Search
Contemporary Terroir
Interesting People

Mitch Bechard, Glenfiddich's Brand Amabassador West, shares the very best. Thank you, thank you!

Lamberto Frescobaldi has been appointed the new President of Marchesi de' Frescobaldi, Tuscany's legendary 700-year old winemaking group. Bravo!

Food Arts just awarded their July/August 2013 Silver Spoon Award to Seattle Chef Tom Douglas for sterling performance. Bravo, bravo, bravo!

Patrick Norquet, the Product Designer Bringing Style to McDonald's French Division 

Sylvia Woods, 1926-2012. Harlem's Queen of Soul Food Who Taught a Whole Nation to Appreciate Its Complete Culinary Heritage

Marion Cunningham, 1922-2012. Inspired Advocate of American Home Cooking, James Beard Colleague, Author and Esteemed Grand Dame d'Escoffier

 La Mancha Wine Ambassador Gregorio Martin-Zarco shares a true Spanish treasure with the world.

Naeem Khan, Style Setting Designer of Michelle Obama's WHCD Dress

Terron Schaefer, Sak's Senior Vice President of Creative Marketing - Co-Creator of The Snowflake and the Bubble 

Pete Wells, the NEW Restaurant Critic for the venerated New York Times - Enjoy the Feast! Ah Bon Appetit!

Garry Trudeau Who Transferred the Faces and Feelings of the 1968 Harvard - Yale Game into the Insightful Doonesbury Commentary Cartoons

Chef Patron Massimo Riccioli of London's Famed Massimo Restaurant and Oyster Bar - Celebrity Perfect 

Carl Warner, Creator of Food Landscapes, a Culinary Terrain Extraordinary

Howard Schiffer, Founder of Vitamin Angels, Giving Healthly Future to Millions of Children

Françoise Branget, French National Assembly Deputy AND editor of La Cuisine de la République, Cuisinez avec vos députés! (or The Cuisine of the Republic: Cook With Your Deputies!)

Professor Hanshan Dong, Developer of the New Antibacterial Stainless Steel - No More Kitchen Germs!

Frieda Caplan, Founder of Frieda's - Innovative Vendor Who Introduced New & Rare Produce to U.S. Well Done Frieda!

Adam D. Tihany, International Famed Hotel & Restaurant Designer To Be New CIA Art Director - FANTASTIC CHOICE!

George Lang, Founder of New York's Trend-Setting Café des Artistes sadly Passed Away Tuesday, July 5, 2011. Rest in Peace.  A Great Gentleman. 

Chef Pasquale Vari of ITHQ - Canada

Nach Waxman, Owner of the Legendary Kitchen Arts & Letters Culinary Bookstore, NYC

Chef Roberto Santibanez, Noted Master of the True Mexican Cuisine - Both Historic and Modern 

Jeremy Goring, the Fourth Goring to Direct the Legendary Goring Hotel, London

Elena Arzak, Master Chef of Arzak, Basque Restaurant in Spain

Yula Zubritsky, Photographer to the Culinary Greats including Chef Anne-Sophie Pic

Adam Rapoport, New Editor in Chief of Bon Appetit

Christine Muhlke, New Executive Editor of Bon Appetit, which recently relocated to New York City

Darren McGrady, Private Chef to the Beloved Princess Diana 

Master French Chef Paul Locuse, Esteemed Founder of the Bocuse d'Or Culinary Championship

Graydon Carter, Editor Extraordinaire and Host of the Most Elite of Post Oscar Parties, The Vanity Fair Gala

Cheryl Cecchetto, Event Designer for Oscar Governor's Ball 2011

Antonio Galloni, the New California Wine Reviewer at Wine Advocate

Tim Walker, Moet & Chandon's New Photographer Extraordinaire

John R. Hanny, White House Food Writer 

Nancy Verde Barr, Friend and Colleague of Julia Child

David Tanis, Co-Chef of Chez Panisse and Paris

Colman AndrewsAuthor of Ferran

Special Finds

Thanks to the IceBag, your Champagne will now always be chilled. Bravo, Bravo, Bravo!

