Monday, March 29, 2010

Got a Scholrship !

Hey everyone, so on March 20th 2010 I went to the Taiwanese Merchants Association of Toronto's Gala dinner to receive a scholarship. At first it was kinda weird to be there but after meeting the other receivers the night turned out to be pretty good. In terms of food it wasn't too impressive, chicken was a bit over so was the salmon, the mushroom soup I just don't have any words for it. Oh well at least the company was good! A few days after the gala I get this phone call from the a Chinese newspaper World Journal and it was the lady who was taking our pictures that night. She did a quick phone interview with me about how I came to be in Culinary school.


22歲的林書緯是家中唯一的男孩子,上有兩個姐姐,按照常理他會被嬌慣得不會做家務事。然而他卻放棄讀了一年的大學,去追求從小就有的夢想——成為一名優秀的廚師,並且還將廚藝一路發揮到了聯邦總理哈珀的家宴上。

3歲從台灣來加拿大的林書緯,從小就喜歡看爸爸媽媽煮飯,夢想將來自己在大輪船上、大飯店裡揮舞鍋鏟的快樂。他約12歲時開始在佛光山組織的活動中幫助擦桌子,再大一些,他就可以做些複雜的工作︰切菜、炸豆腐,忙得不亦樂乎。

高中畢業後,林書緯進入懷雅遜(Ryerson)大學信息技術專業學習,對信息技術完全沒興趣的林書緯讀得很不開心。一年後,當他宣布退學去學廚師的時候,遭到媽媽的反對,在他的堅持和舅舅幫忙勸說下,媽媽終於同意他去追求一直以來的夢。

林書緯於是進入渥太華餐飲藝術學院學習法國餐。每堂課上,先看老師演示四道菜,之後去廚房按照老師教的程序,親自動手做一道。剛開始的時候做出來的味道總是怪怪的,現在他自信地說,我做菜的方法和味道幾乎可以與老師一模一樣了。林書緯所參與的義務工作,幾乎都與食物有關,除了在佛堂幫廚外,還參與青年動力小組(Power Unit)每年夏天舉辦的多倫多夜市,策畫其中的美食大賽,並幫助其他年輕人制定開辦美食攤位的商業計畫;到庇護所為無家可歸者分發食物;另外還為小的慈善團體募捐等。

當林書緯毫不經意地說出去總理的家宴上幫廚時,讓記者大吃一驚︰他學習法國餐僅僅六個月啊!林書緯說,因為老師與總理的御用廚師很熟。哈珀總理有三名廚師,有時他在家中招待國會成員或者傳媒朋友時,會舉辦300人到400人的宴會。每當家廚忙不過來,就會到渥太華餐飲藝術學院搬救兵,林書緯於是自告奮勇。第一次去時十分緊張,渾身冒汗,連話都不敢多說,只是乖乖地坐在一邊,讓他幹什麼才敢動一動。去過三、四次後漸漸放鬆了,現在他與總理的廚師也成為了好朋友,總理在宴會後還與他們合影,並對他們的廚藝表示滿意。他說最遺憾的是,沒有趕上為美國總統歐巴馬獻藝。

談起將來的計畫,林書緯說,他還想學習西餐和義大利餐,然後到船上、飯店裡去工作,十幾年後開個自己的餐廳。


-Taken from World Journal epaper


世界新聞網-多倫多 <-- Orignal Epaper article


I know its in Chinese but I don't know how to translate it haha, I had someone read it to me.

Since I'm now going into Superior Cuisine, I will try to recap most of what happened during Intermediate in the next few days. I'll try to keep each post as small as possible or just do one long post about Intermediate Cuisine.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Hello anyone reading

Its been a while since I have actually updated my blog, I kinda went from blogging almost everyday to blogging once a week to I got so busy that I forgot. Things have calmed down some and when April comes I'll be blogging about my Superior Cuisine Session, till then I'll try to blog about what culinary stuff I'm up to.

Monday, March 2, 2009

At long last!


Gratin de fraises au sabayon 2, originally uploaded by FinasZ.

ALRIGHT! I think its time to be not lazy and finally sit down and actually update my blog; it’s been about a whole week since it saw an update. For one I am sorry for not updating as much as I usually do, been quite tired after school or busy with other things. Tonight however I am free and am dedicated to updating my blog up to par. Alright since the last actual time I updated my blog, a few lessons have gone by, I last stopped off at lesson 22 and now we’re on lesson 26 with one extra lesson about offals!

First up lesson 23, in the demonstration we learned Blanquette de cuisses de grenouilles, Coquilles saint-jacques provencales, Feuilletes d’escargots aux champignons des bois, praires farcies and moules marinieres. In the order that I listed them, this is what type of meat was used for each dish, frog legs, scallops, snail, clams and mussles. When I first heard that we were making frog legs and snails (escargots) I was shocked, since it would be my first time trying both. Sadly though I wasn’t brave enough to try both, I did however cook the frog legs! For the practical class it was pretty interesting, we had to cook two dishes which was a first for us. Not only did we have to cook two dishes but we also had to do it service style. The chef would make groups and then he would go to each group and call orders to us. The first round of orders were pretty straight forward and we only had about 15 minutes to cook both dishes. Of course we were given about an hour to prepare all of the ingredients; we just weren’t allowed to cook any of it. The first round of orders were easy, it was the second round that got a bit complicated. The chef wanted us to feel like what it would feel like in a real restaurant environment, so he would call out the dishes but with no gluten or no tomato. My group was a bit lucky and we didn’t get an order too crazily complicated. The frog legs and scallops I made were pretty good, the first two plates I presented the chef said the frog legs were a bit over salted and the scallops weren’t. Then when round two came by, I had both seasoned perfectly and cooked to the right perfection. I felt that because I had a chance to correct myself right away I was able to produce a better dish. That’s pretty much the same way I generally feel about the previous classes we had, after each and every practical I learn the dish better and feel that I could do a lot better if I got a second chance.

