A Week at the Culinary
Institute of America (continued) - Cooking, Hyde Park, NY,
tasted on December 19-22, 2005 — We're finally back in the
swing of things here at tastingmenu, and it's time to pick up where
we left off recounting our week taking a class at the Culinary
Institute of America (the C.I.A.). We've covered a variety of topics
already including: the
facilities, student life,
and the lectures. Enough
beating around the bush, it's time to get to some cooking, and in
fact that's today's topic. Cooking in our spacious classroom
kitchen. Actually, cooking was what we spent most of our time
doing during the week (with eating a close second) so it's time we
got to it.
After lecture each morning we hit the kitchen. Our class was
organized into 3-4 person teams. Each team had a series of dishes to
prepare. We prepared the first round of dishes over days one and
two, and the second round during days three and four. Some dishes or
elements of dishes could be prepared a day in advance so it worked
out. And this is a fine thing whether cooking for a couple of
people, or cooking at a slightly larger scale (a dozen or two) like
we were.
In fact, scale is really the operative word when it comes to all the
cooking we did. When it comes to food, scale is the enemy of great.
A great dish is a living thing. Chemical reactions are happening
especially when it comes to hot dishes. And each dish, each
ingredient (even ice) has a window in which it's at its peak. Making
a great dish is all about great timing. Making sure that all the
ingredients come together when they are all at their peak. This is
hard enough. Try doing it with multiple dishes for dozens (or
hundreds) of people is an unbelievable challenge. And cooking
professionally is much less about (in terms of energy spent) about
creativity in cooking and ingredients than it is about what many
companies call - program management.
Program managing your dishes requires careful and thoughtful
preparation. But it also requires creativity. What do you do when
you've got dozens of people coming for a meal, you've got several
more dishes to prepare, and a key piece of equipment is missing? You
improvise. I needed a way to make sure the top on my
Mozzarella, Roasted Tomato, and Prosciutto Terrine stayed
depressed so the terrine set tightly. It was nothing that couldn't
be fixed by some of the
attachments for the industrial strength mixer that each weighed
a ton. It's possible that someone in the afternoon session needed
those mixing attachments and couldn't find them because they spent
the night in the fridge keeping my terrine compressed. This is of
course not the optimal way to operate as it can bite you in the ass
as well. For example, on one of the days I had some extra chicken
and decided to make some chicken soup. My father and I were having
our regular debate about who makes a better chicken soup. (I do of
course.) I put the soup in the fridge overnight so we could try it
the next morning. The next morning I walk in to find it gone. I
searched the entire place for it. No luck. I can't prove that our
student teacher who showed up early that day to make lunch for the
staff of the Continuing Education Office used it. But when I rolled
in at 6:52am he already had the start of his paella going. Last I
checked you need stock to make paella. I'm guessing a seafood stock
would be best, but chicken wouldn't be the end of the world. And
this particular student teacher, while super helpful and
knowledgeable around the kitchen had an aversion to going down to
the storeroom to get anything. I suppose an alternate possibility is
that my soup was so damn good, the evening class ate it.
Unfortunately this will remain a mystery. The main lesson that I
took away was that I was on my own and had to worry about every
detail of what I was doing. Nobody was going to look out for me, and
in the most extreme cases other people's behavior might either
purposefully or inadvertently really screw me if I wasn't careful.
Luckily my soup was only something to prop up my ego and not
something I needed to serve the dishes I'd committed to deliver.
It was funny, each team got about 3-4 dishes to make each day over
several hours. I've mentioned that the class is tough because people
with all manner of skills come to the class with an even broader
range of expectations. Luckily Chef DeShetler (Chef D) our
instructor was cool with us taking on extra dishes. This is more
complicated than it sounds as it involves getting the ingredients on
short notice from the storeroom. But we managed.
I should say that the kitchen was where Chef D really came into his
own. Whether it was learning to
make our own mozarella, deboning a chicken properly, the instant
demonstrations were particularly educational. Chef D was
particularly good with charcuterie which we later found out was his
expertise.
What really matters of course is how the food we slaved over tasted. We'll get to
that in the next post. :)