Category: Culinary
Whether you like your food spicy, sweet, sour, or salty, Thai food has all these flavors and more. Unique in nature because it appeals to everyones food instincts, Thai cuisine is not just bursting with flavor, but every mouthful of it creates an explosive sensation in the mouth, whether its a stir-fry dish, a noodle/rice dish, or a curry. Undoubtedly, its this explosion of taste that is pushing Thai food on the list of most popular cuisines in the world as well as in North America. So who or what gets the credit of having developed such a fantastic blend of flavors that appeal to everyones taste buds? What factors inspired the Thai people to create such fantastic gourmet combinations and the seamless blend of flavors, tastes, and aromas? Why wait; lets find out!
The culinary culture of this royal country boasts of a rich and ancient history. History has it that Thais had already begun to enjoy the Siamese cuisine during the 13th century. Siamese cuisine consisted of servings of seafood and meat dishes along with fresh local vegetables, spices and herbs such as pepper and garlic, on a bed of rice. Due to open borders with neighboring countries, Thailands style of cooking started absorbing influences from India, Malaysia, Indonesia, Burma, and China. Thai food began being cooked with spices, ingredients, and even cookware from these countries. For example, the Thais learned to use, now their most important culinary tool – the steel wok as well as learnt how to create noodles. India contributed in the form of turmeric, chillies, cumin, coriander, and many other Indian spices. However, in addition to adapting the best cooking styles from others, Thais didnt forgo their styles completely. Instead they combined the best of both worlds and created Thai food as we know of it today. An example of this fact is that though Thai food uses noodles in the dishes, these noodles are made from rice and not wheat or egg as with Chinese or Italian dishes.
Other important influences that contributed to the growth and taste of Thai food include spicy flavors of Burmese sambals or red chilly sauces; exotic rice dishes inspired by Indonesian cuisine, and Malaysian curries. In fact, interestingly, one of the most well-known Thai Red Curry dishes is called Penang after the Malaysian state!
Food, as with life, adapts, develops, and enhances itself with time and cultural influences. With the sharing of knowledge, ingredients, and interaction, cuisines mature just like Thai cuisine has.
For more such interesting information on Thai food history and other interesting facts visit our Thai Food website- http://www.templeofthai.com/
Pacojet is a revolutionary countertop machine that is essential to every culinary professional kitchen. It whips up frozen dessert creations quickly, and without much fuss. This is a dream machine for chefs who strive for top quality with minimum effort. It has become an essential food preparation device for chefs nation and world wide.
Pacojet is best known for its Pacotizing process: mixing and pureeing deeply frozen food directly in its frozen state, producing a fine consistency intended to maximize flavors. Using Pacojet as a sorbet, ice cream, or gelato machine is best when using fresh and natural ingredients.
Pacojet isnt just for making frozen desserts. It is a versatile, creative, and labor saving tool that also makes savory sauces, pts, and anything you can imagine.
The 3 step Pacojet process couldnt be easier. Step one: fill the beaker with your ingredients. Step two: freeze filled beakers to -20 degrees celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit) for 24 hours in a regular freezer to ensure that the contents are frozen to the core. If you have a shock or blast freezer, this only takes 4 hours. Step three: Pacotize the contents, using the pacotizing blade with the machine. Enter the desired portions, and the Pacojet does the rest. The results will astound you!
Whatever the application, whether its appetizers, concentrates for soups and sauces, or your favorite ice cream or gelato recipes, the Pacojet process is always the same. Beakers can be prepared in advance or during slow periods, stored deep frozen until needed, and require no thawing either prior to or during processing. Because of the constant frozen state, there is no need for additives, preservatives, or flavor enhancers. Partially used beakers can be put back into the freezer, which means nothing is ever wasted.
No kitchen is too big or too small for Pacojet. Its compact countertop design fits well in any space. The needs of larger kitchens can be accommodated simply adding more Pacojet beakers for higher production rates. Many chefs are known to rely on multiple Pacojet machines in their work spaces. Pacojet requires no special installation and uses a standard socket.
