Cooking with Sara Foster: Our Turn to Chop and Dice

15 09 2009

My cooking school with Sara Foster continued this morning with a hands-on session culminating with lunch. While Blackberry Farm has a tradition of bringing in top chefs from across the country for its Food & Wine programs, this is one of the first times that students have been invited to don aprons and closed-toe shoes (to prevent a knife accident!) and tackle the recipes ourselves.

Kudos to Blackberry Farm and to Sara for letting us be the guinea pigs.

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After we picked a work station, Sara told us what each group would be preparing. My table’s task was to make Succotash Salad with Garden Tomatoes, while other groups made grilled vegetables, a salad with roasted butternut squash and goat cheese, barbecued pork tenderloin and lemon pie with a divine gingersnap crust. Everything was quadrupled so we’d have enough to feed the group, meaning a mountain of onions to dice, tomatoes to chop and corn to slice off the cob.

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Always helpful and gracious, Sara walked from table to table, advising us to do our mise-en-place prior to starting and answering questions on everything from how to slice jalapenos to whether to add vinaigrette to a hot bean salad or to let it cool first.

Joseph Lenn, chef de cuisine of the Main House at Blackberry Farm, also spent the morning with us, and it was from him that I learned two marvelous, time-saving techniques for dicing onions and tomatoes. I promise to pass them along once I’m back at home and can illustrate them with step-by-step photos. (I couldn’t take them this morning given the amount of food we had to cook (large) and the time we had to cook it in (not so large). Many thanks to both Sara and Joseph for being so patient and kind with all of our questions.

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When all the basil had been mixed into the salad and the last tenderloin had been pulled from the grill, we settled down to enjoy the fruits of our morning, a fantastic buffet of dishes created from Sara Foster’s three cookbooks (The Foster’s Market Cookbook, Fresh Every Day and Sara Foster’s Casual Cooking).
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There, lingering over lemon pie and coffee, we shared stories of our homes, our kitchens, our families. And that’s the whole reason why I cook, because it brings people together for good food and just-as-good conversation.





Cooking with Sara Foster

14 09 2009

Apologies for not writing yesterday. After taking trains, planes and automobiles (literally), I find myself at Blackberry Farm in Tennessee for a cooking school with famed chef and cookbook author Sara Foster.

The program kicked off last night with a five-course dinner and wines by winemaker Pam Starr of California’s Crocker & Starr. But today we got down to business, first visiting the extensive gardens that supply Blackberry’s restaurants with fresh produce like the long beans and Kamado potatoes in last night’s dinner.
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Chef Sara Foster in the garden

Clad in overalls and checked shirt, John the head gardener humbly led us through his garden, sharing stories of seeds he’s collected and saved over the years (he’s part of the Seed Saver’s Exchange) and stopping every now and then for Sara to pick arugula, basil and peppers. Armed with baskets full of produce, our group headed to the demonstration kitchen. John presumably set off to sow turnips, collect sumac berries and do all the other items on the To-Do list posted in the shed.
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Gardener John’s To-Do List

The rest of the morning we watched and listened and talked as Sara prepared the kind of simple, fresh, seasonal dishes that have become her hallmark: roasted red bell pepper and carrot soup; tomato-mozzarella cheese toasts; capellini with feta and mixed herbs; and individual peach-raspberry crostatas.
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Sara with Joseph Lenn, Blackberry Farm’s chef de cuisine

As she moved from one dish to the next, she shared tips gleaned from nearly 30 years in the food business. One of my favorites was to throw all those leftover onion peels, carrot tops, pepper cores, tomato trimmings and garlic skins into their own pot of water and to let them simmer while you’re cooking. The result will be a vegetable broth you can either use or freeze for your next batch of soup. As a farm-share member, I wish I’d known that sooner! (Just avoid things like broccoli stems and eggplant peels, she advised, as they’ll make things bitter.)

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Peeling skins off blackened red peppers for the soup

The beauty of her demonstration was that we got to eat everything we’d picked and watched her prepare, resulting in a lunch I’d put against any I’ve eaten, anywhere. Simple. Fresh. Delicious.

Stay tuned for more updates, as the cooking school continues with a hands-on session tomorrow.








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