June 10, 2013

Hey chef! Once more 'round the track...


In the first week of June, Chef Dean cooked up something out of the ordinary for most chef-instructors – a pursuit that has little to do with culinary skills. In the weeks leading up to the Canadian Cancer Society’s Relay for Life, he pulled together a team of culinary students and family members to support the annual fundraiser.

Selling cookies and tacos-in-a-bag
 for  the cause. 
On the evening of June 7th, Chef and the rest of the relay team dodged raindrops and walked all night at Guelph Lake Conservation Area with the woman that motivates and mentors them each day.  Their moniker- Elaina’s Secret Agents – holds the key to their inspiration. 
Chef Dean (right) and Chef Elaina (centre) at the
kickoff to the Relay for Life.


Click on the link to learn more about Relay for Life, and stay tuned for more photos in the next couple of days.









May 15, 2013

Food safety becomes second nature



Meat, poultry and seafood are always stored on
the bottom shelf of fridges and freezers,
 so they cannot drip into other foods. 

Chef Dean’s voice drifts from the classroom as he and the students discuss various ways to prepare poultry. Food safety is woven into every detail, from storing and handling the raw product to cooking technique and temperature, along with storage and use of leftovers.  

Rarely does a day pass on campus that we don’t hear the well-entrenched terms “cross-contamination” and “food danger zone.” Avoiding these should become as automatic as breathing. In the classroom and the kitchen, students learn the conditions in which pathogens thrive, the temperature at which most of them are destroyed and the speed at which they can reproduce. 

Every student is issued an instant-read
thermometer (blue-in sleeve pocket) to
check the internal temperature of
meats when they are cooking.
Our kitchen equipment helps with food safety – fridges & freezers keep foods below 40F, dishwashers have external thermometers to ensure water is over 140 F, and instant-read food thermometers are part of every tool kit. 
A clean kitchen is essential to prevent
the spread of food-borne pathogens.

Though these lessons are not everyone’s favorite, they are vital to the reputation and longevity of every 
food establishment, and the health and safety of their customers.They are also essential to our students’ future, as each of them must pass the Region of Waterloo Public Health Safety Food Handlers Certificate before they graduate.

To learn more about how we promote safe food handling, visit our Facebook page. 










April 08, 2013

Meditation in the kitchen......



Most cooks are energized by the adrenalin rush of dinner service, the orchestrated hustle in a crowded kitchen. But the quiet hours at Liaison can also be an inspiration, before the creative process begins anew.

Dim light reflects off idle stoves, utensils wait in ordered assembly, and coolers hum a background melody unnoticed in the chaos of the day.

The counters sparkle, the floors are scrubbed. Tools are stacked in casual congregation as sauté pans on gleaming shelves form a military rumba line. Spring scales are poised for action while sauce
pans rest, nestled together on open racks.

The stillness is like meditation; a space to clear the mind, and slide into the day centred, focused, and ready to learn.





March 27, 2013

A positive attitude and strong spirit awarded at graduation and beyond...


 Kirandeep received Liaison Kitchener's
highest honour: the annual Award of Excellence.
Giovanna-
Certificate of Recognition


Chef Dean Michielsen has a sweet spot for all of his students, even after they have flown the coop. At last week’s graduation he sent his fledglings off into the culinary world with a mix of pride for their accomplishments, and sadness for their departure.

The room was filled with graduating part-timers from 2012 along with their families and friends, as Chef recalled the highlights of their time here at Liaison. “The dedication and enthusiasm of part-time students makes it exciting to teach you,” he says of the people that most often juggle full-time jobs, family responsibilities and evening classes. It also made his task of choosing just four students for achievement awards a very difficult one.    “Every one of you has the passion.” 

Chef Elaina Ravo, Director of Liaison Kitchener had her own words of wisdom & experience for those she addresses as "our very precious students”.
Teresa-
Certificate of Recognition
 
“Being a professional chef is a gift and an honour. The only limitation in your path is you,” she advises. “To achieve your dream, you need a positive attitude and a strong spirit. You may have to get out and knock on doors, sometimes until your knuckles bleed. Some doors will be shut in your face, but you have to pick yourself up, brush off the dust, and keep knocking.” 


She closed with these timeless words, credited to many philosophical minds over the decades:
“Watch your thoughts, they become your words;

watch your words, they become your actions;

watch your actions, they become your habits;

watch your habits, they become your character;

watch your character, it becomes your destiny.”


Lonnie - Certificate of Recognition

For more photos of our March 20 graduation, visit our Facebook page. 