Another benefit of Pacojet is that it will cut time, labor, and ingredients costs, thus increasing the profitability of any restaurant. Cleaning the Pacojet is also a simple and time saving endeavor. Its even easier than the 3 step Pacojet process.
This high performance machine encourages the culinary expert to experiment with innovative ideas for food textures, flavors, aromas, and taste for frozen desserts and savory dishes.
Pacoject is made in Switzerland and is the most innovative food preparation appliance to appear on the market in ten years. It was developed in collaboration with renowned chefs from around the world. Pacojet provides a simple and reliable method for the fresh production of a large variety of frozen desserts. It is a cost effective and labor saving tool that top chefs have been known to take with them everywhere they go.
Charismatic and creative chefs have impacted culture since the 1880s, when France’s Antoine Carme rose to stardom as chef for Napoleon and European royalty. Less than a century later, American Julia Child recreated the world’s understanding of French Cuisine through her cookbooks and television appearances, paving the way for a slew of celebrity chefs in the 1990s and into the next century.
Celebrity chefs earned their fame by starting with culinary school degrees or cooking in their parents’ kitchens. Some supplement culinary school or formal culinary education with natural talent and magnetic personalities to earn public success. Celebrity chefs and their cooking wisdom are available everywhere including a television network devoted entirely to culinary arts and shelves of cookbooks at the local bookstore.
Julia Child: American Chef Turns French
Julia Child, born in 1912 in Pasadena, California, got her start in cooking in the late 1940s after a career in advertising and public relations. Already a graduate of Smith College, she enrolled in Le Cordon Bleu culinary school when her husband was assigned a job in Paris. She later opened a cooking school, L’Ecole des Trois Gourmandes, and published the famous cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking with two colleagues from Le Cordon Bleu. Child became one of American’s first celebrity chefs and enjoyed a long career of television appearances, teaching, and writing.
Rocco DiSpirito: Reality Cooking
New York’s Rocco DiSpirito is one of celebrity chefdom’s best educated stars. He enrolled in the Culinary Institute of America at age 16, where he earned a culinary school degree with honors. He later studied at the Jardin de Cygne in Paris, and spent two years studying regional French food and wine. Rocco rounded out his culinary education with a business degree from Boston University. DiSpirito is known for his fusion of French and Asian styles, and he has opened several popular restaurants. His television credits include the reality show The Restaurant and selling Rocco Cookware on QVC.
Bobby Flay: Natural Culinary Talent
Bobby Flay began his culinary career at age 17, when he was hired at Joe Allen’s restaurant in Manhattan. Allen was so impressed with Flay’s cooking abilities that he paid for Flay’s culinary education at the French Culinary Institute. After receiving his culinary school degree, Flay became famous for his unique blends of Spanish and American cuisines. Flay owns four restaurants, including Bolo in New York, and appears regularly on the Food Network and the Early Show on CBS.
Emeril Lagasse: Kickin’ Cooking up a Notch
Known for popularizing Cajun and Creole cooking, Emeril Lagasse first learned about cooking from his mother as a young boy in Massachusetts. He received his culinary school degree from Johnson and Wales University, and worked as head chef at Commander’s Palace in New Orleans before opening his own restaurants there and in other U.S. cities. He also is a famous TV personality, getting his start in 1993 on the Food Network. The word “bam” has become synonymous with his name.
Nigella Lawson: Writing Her Culinary Career
Unlike most celebrity chefs, Nigella Lawson began her culinary career as a food writer. She earned a language degree from Lady Margaret Hall in Oxford, England and got a job writing a restaurant column for Spectator. She now writes for several major culinary publications, including Gourmet and Bon Appetit, has published a number of bestselling cookbooks based on her motto, “To achieve maximum pleasure through minimum effort.” Today, she hosts several successful TV cooking shows such as Nigella Bites.
Jamie Oliver: Life-Long (and Naked) Chef
Jamie Oliver began his culinary training at age eight in his parents’ popular pub in England. He worked on his culinary education at Westminster Catering College through age sixteen, and he got his celebrity break when he appeared on a documentary about the British caf in which he was working. Television producers called him in the next morning, and he began starring in the enormously successful Naked Chef. He has since written several Naked Chef books, taken his live cooking show on the road, and opened a popular not-for-profit restaurant. Jamie’s dedication to public service and to making culinary education accessible has won him many fans.