Canada's Crystal Head Vodka, 2011 Double Gold Winner at San Francisco World Spirits Competition - Though Halloween Perfect It's So Much More Than a Pretty Bottle: Fastastic Taste 

Post It Paper Watchbands - How to Remember Anything in Unforgettable Style

     
Kai Young Coconut Shochu - Stunning New Rice 'Vodka' from Vietnam, the Full Flavor of a Coconut in a Bottle!

Mandarian Hotel Group Now Offers Diners the Newest Cyber Currency - Worldwide E-Gift Cards

Qkies Cookies Makes QR Codes So Sweet

Air France Brings Art Aloft with New Menu Covers

Moet's Ice Imperial Champagne, a New Summer Favorite at Cannes Film Fetival Designed to Serve on Ice! 


P8tch, Customized Cloth URL patches - Perfect for Website ID Link on a Chef's Knife Roll

Dexter's New Knife Shape, the DuoGlide - An Innovative Design that More Than Makes the Cut & Then Some!

Spring Cupcakes, Perfect for Easter and Beyond, Thanks to Jelly Beans

Chocolates as Stunning as Rare Jewels from Promise Me Chocolate: Great for Mardi Gras or Elegant Weddings

Microplane's Fantastic New Hard Cheese Mill Exclusively from Williams-Sonoma

Be Enchanted by Red Italian Rosa Regale Sparkling Wine, Perfect with Chocolate for a Rose Themed Wedding

Moet & Chandon, the Official Champagne of the Oscars

Hu2 Design,  Art Stickers for the Kitchen 

Dry Fly Vodka of Washington State

New Portability with the Collapsible X-Grill by Picnic Basket

Before there was Champagne, there was Saint-Hilaire, the original sparkling wine

Chilean Winers to Remind Us All of True Courage

Monk's Head or Tete de Moine Cheese Slicer by Boska

The Amazing Smoking Gun by Poly Science

Maytag - Great Blue Cheese

Bookshelf

Ukutya Kwasekhaya - Tastes from Nelson Mandela's Kitchen is more than a just a book of recipes. Each dish tells one part of the 20 year journey the Mandela Family's cook traveled on South Africa's path to freedom.

Like Water for Choclate uses Magical Realism to capture the transformative qualities of everyday food and drink into something more. Also consider reading (and enjoying) Joanne Harris' amazing Chocolat.

Seven Fires by Argentine Grill Master Francis Mallmann is a must have book as all things Latin are set to become a major culinary trend.

Food Landscapes by Carl Warner, London's Amazing Commercial Food Photographer (and yes, there is a 2012 Image Calendar for your wall - Happy New Year!)

Trading Up by Michael J. Silverstein and Neil Fiske, a Must Read for All Who Market Luxury

Las Cocinas del Camino de Santiago de Compostela Captures the Essence of this Great Spanish Journey of Discovery

La Cuisine de la République, Cuisinez avec vos députés! (The Cuisine of the Republic: Cook With Your Deputies!) by Françoise Branget

Toast by English Food Writer Nigel Slater

Dinner at Buckingham Palace by Charles Oliver, Royal Household Servant

Tihany Design by Adam D. Tihany and Paul Goldberger - Truly Inspiring!

Hollywood Cocktails by Tobias & Ben Reed

The Art of the Chocolatier by Master Chef Ewald Notter, National Pastry Team Champion

The Stork Club Bar Book by bon vivant and culinary critic Lucius Beebe

Les Gouttes de Dieu, French Edition

Great Places

Entries in Movies (75)

Monday
Nov072011

Before Starbucks There Was Arbuckles Coffee

Yes, there was coffee before the wonder of Starbucks everywhere. And if you had lived in the American West in the heyday of cattle drives and main street gunfights, your coffee of choice would have been Arbuckle’s, for sure. 

But to appreciate why Arbuckle's was so popular with all those cowboys and gunslingers, we have to go back just a little bit further than the rip roaring days of the West in the late 19th century.

Before Arbuckle's coffee became available, coffee beans were sold in the general store in their original state, unroasted and very green. The cowboy purchaser then had to take the beans, put them in a cast iron pan and roast them over an evening campfire.

If a single beam was burnt, which was very easy to do with only the stars overhead as light, the whole pan of beans had to be tossed. Even if the beans were successfully roasted, the roasting process was inconsistent and so was the strength of the much needed coffee at the end of a long and weary day.  

