Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Wine in the Kitchen DVDs – Fun, Girly Teaching Tools for Home Wine Tastings

Yesterday I had a chance to meet Calgary's Wine Girl Erin Rosar (pictured) and catch a screening of the second episode of her new DVD series Wine in the Kitchen. It's a cute idea: a DVD designed to enable chick-friendly home tasting parties.

The first episode, which is a general beginner's introduction to wine, comes in a pink hatbox-shaped kit. It includes the DVD, an instruction booklet, a set of cloth bags for masking the bottles, tasting notepads and pink pencils (personally sharpened by Rosar's three sons). In case the party host wants to do a blind tasting along with the guests, the instructions include a "spoiler alert" shopping list that can be handed, sealed, to the wine clerk, with a suggested price range.


We guests in the intimate screening room at The Spoke Club got to see episode two, the bubbly episode, while sipping a cheerful Cava. I really liked the straightforward explanations about how champagne (and other sparkling wine) is made, and the tips on how to read labels. I suspect anyone but a trained sommelier would come away from a screening having learned something new about wine, but Rosar's commentary just seems like a casual girlfriend's chat in the kitchen


We repaired to a separate room after the screening for some lovely snacks and some true champagne. Perhaps my favourite part of the whole session was Rosar's list of reasons that justify opening up a bottle of sparkling wine, which includes the following:
  1. Your lipstick is the right shade today
  2. Your kids went to school
  3. You got two green lights in a row
In short, clearly Rosar's a bubbly fan. She's certainly convinced me I should find more reasons to stop thinking of champers as a special-occasions drink and start finding more reasons to enjoy a glass. The Wine in the Kitchen starter kit and DVD is available online and in certain Toronto-area retail stored in the $55 price range. More episodes are planned, including one on beer, one on food pairings and – what will no doubt turn out to be a popular choice – one on wine with chocolate.

What Do the Limes and Peppers Mean?

Not a quiz but a query: I spotted these three limes and hot peppers hung over a shop doorway on Gerrard East (Little India). Anybody know what the significance is?

I have found one pertinent quotation online: "Hanging in the doorways of every business, like mistletoe, is a tiny string of seven chili peppers and a lime to ensure prosperity." It's from a piece of writing by Guy Sibilla about a place called Jaisalmer in Rajasthan.

Free Glenfiddich Whiskey Tasting

On Thursday, October 22 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., the folks at Glenfiddich are holding the second in a series of "Taste and Talk" events, featuring a chance to sample some fine single-malt Scotch whiskies. Glenfiddich Global Ambassador Ian Millar and special guest Richard Poplak will be present. Polak is a writer who spent two years exploring North American cultural influences in the Middle East and Asia for his book The Sheikh's Batmobile: In Pursuit of American Pop-Culture in the Muslim World.

It takes place at One Up Restaurant and Lounge (130 Dundas West, 2nd floor), and it's free of charge. They can accommodate about 100 people, but you must RSVP via email or by phone at 416-963-4297 if you're interested in attending.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

WineOnline Wine Tasting Series

Pantry and South Side Restaurant are among the venues for an upcoming series of wine tastings by WineOnline.ca. Lots of VQA wines are featured, by the way. Here's the rundown:

October 7, 7 p.m.: South Side Restaurant (413 Spadina Road). $39
  • 2007 Altana di Vico, Pinot Grigio
  • 2008 Fabre Montmayou, Phebus Malbec
  • 2006 Ferraton Pere & Fils, Cotes du Rhone Red
  • 2008 Ferraton Pere & Fils, Cotes du Rhone White
  • 2007 Illuminati, Ilico Montepulciano D'Abruzzo
  • 2007 Yorkville Cellars, Sauvignon Blanc
October 14, 7 p.m.: WineOnline.ca (99 Atlantic Avenue, Suite 100). $39
  • 2008 Bodega Catena Zapata, Alamos Selección Malbec
  • 2007 Cave Spring, Riesling
  • 2007, Henry of Pelham Baco Noir
  • N/V Henry of Pelham Cuvée Catharine
  • 2008 La Cappuccina, Soave
  • 2007 Tawse Winery, 17th Street Pinot Noir
October 21, 7 p.m.: Pantry (974 College Street). $39.95
  • 2008 Bodega Catena Zapata, Tilia Malbec
  • 2008 Corte Giara, Pinot Grigio
  • 2006 Marc Kreydenweiss, Barbabelle
  • 2008 Tawse Winery, Sketches of Niagara Riesling
  • 2007 Telmo Rodríguez, Almuvedre
  • 2007 Washington Hills, Gewurztraminer
There's also an October Wine Tasting Pass (all three tastings, all 18 wines) for $99. Ticket prices include hors d'oeuvres; wines may change according to availability. Purchase tickets online and confirm names of guests to WineOnline.ca via email by phone at 416-538-0212.

Chef at Home Michael Smith in Toronto

On Wednesday, October 21 at 4 p.m., Canadian chef Michael Smith, host of Food Network Canada's Chef at Home, Chef at Large and Chef Abroad, will be speaking and signing books at Indigo in the Toronto Eaton Centre (220 Yonge, if you don't happen to know). He'll be promoting his fourth cookbook, The Best of Chef at Home, another in what seems to be a trend of cheerful, down-to-earth, unfussy recipe collections by big-name chefs.

