Welcome to my tales of cookery school, food and travel

The first 30+ posts of this blog describe my experiences as I complete a nine month cooking course - the City and Guilds Diploma in Food Preparation and Culinary Art. I did this after I moved out of full time employment and it was purely selfish - I love food, cooking, eating and drinking. Subsequent posts are about, food, travel and adventures.

Sunday, 11 September 2011

Week 9: It's not about the food

It  gradually occurs to me that everything we do, at least in this part of the course, is about the technique not the food. What really drives this point home is braising celery. Who would eat this? You'd have to be a total celery freak - and even then you'd struggle to find something appealing about it. Regular readers of this blog will know I ventured towards the depths of despair with poaching, steaming and boiling, however braising is running a close second. I mean, look at this picture - this is food blasphemy. Don't even ask why the bread gets slapped on top - I have no idea. We were probably told, but the trauma of having to create such a monstrosity has probably erased it from my memory.

Other vegetables we braise do not suffer so ignominiously: the onions are delicious, the leeks - well, like the onions there are much better things to do with them but they are edible, if not desirable. Actually the onions are quite nice as they have bacon stuffed in them, and as even vegetarians know, everything tastes better with bacon.


Meat fares better: slow cooking is the friend of tough cuts and sinewy pieces, and game birds. For those asking "what is braising? isn't it the same as stewing?" here is the answer you've been waiting for: the differences are not that substantial, so pay close attention.

In relation to meat, both methods are suitable for less tender cuts and use long, slow, moist heat cooking methods which breaks down the collagen and delivers more tender result. In both methods the meat is seared/sealed first. Stewing uses smaller pieces that are totally covered in the cooking liquid while braising is for larger cuts or whole joints which are partially immersed in the cooking liquid  - between 1/2 and 2/3. Indeed, braising is a sort of combination pot roasting and stewing. Confused? Imagine how we feel - you won't have to answer exam questions at the end of the year!

The Lamb Shanks are the best thing we do all week.
That and the Boulangère Potatoes. And the Rice Pilaf.  At the risk of repeating myself, the stock makes all the difference. I have braised lamb shanks many, many times in the past and the ones we do at school, using properly made beef stock, are beyond delicious. And I finally achieve a Distinction in my assessment, as do a few of the others.

Lots of out-of-kitchen activity this week: Jiggly guy is a bit hyper over some young thing he, somewhat inadvisedly, went home with one night (dot dot dot). She is texting and calling and turning up on his doorstep with her kids (she's 21 - he's 37 remember). He says he tells her he's not interested but is probably giving mixed messages by replying to texts and letting her in! His mood this week is a total contrast to last week. Having custody and access battles for some time, he was buzzing as he got to parent his two kids for the week while their caregiver grandparent was in hospital. Apparently it all went really well and he is incredibly chuffed to have positive reinforcement from the ex in-laws.

In the meantime,  tongue-stud girl is pursuing Jim (I decide Dumb and Dumber might be a bit unfair so I am rechristening Dumb and Dumber Jim and Jeff the two characters in the film. Yes, I do need to google it as I haven't seen the film, in case you were wondering!!)  In the middle of the week she has a set-to with her ex boyfriend, which apparently results in him trying to run her over. There's rumours of a non molestation order. Talk about dangerous liaisons - and not the egg and cream kind.

Jim tells me he doesn't want to work as a chef, or do anything in the food industry. So why is he doing the course? He has to do something to show he can meet requirements and finish. I ask how it's going so far and hear he's trying! Yes, true, but not in the way he thinks. Loving our tax dollars at work on the student guarantee scheme.

In class there's always lots of guffawing about any food related term that can carry any innuendo: joints; frenching (as in cutlets); breast; faggots; stuffing - the list is endless and the tutor is as inclined to incite nudge nudge behaviour as not. I am moved to remark one day that it's like being back in the 4th form: our tutor says that was as far as he'd made it before entering a kitchen. Pony tail, who has a pretty dry sense of humour, rejoined that 4th form was the best three years of his life!

So that's it for this week. Next week we have more classroom time studying Nutrition. I wonder if I will see my classmates' diets of pastries, chips and meat pies change. After that it's on to frying, so I suspect not!

Sunday, 4 September 2011

Week 8: First, do no harm

Heightened awareness is an interesting phenomenon: after last week's Food Safety  I am excessively (or not) sensitive to food preparation and storage. For example, today there is an extension to the local Farmers' Market with a mini ethnic food festival in the nearby square. I am unable to order any food as my mind is full of concerns. How long has that been sitting there? What temperature is that bain marie? Arrrggghhh - pre-cooked rice, home of bacillus cereus. OK, you are wearing gloves, but what else have you touched with them, including money? It's not called filthy lucre for nothing! Finally I have a cup of coffee and come home and prepare my own food. Hygienically.

This week we complete our First Aid certificates, so that old heightened awareness thing sees me on the alert of potential heart attack victims or ready to assist at highway accidents. Fortunately no-one appears to need my help. Jiggly guy comes across a woman who has been knocked off her bike by a car when he is on the way home from class, and assists by employing the letter D. We learn many useful acronyms over the two days, the first of these being DRS ABC. The letter D is for Danger, i.e. remove current, or avert further, danger. Jiggly assists by stopping traffic around the accident.
FYI
R is for a response - are they responding to voice, touch?
S - send for help!
A - is their airway clear? Tilt the head back. No, it doesn't matter if they might have a broken neck! Being paralysed is the least of their worries if they can't breathe. Though personally, I'd probably prefer death over paralysis.
B - are they breathing?
C - circulation - do they have a pulse? are they bleeding?

Having been in a medical role in a former life I find most first aid is the same as it ever was. Not strange really, when you consider the human body hasn't changed. But of course there is always new research and science moves on,  so some things are different.  It used to be you gave 15 chest compressions to one breath and now it's 30 chest compression then 2 breaths. And so on.

Anyhow, I have now completed Fire Safety, Food Safety and First Aid. I know enough to be dangerous in an emergency.

Thank God we are back in the kitchen tomorrow where we will engage in the slow, sensuous delights of braising, and with any luck there'll be no fires, food poisoning, heart attacks or accidents.

Nothing to do with Cooking School per se, but here are some whitebait souffles I just made. They are from Annabel Langbein's book (delicious!) The Free Range Cook, page 185. This is after the first cooking and I will now refrigerate them. When we are ready to eat them later tonight I will pour tablespoon of cream over each one, pop them back into the oven for 10 minutes - they will rise again like Jesus did (apparently)