It's easy to see why then that prior to Arbuckle's, tea was the preferred American beverage, not coffee. Enter John Arbuckle, coffee savior and trail-blazing food vendor extraordinaire.

Back in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, far from the dusty plains of the West, John and his brother were experimenting with new ways to seal the flavor and aroma of already roasted coffee into a package while working at their family's grocery store.

Arbuckle found that if he added an egg and sugar glaze to the beans after roasting and pack them while still warm in airtight paper bags they retained their original flavor and freshness.

Fantastic – improved flavor and increased product stability! He had a winner (and he knew it!)

Arbuckle promptly formed his own company. But he still had to get his product noticed. He designed a bright yellow package with distinctive red lettering that any buyer could easily recognize on a country store shelf without having to read the label. For as the movies often portrayed, many of the cowboys were not highly educated.

Arbuckle knew that and he knew that the life of the cowboy was a lonely one. Often months were spent with only a herd of cows and one’s horse for company. Moving with the herd meant traveling light – no books, and certainly no laptop, Internet, i-Phone or i-Pad. Just silence alone under the hot sun and endless night sky.

So he created informational trading cards that featured historical and geographical information and images and packaged them in every bag of coffee.

 He also included a stick of peppermint candy for sturring, just in case the cowboy didn't have a spoon. The peppermint flavor became so popular that local restaurants were forced to put similar small round candies to gain their business when the cowboys came to town. Still today many restaurants offer small peppermint candies at the end of the meal but most have forgotten how the tradition began.

But to return to the cards, so easily to carry, they were often called the “cowboy’s library”.They were so valued that cowboys even used them as money in a poker game. Arbuckle’s coffee is still available today and it's still as good. If you have never tasted the “Coffee that Won the West”, you should. It's literally history in a cup.

Just be sure, when you walk into a modern coffee shop today and see the news on the latest flat screen TV monitor or boot up the Internet to check the Market returns, to remember that your path links directly back to that solo cowboy - the one with a mug of Arbuckle’s coffee, gazing at a trading card and learning about the world beyond his campfire.  The past, in truth, is never really far away for the day we live today. 

That's something to remember because everything in our Industry has a history, a heritage- even a simple cup of coffee. Each and every day the past, as welll as the future, is with us as we work to serve our guests.

Post Note, November 8, 2011: After Arbuckle's introduced ground coffee, there was little use for the traditional hand-turned coffee mill until Joseph Glidden used it to twist common wire into barbed wire. With barbed wire came the end of the open range and the establishment of the great fenced western ranches. 

Once the boundaries of the ranches were established, roads (and general commerce) could be more easily developed. A small but interesting culinary fact - thank you once again, John Arbuckle. Small things often make a great difference in the course of history.  

Your Culinary World copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel 2011

Thursday
Nov032011

New James Bond Movie SKYFALL Launches at Massimo Restaurant and Oyster Bar

Yes, James is back and just in time for the 50th anniversary of Hollywood’s longest and most successful film franchise. The new film, entitled Skyfall, will premiere in the fall of 2012 and stars once again the fabulous Daniel Craig.

And where did the over 100 reporters from around the world go to attend the film's press launch?

Why none other than the famed Massimo Restaurant and Oyster Bar in London.

If you doubt this amazing restaurant’s popularity with celebrities, just consider that Johnny Depp also appeared there for the press launch of his latest installment of the Pirates of the Caribbean series – On Stranger Tides

Given the setting for the film (water, water everywhere) – this legendary seafood restaurant seems the perfect destination for Depp and his fellow actors. (Not to mention the lucky attending members of the press – thank you Johnny!)

But back to Bond. The new film will be the 23rd time Bond has dazzled and with Craig, acting as our daring savior from disaster, this film is sure to be a worldwide hit.

Speaking of worldwide, the film’s still closely guarded plot is projected to range from England to China to Istanbul and finally to Scotland.  Such a wealth of destinations is sure to trigger (pardon the pun) new culinary trends and flavors.

Hosting all this wonder at El Massimo is Chef Patron Massimo Riccioli himself.  

Beginning in Rome, he directed the culinary delights at La Rossetta, the oldest Michelin star rated restaurant in Italy.