It's the second of Smith's books to come out of the Chef at Home series, and draws from all six seasons. It contains recipes for basics like pancakes, beef stew, chicken noodle soup, lasagna, apple pie and chocolate chip cookies. By the way, I'll be interviewing Chef Smith in October, and promise a profile here on the site.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Making Tomato Sauce with a Crate of Tomatoes

I spent yesterday turning a $20 crate of Ontario tomatoes into 18 jars of sauce. Since all the jars were reused, that's cheaper than what you might buy at most supermarkets, if you don't count the labour or the gas-stove energy. As for the labour, I figure it's a bargain. Let loose on a Saturday, I might well have blown $25 on a movie and popcorn... or much, much worse. The image above shows the very crowded counter where I was blanching tomatoes in the blue pot, then transfering them to the blue colander before tumbling them into the overcrowded sink.


The cooled tomatoes went into silver bowl number one; then I skinned them and seeded them over the strainer in silver bowl number two, so I wouldn't lose any of the good juice. The final step was to run them through an 1897-vintage hand-cranked iron grinder, my big concession to mechanization. (Of course, I'm really jealous of the folks at Well Preserved, with their motorized crusher/seeder/skinner. Apparently they can do a bushel of tomatoes in half an hour; it took me a solid five hours to do 1 1/9 bushels.)


I have one pot that's big enough for the whole shooting match (just!); I think it holds 18 litres or 10 gallons. In the end, I got 18 jars of sauce measuring between 500 and 1,500 mL, so that just about works out. In retrospect, I would do this again, but I'd start much earlier in the day. It was 3:30 in the morning by the time I was able to turn off the canner, since the biggest jars take almost an hour to process.

I would also take the advice of Well Preserved and wear gloves; today my hands feel the way they do if you work with plaster – not sore, exactly, but a bit raw and dry (I noticed partway through the process that they were looking purplish-white and extremely wrinkly.) However, with what I made before, we can now open a jar of nice local tomato sauce every two weeks until the end of April. Well worth it.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Cooking Classes at Dish Cooking Studio

I dropped in to Dish Café – the restaurant part of Dish Cooking Studio (390 Dupont, 416-920-5559) – a few days ago and, while enjoying a really sustaining bowl of Carrot Ginger Soup, noticed that they now sell jams, sauces and other prepared foods to go. Apparently this has been going on for about a month now.

They also continue to offer cooking classes in this rather gorgeous kitchen; here's the schedule up to the end of October.
  • September 28, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Charmaine Baan's BBQ & Smoker. $135+tax
  • September 29, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Joshna Maharaj's Weeknight Dinner Made Special. $135+tax
  • October 21, 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.: Michelle Massey's Perfect Lunch Box. $135+tax
  • October 4, 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.: Michelle Massey's Harvest Baking. $175+tax
  • October 6, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Joshna Maharaj's Frugal Foodie. $135+tax
  • October 7, 1 to 2:30 p.m.: Michelle Massey's BTK: Pan Frying, Sauteing and Frying. $75+tax
  • October 14, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Angie Macrae's Naked in Italy: Rome. $135+tax
  • October 16, 6 to 7:30 p.m.: Kristin Donovan's Tastings – Global and Local Wine. $50+tax
  • October 18, 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.: Michelle Massey's Beginner Chef Essentials. $175+tax
  • October 19, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Celebrity Chef David Lee – SOLD OUT – call for waitlist. $175+tax
  • October 20, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Joshna Maharaj's Veggie Masala. $135+tax
  • October 21, 1 to 2:30 p.m.: Michelle Massey's BTK: Soups and Stocks. $75+tax
  • October 24, 7 to 9:30 p.m.: Charmaine Baan's Date Night Cooking, Dinner & Movie (Tampopo). $125+tax
  • October 25, 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.: Michelle Massey's The Proper Brunch. $135+tax
  • October 26, 6:30 to 9 p.m.: Charmaine Baan's Moroccan Adventure. $135+tax

Cooks 'n' Books at Word on the Street

For the first time ever, Word on the Street is highlighting food writers with a cooking stage, called Cooks 'n' Books. Here's the lineup:
  • 11 to 11:45: Jean-Pierre Challet and Jennifer Decorte (One Pot French) – traditional soups and stews
  • Noon to 12:45: Brian Morin (The Beerbistro Cookbook) – Beer knowledge and food pairing
  • 1 to 1:45: Jennifer McLagan (pictured – Fat) – The argument for eating butter from a spoon
  • 2 to 2:45: Jeff Crump and Bettina Schormann (Earth to Table) – Locavore and seasonal fare
  • 3 to 3:45: Elizabeth Baird (The Complete Canadian Living Baking Book) – What more do you need to know?
  • 4 to 4:45: Jane Rodmell (All The Best Recipes) – One of my recent faves
  • 5 to 5:45: Mairlyn Smith (Ultimate Foods for Ultimate Health) – And it includes chocolate!

Sarah in the National Post

Two food-related pieces in the Post today: one is about the Merchants of Green Coffee, and it discusses civet coffee (they have some coming in, apparently.) The other is about the wonderful Chef Chris Brown (pictured here with community cook Lucy Iervolino), his work at The Stop Community Food Centre, and their amazing Food For Change dinners.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

All the Best Fine Foods 25th Birthday Party and Cookbook Launch


What a cake! What a night! Earlier this evening, Jane Rodmell (pictured, above, with a birthday cake nearly as tall as she is) celebrated 25 year of selling local and artisanal food at her shop, All the Best Fine Foods (1009 Yonge, 416-928-3330). The party was held at ATBFF's temporary digs just south of the Summerhill LCBO; the shop is expected to move back into its refurbished, lovely heritage building within the next few months.

A delighted throng of wellwishers sampled hors d'oeuvres created from recipes in Rodmell's celebratory cookbook, All the Best Recipes (it's the cake-topper, see?) Among the treats were Carrot Ginger Soup, a cool and pretty Spring Green Soup with peas and mint, bites of Beet Salad with Chèvre and Tarragon, Southern Fried Chicken, Duck Confit served on Mini Latkes, Crab Cakes, Grilled Vegetable Bundles wrapped in zucchini, and – one of the clear crowd favourites – Spicy Coconut Shrimp with Mango Salsa.

