Self-Sufficient Kitchen: The Winter Pantry
This ongoing series of classes will introduce you to the basics of traditional food preparation. In a time when we can often mistake “food products” for real food, the “Self-Sufficient Kitchen” will ground students in the processes, recipes and nutritional benefits of cooking from scratch.
As Michael Pollan writes in his book In Defense of Food: An Eaters Manifesto “Don’t eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food.” The self-sufficient kitchen will revisit traditional cooking techniques and reinterpret them in the context of the contemporary urban foodshed. We will examine the city as an agricultural site. When appropriate, the class will take short walking trips to local urban farms to visit local growers and harvest ingredients for the dishes we prepare.
Each class will be taught by Nicole LoBue. Nicole has been working in the food industry in New York and San Francisco since 1990. She studied the culinary arts and whole foods nutrition at the Anne Marie Colbins School of Food and Healing and the French Culinary Institute in NY. With a deep passion for food inspired by her Sicilian heritage and world travels, Chef Nicole Lobue spreads the love of everything delicious to others. A dedicated student of herbal medicine; Nicole firmly follows the political and aesthetic culinary principles regarding the faithful use of ingredients that are healthful both for consumers and the environment.
The Winter Pantry
We are used to finding foods in our markets that do not grow seasonally. In fact, it is estimated that the average American meal travels well over 1000 miles to get from the farm to our plates. This class will teach us how to eat local in the winter months and find the subbtleties of flavor using what is available. We will cook with winter vegetables roots, squashes, tubers, braising greens, rancho gordo beans and whole grains, including farro and quinoa. We will learn
how to cook with these whole foods to make them delicious and nourishing. The class will take a brief trip to a neighborhood farm
to harvest some of the produce that we will use in the dishes we prepare.
The Winter Pantry
We are used to finding foods in our markets that do not grow seasonally. In fact, it is estimated that the average American meal travels well over 1000 miles to get from the farm to our plates. This class will teach us how to eat local in the winter months and find the subbtleties of flavor using what is available. We will cook with winter vegetables roots, squashes, tubers, braising greens, rancho gordo beans and whole grains, including farro and quinoa. We will learn how to cook with these whole foods to make them delicious and nourishing. The class will take a brief trip to a neighborhood farm to harvest some of the produce that we will use in the dishes we prepare.
Classes take place at the Studio for Urban Projects storefront at 3579 17th Street San Francisco from 1:00-5:00 pm. To register please use the link below. For more information please contact us atinfo@studioforurbanprojects.org