March 11, 2013

What's on the menu? Knife skills and technique with a recipe on the side......


Chicken curry with basmati rice, lime and cilantro.
Knife skills are an inherent part of
most lessons.
With so much going on at Liaison Kitchener during the daytime – full-time programs, special events, Friday lunches – our evening classes so far have been flying under the social media radar. Since they attend school just two evenings per week, these part-time students are part of the school’s social fabric for a much longer stretch of time than the daytime students, and deserve a little more attention. 

The lessons flow a little differently at night: while daytime classes concentrate on classroom theory in one five-week stretch, the part-timers get textbook material interspersed with hands-on kitchen time, giving them a chance to apply their freshly-learned theory at the stove as they work their way through their term.

Last week Chef Tekin had a couple of poultry lessons on the menu, walking the evening students through an Asian curry with basmati rice, along with a poached chicken leg, wrapped in bacon and stuffed with ricotta and spinach.

Chef Tekin wraps stuffed chicken in plastic wrap and foil
before poaching.
The goal is not so much for students to learn a recipe or two- those can be found in any number of books, magazines and websites. Knife skills and technique, however (cutting up a whole chicken, cooking methods, etc)  are at the heart of every lesson, giving students a chance to practice these essentials each time they don their aprons. 

For more photos, visit our Facebook page. 

February 04, 2013

Fuel your passion, feed your mind....


Chef Elaina Ravo in the library at Liaison Kitchener

The library at Liaison Kitchener feeds the mind and fuels the imagination; a sanctuary from the hustle of the kitchen and the intensity of the classroom.

Racks of neatly stacked magazines – Fine Cooking, Saveur, Cook’s Illustrated - flank a cast of characters, standing side by side like soldiers at role call: Brits Gordon Ramsay, Heston Blumenthal and Jamie Oliver are next to the new-world influence of the Barefood Contessa, Emeril Lagasse, and our own Ontario local-food champion Lynn Ogryzlo.

The bold, primary colours of the Culinaria Series defy political boundaries: Germany and France rub shoulders with Greece, while Spain and Italy get acquainted. Across the room, the complex layering of spices from Lebanon, Morocco, Jerusalem and Turkey share the shelves with fast and fiery Vietnamese. There are cookbooks in Arabic too, for a truly authentic reflection of the flavours of the Middle East.

From the textbooks Professional Cooking for Canadian Chefs and Garde Manger, to the lay cook’s Culinary Landmarks: A Bibliography of Canadian Cookbooks – 1825 to 1949, these tomes reflect the provenance and care of foods we turn to for comfort and celebration.

 Classroom theory, knife skills, food safety and classic technique will make professionals out of Liaison’s students. It is this library, though, with its combined passion of generations of chefs from around the world, that will help them forge a culinary identity for themselves and for this country.
All photos by Terry Asma, 2020studios.com


January 11, 2013

Students become entrepreneurs and bankers. "Would you invest in these ventures?"


Andrew (left) and Ali (right) explain the details of the property
they researched for their Bollywood Lounge. 
Cassindra and Larry's marketing
material for their food truck.
Some were dressed to impress, buttoned up, tucked in and ready for business. Others nervously reviewed their Power Point programs, or prepared sample foods to bring their presentations alive. It was the final hurrah for Advanced students, revealing the projects that had consumed much of their time of late. At the same time they were refining, exploring, and putting personal touches on their creative efforts in the kitchen, they were also developing business ventures: fleshing out concepts for a food business, from menus and target markets all the way through to location and design.

Kathy (left) and Siavash (centre) dressed for success.
Their mission this past week – the last before their graduation - was to convince their fellow students that they had done their homework. While project partners walked everyone through their lofty goals, questing for investment capital, the rest of the class played banker, asked questions, and tried to decide whether the business would be a reasonable risk.

While it may be some time before these new grads can think about starting their own café, bistro or food truck, the lessons learned here- from missed details, oversights, or brilliant innovations - provide a solid foundation that will stay with them throughout their careers.
Chef Dean checked out Ali & Andrew's online
marketing while their presentation was still in progress.


January 03, 2013

Are you craving our Friday lunch? Eat first with your eyes.....

Happy New Year! The Liaison College Kitchener campus is still blissfully quiet until we resume classes on Monday January 7. Our first Friday lunch of 2013 will be held on January 18. Until then, you can eat with your eyes: Click here or follow the link below to view a few of the tantalizing dishes our students created last year.

Bon Appetit! Hope to see you in 2013.



http://www.facebook.com/pages/Liaison-College-Kitchener/524198780925429