It was a discerning guest list, too. Among the well known faces were several other redoubtable food authors, including Judith Finlayson (author of nine cookbooks, of which the most recent is Slow Cooker Comfort Food) and current Canadian Culinary Book Award nominee Jennifer McLagan (Bones, Cooking on the Bone and Fat).

By the way, this fabulous gateau was, I believe, a Chocolate Buttermilk Cake. The recipe, as Rodmell pointed out, is on page 430.

Update: Andrea the Gastronaut has also published an All the Best Fine Foods party roundup.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Joey Don Mills Media Opening #joeydonmills


Just got back from the launch of Joey Don Mills Grill/Lounge (15 O’Neill Road at the Shops at Don Mills, Don Mills Road at Lawrence, 416-445-6391). As you can see, they were bustling about in the shiny new kitchen, making butter chicken and other delectable treats for the guests.


One of the most interesting things for me was the Enomatic Wine Dispenser, which allows the restaurant to offer by-the-glass service for almost any wine, because the bottles, when pressurized with (I believe) carbon dioxide, keep the wine in an as-if-unopened state. I was particularly pleased to see a Joie rosé there because we don't see as many nice B.C. wines here as we might. Chef Chris Mills, who gave us the tour, said he's buddies with the folks at Joie, so we shouldn't be surprised to see their lovely wines at his place.

By the way, the Shops at Don Mills are surprisingly easy to get to via the 25 bus north from Pape TTC Station.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Executive Chef Chris Mills of Joey Restaurant Group

Chef Chris Mills started cooking at the age of 20, with six years of restaurant experience already under his belt. He apprenticed under chef Michael Noble at Diva at the Met and worked as Executive Chef at the Metropolitan Hotel Vancouver. His flair for international fusion brought him the Pierre Dubrulle “Rising Star” award in 1995. In 1999, he appeared on the original Japanese Iron Chef, and in 2001, he placed fifth overall at the Bocuse d’Or culinary competition. In 2006 he joined the select group of chefs invited to prepare a meal for members of the James Beard Foundation in New York.

In 2004, Mills became full-time Vice President of Culinary for west-coast-based Joey Restaurant Group, where he runs a rigorous culinary apprenticeship program as well as popular kitchens in 18 Joey locations throughout B.C., Alberta, Manitoba and Washington. On September 18, the first Ontario location opened. The 9,000 square-foot Joey Don Mills Grill/Lounge (15 O’Neill Road at the Shops at Don Mills, Don Mills Road at Lawrence, 416-445-6391) serves an internationally inspired menu in a casual atmosphere, featuring dishes like Ahi Tuna Taco, Lobster Grilled Cheese, Bombay Buttered Chicken and Panang Prawn Curry Bowl.
  • Food Style: It’s mostly built on what I love to eat, and it’s definitely built upon my travels. It seems to be getting simpler and simpler the older I get. I think it’s part of maturity; I respect authenticity and simplicity a lot more. For instance, there’s the French way to make chicken stock and the Chinese way. The Chinese way is just chicken and salt, and the French way is more complicated. And you know, I kind of like the Chinese way.
  • Oddest Customer Request? I had someone who was vegan, lactose intolerant, and allergic to garlic and nightshade vegetables. I don’t know too much that doesn’t fall into those categories. I was fine until it came up to garlic and nightshade vegetables.
  • Scariest Moment in the Kitchen? It’s when you think you’re going to run out of food; everything else is manageable. And I’d have to say there’s that point just before service – it’s kind of like stage fright – you relive it every day.
  • Greatest Triumph? Always, the chefs that I’ve trained that are now out there. One of my apprentices is at the Shangri-La in Singapore and another is in the kitchen in Daniel in New York. The greatest triumph is when they come back to work with you years later.
  • Wisdom for Other Chefs? Be humble. Listen. Don’t be too judgmental. There’s a lot to learn everywhere.
  • What’s Cooking? The last thing I cooked before coming to work was wonton soup. I love it because stocks are just so much fun to cook, so beautiful and simple, and then you can just add whatever you want. But buy the noodles. You can stuff them with whatever you want, but buy the noodles. I think you have to respect where sometimes other people can do it a lot better than you can.
Also check out:

Monday, September 21, 2009

3rd Food for Change Dinnner Menu Announced

Chef Chris Brown of The Stop Community Food Centre (seen here at the centre consulting with community cooks Silvia and Opal) has announced the menu for the third Food for Change dinner, set for Thursday, September 24 at The Stop’s Green Barn.

You can eat it for $75 ($120 with wine pairing), or you can cook in the kitchen under Chef Brown's expert tutelage for $100. Proceeds go to The Stop. Reserve via email, or call 416-652-7867, extenion 250. Now, does this make your mouth water?
  • Potato frite canapés with a pickled tomatillo salsa
  • Seared scallops topped with smoky tomato and zucchini salsa over a butternut squash beurre blanc
  • Roasted veal sweet breads with a cucumber and turnip slaw over an oyster gribiche sauce
  • Raw porcini mushroom salad with wild arugula, confit pork, candied lemon and shaved Monforte Dairy Toscano cheese
  • Apple cider vinegar sorbet with candied basil
  • Roasted local lamb with a nasturtium pesto, roasted new potatoes and pickled baby carrots
  • Sticky honey pudding stuffed with fresh ricotta atop sweet tomato compote

Chefs Jamie Oliver and Thomas Keller in Toronto

Since Jamie Oliver – or @jamie_oliver, as I now think of him – responded to me on Twitter earlier today, of course I have come to think of him as a close friend. (I had tweeted something nice about him and a truly great, unthreatening recipe for tomato sauce he posted today.) Therefore I feel obliged to mention that he's coming to Toronto for a talk at Roy Thomson Hall at 2 p.m. on Sunday, November 22.

