a 12-cup bundt pan and set aside. In a small bowl, combine bourbon and chopped ginger, and let stand 10 minutes. In a large bowl, beat together brown sugar and butter on medium-high speed until light and fluffy with stand mixer, fitted with the paddle attachment. - Or, using a hand-held mixer... I hadn't seen this detail in the recipe, and had made my mind up that I absolutely was going to make this delicious-sounding cake, and so forged ahead using my vintage hand-me-down hand mixer. It worked just fine... Determination goes a long way. - With my hand-held mixer, it took about 7 minutes. Beat in the eggs one at a time, fully incorporating each before adding the next.

In a separate bowl, whisk together flour with baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, salt, and nutmeg. In another bowl, fold vanilla into sour cream until combined. Pour in the bourbon from the ginger mixture (save ginger), whisk until smooth, and stir in zest.

Turn oven to 325 degrees (F). With mixer on medium speed, add dry ingredient mix and sour cream blend to the sugar-butter-egg solution in three additions, alternating adding one and then the other. Fold in the ginger, apples, and pecans. Pour the batter into the bundt pan and bake until golden brown, where a skewer inserted into the batter comes out dry, about an hour.

Cool in the pan for 15 minutes and run a butter knife around the sides of the pan to release the cake. Cool on a wire rack, bottom-side-down. While cake cools, make 10 slits on top with a paring knife, and heat the 1/2 cup sugar and bourbon together in a small saucepan over low heat. Gently stir until sugar dissolves, remove from heat, and add lemon juice. Pour half the sauce onto the still warm cake. When it has fully cooled, flip the cake and pour over half the remaining glaze. Turn upright, serve, and accompany with the last of the sauce.



I hope you have thoroughly enjoyed this warming and wintry adventure. So many things to keep us cozy on chilly nights! Here's to a little frost on our windows to inspire us all. :)

1.24.2012

A New Winter Story


Winter is here. There are some new things I am eager to share, so give me a day or two while I put the finishing touches in place. Things to soothe you on chilly days and delight you in their surprising deliciousness. Think winter, and warmth... :)

12.08.2011

Pairings at The New York Times

Suffice it to say, I love shooting projects for The New York Times. I love the challenge to create something interesting and graphic that will show well in either color or black & white, depending on how that week's paper layout determines. Here's an article - with a great recipe, by the way - in which I produced the photography. Appeared in yesterday's print edition and is currently viewable online.























Another I liked, an outtake...



Tis the season.... merry, merry. :)

11.14.2011

Sneak Preview to Holiday Treats

Good day! It appears the holidays are upon us, and what better way to celebrate than with sneak previews to tasty goods that anyone would love to have? Michaela Hayes of Crock and Jar was just featured on Clean Plates. Her kraut blends are amazing and zingy, with all the crunch you can handle. After shooting her products for Sweet Paul Magazine, she sent me home with jars of her Spicy Kraut (think delicious kimchi, with a twist), and the Pickle Kraut (tangy, assertive, wonderful). These unusual treats make a great and thoughtful gift for anyone who loves a food adventure.  :-)

Speaking of Sweet Paul, the holiday issue comes out tomorrow! Here's a sneak peek - including photos by yours truly - over at Bright. Bazaar. I photographed a number of things for this issue, and I am so excited to see how it all has come together. Paul says we can see the full spread after 8 am. I'll be there with a warm cup of coffee to keep me company! Here is a teaser from a story I shot:

There's lots more great bits on the way. The nice people at Crown Maple Syrup sent me some of their fantastic, organic syrups for me to play with, and Gilt Taste thought to include me (thanks, Ruth!) in their new bloggers list to receive products and share stories. So look forward to more treats, coming soon. :)

11.04.2011

Making Pasta

I was invited to take a class at the Institute for Culinary Education, and after browsing various options, decided on a pasta and sauce making course. I love a good fresh pasta, and am a total sucker for the process.

It was a grey, wet day, but I was energized to cook! Our chef instructor reviewed several pasta variations we would attempt as groups: a saffron-based dough, a whole wheat version, and one formed using spinach (or other similar greens). We were also going to create sauces to accompany these delicious noodles: a fresh tomato sauce (and another, with the addition of meat), an alfredo, a fresh herb-style, a Bolognese, and a roasted pepper-cream sauce.

We made our way into smaller groups and Chef Loren demonstrated each process to insure a success of our efforts. After all, we were going to eat the results.... :) I had so much fun photographing everything, I had to remind myself to stop and actually perform each process so that they would gel for later (in real life!). I hope you all enjoy the photographs.  Note: you can click on each series to see them larger! It's worth it.

Measuring flour and making a well






















Incorporating the egg into the flour, bit by bit

Incorporating the mixture using a bench scraper, then by hand

Loren describing the gluten network













































kneading and forming the dough
Porcinis and pancetta, starting out the Bolognese sauce
The three groups made dough using different means - my group made the saffron dough using the dough hook attachment on a stand mixer. Not my favorite way. Chef agreed that it was tedious, and volunteered that his preferred way to make the dough was by using a food processor. I was sold.

He also showed us how to roll the dough out, first using a stand mixer attachment (easy-peasy), as well as a hand-roller. I asked about using a rolling pin as I don't own either, and in his dry wit, complete with a raised eyebrow, explained that that is the traditional way to do it, but to be prepared for a lot of work. Ah well, challenge is my middle name....?


 
Making tagliatelle
This goddess was framed on the wall; the Bolognese shaping up





Ravioli demo


The stand mixer slowly bringing the saffron dough together; a nice photo of me looking like I know what I'm doing :)

Loren shaping tortellino

A humerous moment talking about navels - the namesake for this great pasta~!


Finishing up, time to feast
It was an ambitious list and we did not get to it all. Everyone was focused, however, and some truly delightful dishes were created through the learning process. Nothing like a glass of wine in the afternoon, accompanying food that you toiled and scrambled to make!

I was happily surprised by how delicious it all was. YUM. As a result, I am definitely going to invest in a proper pasta roller to make experimenting at home a real option. There is nothing quite like fresh pasta and its sauce. Thank you for joining me in this adventure!