Wolfgang Puck: Charismatic Culinary Talent
Originally from Austria, Wolfgang Puck was one of the first super chefs to establish a cooking empire. His interest in cooking was first sparked by his mother, a hotel chef. Puck received his culinary education as an apprentice in the master kitchens of top French restaurants in Europe. His charismatic personality and cooking talent led to television appearances, popular cookbooks, and wildly successful business ventures. Spago, his famous Los Angeles-based restaurant, revolutionized California pizza with its menu of gourmet toppings.
Gordon Ramsay: Villain Chef or Hero Helper?
England’s Gordon Ramsay has become one of the most notorious villains of celebrity chefdom, known for both his outstanding cooking skills and abrasive personality. His soccer career was cut short with an injury at age fifteen. He began cooking four years later, working with top chefs in London and Paris before becoming head chef at Aubergine in 1993. Ramsay’s infamy has spread to the U.S. in his reality television show Hell’s Kitchen. His culinary career continues to flourish with new restaurants and another television series where he provides on-the-spot culinary education to struggling restaurant owners.
Rachael Ray: Much More Than 30 Minutes of Fame
Culinary entrepreneur Rachel Ray began cooking at her mother’s side as a toddler. Her family owned and worked in restaurants in the northeastern United States. Ray learned about gourmet foods working at the candy counter and the fresh food department at Macy’s. She opened a prestigious gourmet food market in New York but left to pursue a culinary career in the Adirondacks. She managed restaurants and taught her “30-Minute Meals” cooking classes, which catapulted her to fame when she was featured on the local news. Ray now is the author of New York Times bestselling cookbooks, publishes her own magazine, and appears regularly on television.
Sources:
“Rocco DiSpirito,” About.com
BobbyFlay.com
“Julia Child,” Chef2Chef
“Emeril Lagasse,” Emerils.com
Every Day with Rachel Ray
“Jamie Oliver,” Food Network
“Rachel Ray,” Food Network
“Rocco DiSpirito,” Food Network
Jamie’s Kitchen
“Jeff Smith,” Seattle Times
“Bobby Flay,” Star Chefs
“Julia Child,” Star Chefs
“Nigella Lawson,” Style Network
“Celebrity Chefs,” Travel-Quest
“Celebrity Chefs,” USA Today
“Celebrity Chefs,” Wikipedia
“Bobby Flay,” Wikipedia
“Emeril Lagasse,” Wikipedia
“Gordon Ramsay,” Wikipedia
“Nigella Lawson,” Wikipedia
“Wolfgang Puck,” Wikipedia
WolfgangPuck.com
If you listen to top media sources like Good Morning America, Fodors, and TripAdvisor.com, you will imagine a vacation in Asheville as a portal to paradise. Lush, tree-lined mountain roads and roaring rivers call to the outdoors persons who thrives on hiking, kayaking, mountain biking or fly-fishing. Thousand s of visitors each year are attracted to sophisticated culinary options in and around Asheville as well as many choices in art and cultural venues. Families vacation in Asheville just to visit to Biltmore Estate or the Grove Park Inn, the Thomas Wolfe House, Chimney Rock and other sites.
Why are major media sources gushing about Asheville? The truth is, these news sources are culling the opinions of the masses. In August 2011, Good Morning America (GMA) queried viewers and wanted to know, Whats the Most Beautiful Place in America? The morning show received thousands of photos and responses. Asheville was selected #1 as the most gorgeous spot in the U.S. The City was nominated by Alan Ostmann from Candler, who lives on the edge of the Pisgah Forest. The ABC News GMA website describes Asheville as “a small city tucked in the Appalachian Mountains rich with art, architecture and outstanding scenery.” Ostmann says he hikes and bikes the area all the time and “am always amazed at the beauty nature can reveal to us.”
I have lived in a woodland garden in South Asheville for over 16 years. This four-season garden on the edge of the wilderness is filled with natural surprises, color and animal life year round. Though I have grown used to the experience of being here, I see visitors who rarely get to experience nature in this intimate way and — they love every minute of it.