He'll be promoting his latest book, titled Jamie’s Food Revolution: Rediscover How to Cook Simple, Delicious, Affordable Meals. Tickets are $49.50 to $99.50, and include one copy of the book. They go on sale on September 28 at 10 a.m. (Hey, I never said I wasn't susceptible to the seductive power of social media!)

Also, The Cookbook Store has just announced that they'll be hosting an evening with Thomas Keller, chef and owner at California's legendary French Laundry, on November 30; location and details to be announced later. He's promoting his new book Ad Hoc at Home, a slightly less daunting volume, apparently, than his French Laundry Cookbook.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Guinness 250th at Ceili Cottage

Chef Kyle Deming and proprietor / shucker extraordinaire Patrick McMurray were already contemplating empty glasses of Guinness by about 1 p.m. today, under the festive black tents at Ceili Cottage (1301 Queen East, 416-406-1301). Naturally; they're celebrating the Guinness 250th anniversary. (What other occasion calls for black balloons?) You have until midnight to get down there today to drink a pint amidst the stepdancers and fiddle players.

Patrick was telling me about some of his ideas for the fall, including a skating rink where the patio is now, ice sculpting, and a glassed-in conservatory-style extension to the cottage that will offer almost as many seats as the patio when it gets cold. And I think he also said something about an ice-fishing hut, but I decided that might be the Guinness talking.

Sarah's Wall of Jars

I did it! My homage to Jamie Kennedy's wall of preserves in no way approaches his level of awesomeness, but – hey – I live in a 12-foot-wide house.

There was a point today when I thought I might have to give up. (Returning the first hacksaw. Don't ask.) But I persevered, and the way I figure it, I'll probably give away enough plum conserve at Christmas (the little jars on the top shelf) to make room for Seville orange marmalade in February.

The bike art is by Coco Love Alcorn, BTW.

TO Tasting Notes Contest – again

Here's another (slightly recycled) contest for you, to celebrate the last few moments of summer. First person who can correctly answer the following question will received a copy of the newly released Slow Cooker Comfort Food by Judith Finlayson.

(In order to win, you must include some kind of contact info with your answer, so I can find out where to send the prize.)

CONTEST QUESTION
Where in Toronto was this picture taken? Answer via the "Comments" function. Ready, set, go...!

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Gilead's Wall of Jars


Ever since I first laid eyes on the beautiful wall of preserved fruit and vegetables at Gilead (4 Gilead Place, 647-288-0680), I've been longing to create a similar place for my jars – not that I can boast such a noble array of local fare as Jamie Kennedy has so lovingly concocted, but I do have some nice-looking pickles and tomato sauce, as well as a great raft of jam. This desire has recently been whetted by reading about the preserve display set up by Dana Harrison and Joel MacCharles of Well Preserved.

One of my challenges is that, instead of having a 20-foot wall to work with, I have about a 30-inch-square spot under the stairs. Nonetheless, I've been conniving and measuring and sizing up the spare lumber in the basement and haunting the local junk shops just in case a little two-shelf unit turns up. But finally I've come to the conclusion that if I want it done to the rather precise size I need, I'll have to build it myself.

Not having a car makes the project a little trickier, but I've picked out a rather attractive board that's about 5 feet long and nine inches wide, and I think I can do something with it. This may or may not happen tomorrow (I also have dreams of making tomato sauce, or maybe a honey cake in honour of Rosh Hashanah, to try out my review copy of The Jewish Princess Feasts and Festivals cookbook), but I'll be sure to keep you posted, whatever happens.

Friday, September 18, 2009

The Stop Launches "Good Food for All" Cookbook

On October 8, The Stop Community Food Centre is launching a four-seasons cookbook. Titled Good Food for All, Seasonal Recipes from a Community Garden and published by Touchstone, it's part cookbook and part call to action on behalf of both local food and universal access to good food. All the recipes were developed at the centre by The Stop’s Joshna Maharaj. Here's a sample recipe for fall:

Joshna’s Vegetable Chili
Serves 4-6

Use any combination of vegetables you like for this recipe. This is a great way to clean out the fridge and pantry. The bulgur is a key ingredient, adding body and texture.