Now London is the lucky city able to enjoy his memorable feasts from the sea to shining sea.

Let’s just hope that the celebrities attending the launch don’t forget to enjoy those vodka martinis that James made so very popular as they dine on the best that chef and the oceans can offer.  

To be sure, “Shaken, not stirred” should help boast beverage profits around the world as countless movie goers applaud Ian Flemings 007 hero one more time in true cinematic style. 

Your Culinary World copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel 2011

Friday
Oct282011

New PUSS IN BOOTS Movie Will Make All Things Spanish So HOT!

All things Spanish will only get hotter with the premiere of DreamWorks new movie Puss in Boots, starring Antonio Banderas as the elegant voice of the utterly unforgettable feline purrr-fect hero.

With lines like "I smell something familiar. Something dangerous. Something - breakfasty" and "I hate Mondays", what chef can't relate to this noble gato?

Add in magic beans and golden eggs and, well, this movie is sure to be a big hit worldwide with everyone be they child, parent or chef.

That said, innovative chefs everywhere know a great theme when they see it. And this year (and next), it is going to be all things Spanish but with flare and surprise (Puss would so approve).

And speaking of breakfast and golden eggs, why not create exactly that with the amazing edible food spray from The Deli Garage. Applied with style (oh so Spanish), it's sure to create a never to be forgotten a la Ferran meal worthy of any chef's knowing smile.

Shouldn't we all then say "Ole!" and tip our hats to a great (and very funny) new DreamWorks film. Just don't forget your toque and BOOTS!

Post Note, October 28, 2011: Here are several additional great lines from Puss in Boots that are truly worth of Chef and supportive staff...

"Is it hot in here? Or is just ME?"

"Fear me, if you dare."

"You made the cat (substitute the word 'chef' here) angry. You do not want to make the cat (chef) angry." - followed by a swip by something sharp and great personal embarrassment.

Post Note, October 30, 2011: If you still doubt that things Hispanic will be a hot trend in the coming year, check out the well dressed Japanese business men dancing their away across Mexico in Genki Sudo's World Order viral music video. The tightly choreographed moves are almost equal to any performed by the staff of a well run kitchen. Bravo gentlemen!

 Your Culinary World copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel 2011

Friday
Oct212011

Innovative Design Makes It the Best of Times

This is an amazing time to be within the hospitality industry. From the culinary scientists creating at PolyScience to the talented hotel architects working in Dubai, the future is going to be, well, simply amazing.

Just consider PolyScience’s new take on take on an Old Fashion Cocktail, not on the rocks, but WITHIN the rocks (ice cube we mean). Not only does their Refrigerated Circulating Bath technique create additional “table drama”, it will also greatly increase the ease of service at large functions which include a preset bar service.

But the future doesn’t stop there – take a look at Dubai’s upcoming plans for the world’s first rotating hotel. The waltz-themed music adapted from the epic space movie 2001 seems the perfect choice for this breath-taking future structure that’s sure to include the most modern of restaurants.

With such tools at the disposal at chefs, food and beverage directors and as well as bar masters, it's truly the best of times to be creative!

Your Culinary World copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel 2011

Friday
Oct142011

You Will Be Inspired by the New Film THE WAY  

Our profession is not a mere job, done for dollars. Rather it is a journey about life’s meaning learned along the way every day.

Now there is an outstanding new movie, The Way, starring Martin Sheen and directed by his own son, Emilio Estevez shares that experience step by step, frame by frame.

Sheen plays a busy corporate father - too busy to be a father. On learning that his only son has died while walking the pilgrims’ path on Spain’s famed Camino de Compostela, Sheen’s character Tom decides to complete the journey to honor his lost son’s memory.

Among the way, among the welcoming plates and glasses of Spanish food and wine that he’s offered, the grieving father finds more the past, he finds the very ingredients of meaning that are sadly missing in his own life.  

Those of us who have spent a lifetime within the industry know that what we do is about more than mere profit or product produced.

It is about an alchemy that involves our very lives, the meaning of our days well spent – a magic made from the everyday, dish by dish, choice by choice. Like the pilgrims in the movie The Way, we also walk a path of discovery, a journey of exploration that in the end is about who we have chosen to become through the amazing medium of our profession.  

Your Culinary World copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel 2011