TripAdvisor.com recently released their top 15 list for destinations that have seen the most increase in reviews on the website. Asheville is #13 on the popularity list. The TripAdvisor review cites Asheville as “a resort for the wealthy” with a great deal of appeal for the “outdoor enthusiast.” Asheville remains a popular choice among the well-heeled and middle-income families in search of a fun, affordable vacation. Couples in search of a romantic setting, the young or hardy in search of a wilderness adventure, nature enthusiasts, musicians, artists and foodies will find something in Asheville to excite and inspire them, too.
The aforementioned media sources represent popular opinion about Asheville as a destination. Also, being reviewed and recommended by Fodors – a well-established and respected travel publication that has produced guides on major cities for years is a stellar accomplishment. Fodors editors consider Asheville the hippest city in the South. Fodors describes Asheville as a diverse mix of retirees, aging hippies, and halfbacks from the Northern U.S. who retired to Florida and moved halfway back. The review says that the art and culture scene in Asheville “rivals that of Santa Fe,” and is complemented by unique boutiques, restaurants, gift stores, galleries and antique shops in and near the downtown district.
These glowing recommendations from top media sources and websites do not come unearned. At the heart of it all, Asheville truly is a mountain community founded on the ideals and practices of agrarian people. Appalachian Culture remains strong and respected here. George Vanderbilt set down roots in Asheville in the late 19th Century when he built his estate here. The Biltmore Estate drew other wealthy industrialists, architects, artisans, restaurateurs and tourists to the area. Today, the population of 70,000+ is a cosmopolitan, creative and quirky mix of people.
France is the home of French cuisine, and they set an amazingly high culinary standard to which all other native cuisines must live up to. The French have been the leaders and are recognized as the innovators in the culinary arts scene since the beginning of time, and most of the famous chefs in history are French. The well known and famous chefs that are not French, nevertheless, are trained in the art of cooking with the classical French style. Some of the finest cuisine in the world comes from France, and created by some of the finest master chefs in the world. The cooking knowledge and skills required to prepare a good culinary meal is something that the French people take excessive pride in when they present meals. Cooking is an essential part of the French culture, and it adds to one’s usefulness and talents if they are capable of preparing a good culinary meal.
France has many culinary regions and each one has a specific characteristic of its own food and area. Generally French food requires the use of many different types of sauces and gravies. The northwestern region of France produce recipes for cuisine that tends to require ingredients like apples, milk, butter and cream, and the meals tend to be extremely rich and sometimes rather heavy. Reminiscent of the German style of food, the southeastern area of France, the French cuisine is heavy in lard and meat products such as sauerkraut and pork sausage.
The more widely accepted type of French food is southern French cuisine and this style of food is generally served in traditional French restaurants. The cooking is a lot lighter in fat and substance in the southeastern area of France. In the southeast area of France, chefs and their culinary creations tend to lean more toward the side of a light olive oil more than any other types of oil, and they rely heavily on herbs and tomatoes, as well as tomato-based products.
Developed in the late 1970s, Cuisine Nouvelle is a more contemporary form of traditional French cuisine. Served in French restaurants today, this style of food is the most common type of French cuisine. General characteristics of the Cuisine Nouvelle style is decorative plate presentations with shorter cooking times, smaller food portions, and more festive. Many French restaurants cuisines can be classified as Cuisine Nouvelle, although, the more traditional French restaurant cuisine would be classified as Cuisine du Terroir rather than the French cooking style Cuisine Nouvelle. With the references to regional differences between the north and south, Cuisine du Terroir is an attempt to return to the more indigenous styles of French cooking, and also different areas such as Catalonia, Loire Valley and Rousillon. Their specific specialty of French cuisine makes these areas of France famous. As time goes on, the differences between white wines from the Loire Valley and wines from another area of France has slowly diminished, and the Cuisine du Terroir approach to French cooking focuses on establishing special characteristics between regions such as this.
In France, the French incorporate wine into nearly every culinary meal, and it is a big part of the French culture. The French drink wine simply as a refreshment or part of the recipe for the culinary meal itself. It is a part of traditional French culture to have at least one glass of wine on a daily basis, even today.