Ingredients
  • 2 tbsp canola oil
  • 1 medium onion, finely diced
  • 2 stalks celery, finely diced
  • 1 serrano or jalapeno chili, finely chopped
  • 6 pitted black olives, finely chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tsp toasted ground cumin
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 2 tsp chili powder
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 medium bell pepper, finely diced
  • 1 medium zucchini, finely diced
  • 2 carrots, peeled and finely diced
  • 1 19-oz (540 mL) can kidney beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 19-oz (540 mL) can chickpeas, drained and rinsed
  • 1 19-oz (540 mL) can white beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 28-oz (796 mL) can whole tomatoes, puréed
  • 1 cup store-bought salsa
  • 1 oz (30 g) bittersweet chocolate, chopped
  • 1 cup bulgur wheat
  • 1 small handful fresh cilantro, chopped
  • 1 small handful fresh parsley, chopped
  • kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
  • zest of 1 lime
  • 1 cup sour cream
  1. Heat oil in a large soup pot on medium high. Add onion, celery, chili and olives and season with a pinch of salt. Stir and sauté until celery and onion are translucent but not brown. Add garlic and stir. Add cumin, oregano, chili powder and cinnamon and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Stir to combine.
  2. Add chopped vegetables, all beans, puréed tomatoes, salsa and 1 cup water. Increase heat to high and bring to a boil.
  3. Reduce heat and allow to simmer for about 30 minutes, or until liquid has reduced slightly. Stir often to prevent chili from sticking to the bottom of the pot. Stir in chocolate until combined.
  4. At this stage, chili should be relatively thin and liquidy, as the bulgur will soak up a good bit of liquid and you don’t want to dry out the dish. Add more liquid if necessary and bring back to a boil.
  5. When chili is barely boiling, add bulgur and stir. Cover pot and let sit on low heat while bulgur absorbs the liquid, about 15 minutes.
  6. Add fresh herbs and stir to combine. Taste and adjust seasoning.
  7. In a small bowl, combine sour cream and lime zest. Set aside.
  8. Serve chili with a dollop of lime sour cream and a handful of tortilla chips.
By the way, tomorrow is the date of The Stop's 4th annual Good Food for All Festval, which takes place from noon to 3 p.m. at 1884 Davenport West at Symington, behind the Davenport Perth Community Centre. It features a community kitchen cook-off, free food samples, food demos, live music and children's activities.

Clam Bake and Corn Roast at Jamie Kennedy's Gilead Café

What a way to celebrate the end of the season! Everybody's favourite local food hero Jamie Kennedy is having people over tomorrow; he's announced his first-ever Summer Clam Bake and Corn Roast at Gilead Café and patio (4 Gilead Place, near King & Parliament, 647-288-0680) tomorrow, Saturday, September 19, from 4 to 7 p.m.

For a mere $10 at the door and a cash bar, he's serving up steamer clams, charcoal-grilled corn, artisan bread, peach crumble and vanilla ice cream. A selection of Ontario wines wll be available, with Steam Whistle Beer.

Photo credit: Mary Elizabeth Armstrong

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Nyarai and Long Dog Wine Tasting #30dowc

Thanks to a last-minute invitation from Suresh Doss (@spotlightcity on Twitter), I was able to drop in on an intimate Ontario wine tasting at a secret underground wine location (honestly!) on Tuesday.

It was a rare chance to try four wines from the inaugural year of a new winery: Nyarai Cellars, launched in June 2009, which uses grapes from both Niagara and Beamsville Bench. A "virtual winery", they only sell online, or in person through the Calamus Estate Winery in Jordan.

The four wines on offer were:
  • Sauvignon Blanc 2007: Nyarai's signature wine to date, with a savour of pear and grapefruit. $18.20
  • Chardonnay 2007: Almost no scent; perhaps a very faint melon aroma. The taste is also subtle; it suggests spicy green apple and cinnamon. $16.20
  • Cabernet Merlot 2007: A raspberry and plum nose followed up with a slightly spicy, fruity frankincense flavour. $18.20
  • Syrah 2007: A dark berry scent matches an equally dark, white pepper-tinged taste. $20.20

Also present was Long Dog Winery from Prince Edward County, with four of their wines, made, they boast, entirely from grapes grown in their own vineyards. Their offerings:

  • Pinot Gris 2007 "Francesca": A pleasantly peachy colour with a black cherry taste; possibly a hint of green olive about the nose. Its sweetness and acidity recommend it to Indian and Thai food. $22
  • Riserva Chardonnay 2007 "Bella": Very pale in colour, very minerally and not sweet in the least; an olive oil scent gives way to a natural gas taste. A grownup's Chardonnay. $34
  • Gamay / Pinot 2007 "Tumbling Stone": Half-and-half Gamay (2007) and Pinot (2006) with a violet hue, a sweet cherry or raspberry scent and a black pepper taste. $22
  • Pinot Noir 2007 "Otto": A scent of raspberry and black pepper with a juicy, really fruity rich cherry taste and a gentle licorice or blackberry finish. That's a lot of flavour for $50

Bad News! Explore Toronto’s Culinary Neighbourhoods Series Canceled

Due to lower-than-hoped advance ticket sales, Harbourfront Centre has canceled its food-focused walking series, Explore Toronto’s Culinary Neighbourhoods, which I wrote about in my most recent post.

A popular event in past seasons, it would have taken visitors to four great Toronto knoshing neighbourhoods on four succesive Saturdays: September 19 and 26, October 3 and 10. No word as to whether there are plans to rebook the series.


Photo by Clarita, Morguefile

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Explore Toronto’s Culinary Neighbourhoods

In The Moor's Last Sigh, apparently, Salman Rushdie says that the entire fascination of the West with the East can be summed up in the one word "pepper".

That's artist and chef Christopher Pinheiro's philosophical point of departure as host of this coming Saturday, September 19's food-oriented walking tour of Gerrard India Bazaar, the first of Harbourfront Centre's series titled Explore Toronto’s Culinary Neighbourhoods.

The series is bound to be exciting. It includes lots of opportunities for tasting, and Pinheiro (who has lived in India and Trinidad) is amazingly exuberant as well as passionate about his subject. His recent presentation on Moros y Cristianos AKA Moors & Christians (black beans and rice), part of the Hot and Spicy Food Festival's "Ten Tastes to Try Before You Die" series, was packed, and featured a red-hot stiltwalking chili pepper devil .

Pinheiro's tours continue on successive Saturdays, always from 1 to 3:30 p.m.; the cost is $40 per tour (which includes food); all four are $125 as a package. Reserve places via the Harbourfront Centre website. Upcoming dates are:
  • September 26: Kensington Market
  • October 3: Chinatown
  • October 10: Greektown

Monday, September 14, 2009

Pickling Green Tomatoes and Beets at The STOP Community Food Centre

I'll be writing about this session for the National Post next weekend, but for now just let me say that I spent an idyllic trilingual (English-Italian-Spanish) aftenoon covering a community pickling session at The Stop Community Food Centre under the direction of Chef Chris Brown (formerly of Perigee) with co-chef Scott MacNeil and the frighteningly competent volunteer team of Lucy, Maria, Opal and Silvia, who kept unveiling side dishes from home or just whipped up out of nowhere: eggplant aglio olio; lemon cake; beet salad.

It was a remarkably joyous time, and, I realized, the first time I've ever worked on canning food with anyone who already knew how to do it. The food, which I believe was donated by the New Farm in Creemore, was just lovely: deep purple Bull's Blood beets plus at least three other kinds: one that was white inside (Blankoma?); one that was yellow (Golden Beets, I think), and Chiogga, which are beautiful with their concentric white-and-red rings. There were also fresh green tomatoes, as per the photo.

Here*, Chef Brown presides over a row of green-tomato jars ready for processing, which will later be used to nourish the 200-or-so folks that The Stop feeds at numerous meals every week. What could be better?

By the way, as I've reported elsewhere, ambitious home cooks can challenge themselves once a month by signing on for about $100 a head to join Chef Brown's kitchen crew to prepare a 40-person local feast at his Food for Change fundraising dinners on behalf of The Stop.

*When I got home with my camera, I realized that every image had elements that were severely blurry. I think this is because – although the session seemed tremendously relaxed and happy – in fact everyone was in nonstop motion all afternoon. Real cooking.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Rising Star Chef Dinners at George Brown Culinary School Restaurant, the Chefs' House

Last year, George Brown's Culinary School opened a new restaurant called The Chefs' House (215 King East, 416-415-2260); this season it's inaugurating a new dinner series: Rising Star Chef Dinners. Every month, beginning September 23, the restaurant will present a four-course dinner for a maximum of 60 people prepared by a top Ontario chef – many of whom, of course, are George Brown graduates.
  • On Wednesday, September 23, Executive Chef Kyle Deming of Starfish Oyster Bar & Grill and Ceili Cottage (pictured) leads off with his Irish/British sensibility and his appreciation of fresh fish, shellfish, steak and duck.
  • Tuesday, October 20 brings Chef Trevor Ritchie of the opulent Queen's Landing in Niagara-on-the-Lake. This George Brown graduate is Ontario's top junior chef and winner of a gold medal in the 2009 National Junior Culinary Competition. He will represent Canada at the World's Chef Competition in Santiago, Chile in January 2010.
  • On Tuesday, November 17, Chef Marco Zandona of Via Allegro Ristorante explores his love of the artisanal regional cooking of Italy. Besides graduating from George Brown’s Italian Culinary Arts Post Diploma program, Zandona has also studied with the International Sommelier Guild.
All dinners begin at 6 p.m. Tickets are $95 per dinner (including tax and tip!). George Brown alumni may purchase up to two tickets for a special price of $50 each. Book advance tickets on NetCommunity.

Get Sweet Fundraiser at Bar Italia

On Thursday, September 17 at 8 p.m., SilverLining Group and JEWlectable Events present a Jewish New Year event at Bar Italia (582 College, 416-535-3621) called Get Sweet.

It's a fundraiser for Ve’ahavta, a Canadian humanitarian and relief organization, motivated by the Jewish value of Tzedakah (Justice), that assists the needy at home and abroad, through volunteerism, education, and acts of kindness, while building bridges between Jews and other peoples. Admission is $18 in advance, $25 at the door, which includes one freshly made gelato or drink of your choice, prizes, tunes from DJ Falcon and salsa performance by TropiCaliente Latin Dancers.

For more information, email The SilverLining Group or click on the Get Sweet link above to order tickets.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Toronto Tasting Notes Contest - Harvest 2009 edition

Here's a fun harvest contest for you. First person who can correctly answer the following question will receive a pack of vegetable-theme greeting cards, drawn by me. (In order to win, you must include some kind of contact info with your answer, so I can get in touch with you to find out where to send the cards.)

CONTEST QUESTION

This tool, on display at the Bowmanville Museum, is designed to harvest one specific local food item (which may or may not be in season at the moment). What is it?

Note: the white disk with the red button is part of the display, but not part of the tool.

Clue #1: This crop is still gathered in the wild as well as farmed.

Answer via the "Comments" function. Ready, set, go...!

Bowmanville Fall Glory Garden Tour

I went to Bowmanville for the annual Fall Glory Garden Tour with my friend Amy (AKA Assertagirl) of Playing in the Dirt, and – although the tour most prominently features flowers – I can personally attest that home vegetable growing thrives in Bowmanville and the surrounding area.

The gorgeous bowl above was Amy's parting present to me; she just popped out and tugged a few things off various plants in the backyard, saying sadly that she hadn't actually had time to do any serious gardening this year.


One of the stops on the tour was the Bowmanville Ecology Garden (45 Liberty Street North), a community garden with a children's section and a butterfly garden, where I took these shots. It's easy to forget how opulent Brussels sprouts are.


Tomatoes, of course, are always lovely...


...as is this collection of noble roots and bulbs, fresh out of the ground.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Sprouting Classes from Toronto Sprouts

Toronto Sprouts announces that they don't yet have a new home, but their sprouts are still available at Organics on Bloor (468 Bloor West) and S.E.E.D Culture (64 Oxford Street in Kensington Market). They're also still offering classes; three editions of their Learn to Sprout from the Pros sessions are coming up from 7 to 9 p.m. on Mondays, September 21, October 7 and October 19 in the 4th-floor Sunshine Room of the Centre for Social Innovation (215 Spadina Avenue). The cost is $40 per person. Preregistration and prepayment are required via email, or by phone at 416-535-3111.

Image courtesy of Super Stock.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Grapes for Humanity's Chocolate and Wine Fantasy at the Four Seasons

On October 8, Grapes for Humanity is holding a sumptuous fundraiser called A Chocolate and Wine Fantasy at the Four Seasons (21 Avenue Road, 416-964-0411), as part of their ongoing program of aid to various humanitarian causes. Previous beneficiaries of their fundraising efforts are Community New Start, which helps to resettle Hurricane Katrina victims in Austin, Texas; One Sri Lanka Foundation, which has been building schools in the Jaffna Peninsula since the tsunami destruction there, and several projects dedicated to achieving self-sufficiency and human dignity for victims of landmines and their families.

The event is a five-course banquet prepared with Lindt chocolate by Four Seasons Hotels Executive Chefs Ashley James (Los Angeles) and Claudio Rossi (Toronto), with matching wines. Special guest Jean-Charles Boisset of JCB Wines will be in attendance; Ken Shaw of CTV News will emcee. It gets underway with a champagne and chocolate martini reception at 6:30, followed by dinner at 7:30 p.m.

The wines to be served are DeLoach OFS Chardonnay 2007, Clos Jordanne Le Grand Clos Blanc 2006, Domaine de la Vougeraie Clos Blanc de Vougeot 2006, DeLoach Pinot Noir Vineyard Designate 2006, Jean Claude Boisset Gevrey-Chambertin 2006, Domaine de la Vougeraie Clos de Vougeot Grand Cru 2006 (apology to the purists; I could only find a picture of the 2005!), DeLoach Forgotten Vine Zinfandel 2007 and La Face Cachée Neige Première. Tickets are a formidable $500, with corporate tables of eight available for $4,000. For reservations, email Annette Quitevis or phone her at 416-445-9920.

Two New Fall Farm Field Trips

Field Trip has added two more dates to its calendar of day trips to working farms. On Sunday, September 20, they tour to Cookstown Greens, purveyors of edible flowers, herbs, sprouts and veggies of all descriptions (a camera crew may be along for the ride). On Sunday, October 4 it's Wheelbarrow Farm, which raises Berkshire and Tamworth heritage breeds of pork.

Trips are $45 per person, and are designed to offer "city folks" a chance to get into the country to see where their food is coming from, to tour a local farm and to buy fresh produce directly from the source. They start just outside the Broadview TTC station in Toronto at 10:30 a.m., returning by 5:30 p.m. Call 416-371-3471 to book or find out more.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

All the Best Recipes by Jane Rodmell

In 1984, All the Best Fine Foods (1009 Yonge, 416-928-3330) opened in what was then more of an antique-store district, but which, with the refurbishment of the LCBO Summmerhill outlet, has since become a prime destination for food lovers. I'm not there all that often, but I do drop in from time to time, either on a whim, or because I'm looking for some special treat for a holiday meal.

It's costly, but with reason; their own products and the ones they source from other suppliers are all top quality. I was therefore excited to hear that proprietor Jane Rodmell has published a cookbook called, of course, All the Best Recipes.

I thought the book might focus on tricksy, difficult meringue-based desserts and temperamental sauces, but if anything, it's more of a beginner's staple cookbook full of essential recipes like mayonnaise; gazpacho, bouillabaise and minestrone; Yorkshire pudding, pastry doughs, mac and cheese and, of course, beef bourguignon. It includes quite a few Indian and Moroccan dishes, and numerous vegetarian recipes, including mains (but few that are truly vegan).

The book opens with a thorough and beautifully illustrated how-to section (cutting up a chicken, dicing onions, seeding a pomegranate, building a double-crust pie). It's also larded with brief essays on key ingredients like sugar, salt, vinegar and olive oil by writer David Cobb (including a surprisingly impassioned ode to butter). It offers suggestions on party menu planning. In fact, what it most reminds me of is (dare I say it?) The Joy of Cooking, back in its better days, three editions ago, when it still used fats and raw eggs, and when it was full of those "about the ingredients" sections.

Of course, with 300 recipes, it doesn't cover the vast scope of The Joy, but it hits the same balance between beginner basics and advanced results. Like the shop it's named for, it insists throughout on using the best ingredients – fresh, local and seasonal – whenever possible.

As for the production, its foodporn attraction is perhaps a little lower than its instructional utility. The rather high-colour photos are arranged in two clumps around pages 100 and 325. They have no margins and seem unappetizingly close-up for the page size. Also, I spotted a table-of-contents typo; I suppose they added the sections on suggested menu planning late in the production process. But these are minor quibbles in a book of such great value.

If I had any real disappointment, it was that Rodmell failed to include a recipe for either Christmas pudding with hard sauce or Yule log, both of which I enjoy purchasing from her. I hope this means she's saving them up for a sequel titled All the Best Holiday Recipes.

Late last night I tested her recipe for gingersnaps. Here it is, printed with permission from All the Best Recipes by Jane Rodmell. (I like the fact that she calls specifically for a wooden spoon, as opposed to a $500 plug-in appliance, to mix the dough.)

Gingersnaps
Makes about 4 dozen cookies

We love the warm, spicy flavor of ginger and use it in the bakery in many forms — ground ginger, crystallized ginger, freshly grated gingerroot, preserved ginger in syrup and even pickled ginger. These spicy cookies are a perennial favorite and are delicious with a bowl of lemon or mango sorbet.

Tip
For crisp cookies, press the balls flat with the bottom of a glass dipped in sugar. If you like chewy cookies, do not flatten before baking.

Variations
For an extra hit of ginger, add 2 tbsp (25 mL) minced gingerroot to the dough with the egg, or add 2 to 3 tbsp (25 to 45 mL) chopped crystallized ginger.

Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C)
Baking sheets, lined with parchment paper

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour (500 mL)
  • 2 tsp baking soda (10 mL)
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon (5 mL)
  • 1 tsp ground ginger (5 mL)
  • ½ tsp ground cloves (2 mL)
  • ¼ tsp ground allspice (1 mL)
  • ¼ tsp salt (1 mL)
  • ¼ tsp ground black pepper (1 mL)
  • ¾ cup butter, softened (175 mL)
  • 1 cup granulated sugar (250 mL)
  • 1 egg
  • ¼ cup fancy (light) molasses (50 mL)
  • Granulated sugar for coating
  1. In a bowl, combine flour, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, allspice, salt and pepper. Set aside.
  2. In a large bowl, using an electric mixer on medium speed or a wooden spoon, beat butter and sugar until blended. Add egg and molasses, beating until smooth. With a wooden spoon, gradually add flour mixture, mixing until blended.
  3. Shape dough into 1-inch (2.5 cm) balls. Roll in sugar and place on prepared baking sheets, about 2 inches (5 cm) apart. Bake in a preheated oven until the edges are staring to brown, 10 to 12 minutes. Let cool for 10 minutes on sheets, then transfer to wire racks and let cool completely.
All the Best Recipes: 300 delicious and extraordinary recipes by Jane Rodmell (Robert Rose, 2009) ISBN 978-0-7788-0223-5 $27.95 CAN $24.95 USA

Canadian Culinary Book Awards Finalists

Cuisine Canada and the University of Guelph Library have announced the shortlist for the 2009 Canadian Culinary Book Awards. The winner will be announced at the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto on November 6. Meanwhile, there's still time to get your hands on some and read them.

English-language Cookbooks
  • The Complete Canadian Living Baking Book: The Essentials of Home Baking by Elizabeth Baird (Transcontinental Books, Montreal)
  • Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, with Recipes by Jennifer McLagan (McClelland Stewart Ltd., Toronto) – got!
  • Small Plates for Sharing, Laurie Stempfle, Ed. (Company’s Coming Publishing Limited, Edmonton)
English-language Special Interest Food Books
  • Beyond the Great Wall: Recipes and Travels in the Other China by Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid (Random House Canada, Toronto)
  • Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood by Taras Grescoe (HarperCollins Publishers Ltd, Toronto) – want!

English-language Canadian Food Culture Books

  • Anita Stewart’s Canada by Anita Stewart (HarperCollins Publishers Ltd, Toronto)
  • Apples to Oysters: A Food Lover’s Tour of Canadian Farms by Margaret Webb (Penguin Group Canada, Toronto) – want!
  • A Taste of Canada: A Culinary Journey by Rose Murray (Whitecap Books Ltd., North Vancouver)

French-language Cookbooks

  • Gibier à poil et à plume : découper, apprêter et cuisiner by Jean-Paul Grappe (Les Éditions de l’Homme, Montréal) – want!
  • Ricardo : parce qu’on a tous de la visite : cuisiner en toutes circonstances by Ricardo (Les Éditions La Presse, Montréal)
  • Les secrets des sauces révélés by Jérôme Ferrer (Les Éditions La Presse, Montréal)

French-language Special Interest Food Books

  • Un jeu d’enfant by Guylaine Guèvremont and Marie-Claude Lortie (Les Éditions La Presse, Montréal)
  • Répertoire des fromages du Québec, Édition augmentée by Richard Bizier and Roch Nadeau (Les Éditions du Trécarré-Groupe Librex inc., Montréal) – want!
  • Les vins du nouveau monde, Volume 2, by Jacques Orhon, (Les Éditions de l’Homme, Montréal)

French-language Canadian Food Culture Books

  • Québec capitale gastronomique by Anne L Desjardins (Les Éditions La Presse, Montréal)

Baking Gingersnaps from Jane Rodmell's All the Best Recipes

I'm a sucker for a good cookie recipe, so when I got my review copy of Jane Rodmell's All the Best Recipes (Robert Rose, 2009), I just had to try her gingersnaps. I do plan to say more about the book itself by and by, but for now I'm here to report that she writes a fine set of cookie instructions.

The layout was very clear, and she even managed to toss in a total of six possible variations without making it seem fussy. You can use powdered ginger, minced ginger root (my option) or candied ginger, and you can set the cookies on the sheet as balls (like the picture), or flattened. I tried both, and the flattened ones really are a lot crisper than the balls. (Normally I'm a chewy cookie girl, but I'd be hard pressed to say which was nicer.)

The dough made exactly 48 cookies, which was what was suggested, with no cheating. I think I will add a marginal note to myself not to put more than 12 cookies on a single sheet though. (I love having marginal notes in my cookbooks.) It looks as though 18 will fit, but the edges touch and they don't come out looking quite so pretty.

My poor old oven runs low. Like 50 degrees low. So I cranked it, and even at that left them in much longer than her suggested 10 to 12 minutes. However, her clear instruction not to take them out until the edges started to brown was a great help. As for taste, with the suggested 2 tbsp of ginger root, they have a very pleasing bite; almost a burn. If one were feeling daring, one might even ramp up the black pepper and ginger an extra tad. Or not... they're very nice.

By the way, don't you like my vintage Peak Freans cookie tin? I bless people who try to recycle things they shouldn't... or who just leave them out in boxes on the lawn, which is how I got my gorgeous collection of antique Mason jars. I daresay this will go over well in the George Brown teachers' room tomorrow – or in the classroom the day after.