Next lesson 23 and a half, this lesson was just a demonstration class with no practical afterwards. The special thing about this lesson was that it was entirely on offals, yes you read right OFFALS. In case you don’t know what offals are, they are organs and extremities. There are many offals that are edible some are liver, heart, lungs, brains, sweetbread, tripes and prarie oysters. The ones that the chef cook that night were veal brain (I think I forget it if it was veal or lamb), veal kidney, veal liver and veal sweet bread. The smells that were coming up while the chef was cooking were quite interesting, especially when he was cooking the kidneys. In the end I only had enough courage to try the veal brains and sweetbread, which tasted like a really mushy fat. I can’t quite pinpoint the full taste or texture of it, but if anything the texture was like a really rough puree. While I ate both of them I had to force my brain to think about other things other than what I was about to eat.

Lesson 24, we only learned three recipes this time and they were aubergines imam bayildi (eggplant), osso-bucco piemontaise (braised veal knuckle) and gratin de fraises au sabayon (a sweet dessert made with strawberries). Out of the three recipes that we learned that day I had to make the osso-bucco piemontaise. The eggplant though I would really like to try sometime because it tasted quite good. During practical the osso-bucco wasn’t that hard to make, there was just a lot of things to do and we had to race against time since the chef gave us about an hour and half to finish it. For this practical I didn’t really panic much or forget many small details, when I plated to the chef it turned out pretty good. The veal knuckle was cooked well and the sauce tasted alright, except that there was a bit too much fat in the sauce. Other than that one error the chef didn’t have anything out much to complain about, he even said that my seasoning was good.

Onwards to lesson 25, this lesson was quite interesting because in this lesson the chef had to drag a few things on just so that he could do something other than standing there waiting for something to finish cooking. In this lesson we learned to make salade tiede de foies de volaille (this was a warm chicken liver salad), cotes de porc charcutiere (pork chops) and savarin aux fruits (drunken cake). Alright so today we had to make one of my favorite things to eat, pork chops. The catch here is that the pork chops come still attached as a rib and we have to debone and clean them before sautéing. Like the chef had told us before, once you debone and clean one rib all other ribs are pretty much the same. Well he was right, once we did that big beef rib all the other ribs that we had to do were pretty easy and very similar. We also had to make a mashed potato side dish, which wasn’t too crazily hard minus the fact that mine almost died. While I was keeping it was on the bain marie (hot water bath) the plastic wrap broke and some water somehow got in. I thought that the potatoes were ruined, panicked, borrowed my friend’s potato just so I could plate. When I went up to the chef I told him what had happened and showed him mine, but also told him the one on the plate wasn’t mine. He looked at it and tried it, and told me that there wasn’t anything wrong with it. I gave him a blank stare and he said that since only water had fallen into the potatoes, nothing was ruined. I couldn’t figure out why till he explained to me, he said that with water I could just strain the potatoes and then on low heat steam out the water. He also told me that it was a good thing it was only water, because if it was anything else my potatoes would have been ruined. Other than the potato scare, my sauce and my pork chop was cooked properly. I was quite surprised that I managed to cook the pork chop with some pink still in the middle when I was quite sure it was fully cooked (mind that these were LARGE pork chops).

Ah Lessons 26, finally I have caught up in blogging about school, in this lesson we learned how to make civet de lapin a la francaise (rabbit stew), soufflé au fromage (cheese soufflé) and bavarois rubane (a mousse with 3 different layers). The crazy part of today’s class was that we had to debone and cook a rabbit at the same time make our own pasta. First of all I was a bit freaked out that we had to cook rabbit, I thought that out of all the things in life rabbit would be the only thing I would never cook. Turns out I was wrong, although I did try some of the rabbit meat and it didn’t really have any crazy taste to it. It was like I was eating any other meat, maybe like if I were eating chicken. Today though was insane, some of the intermediate and superior students were telling us that a lot of people during their session didn’t finish on time. With that being said we were all panicking a bit, but at the end of the day we all pretty much finished by 2 and a half hours, except for me and two other people (we finished 2 minutes late). Deboning the rabbit wasn’t too hard after I did it once and got a feel of where I should cut and what not. The annoying part was to clean off the rib tips, your suppose to somehow rip the skin right off the ribs and then cut off the excess meat. The chef was being nice and told us that we only had to present one of the rib pieces cleaned. Making the pasta dough wasn’t too bad; it was rolling it out to be super thin that was a pain. In the end when I presented my dish to the chef, he told me over all everything was good minus the fact I was a bit late and that my pasta was a bit thick. Today was a pretty good day for me in practical, since today’s dish is supposed to be one of the hardest to complete on time.

With the days going by, I come to realize that time just keeps on flying by, when school first started it felt like 3 months was a long time away. Now that I took in a deep breath and slowed down the world a bit, I figured that 3 months is like a blink of an eye. With that in mind, my final exam is coming up soon! Hopefully I have learned well enough and am going to furiously study and prepare for it. With all my experiences and with my constant improving of my techniques, I feel that by the time exams are here I will be able to ace it. I also feel that as the days go on I feel more and more confident about my cooking skills as well as my task management skills.



Because of the over due update to my blog, there are too many pictures so it would be a lot faster if you just visited my flickr account and look at all the mouth watering pictures there
Dave's Flickr Page

Monday, February 23, 2009

NAC Black and White Gala Weekend!


Appetizer Dish, originally uploaded by FinasZ.

Alright the past few days I’ve been quite busy as well as lazy, Wednesday and Thursday I was just lazy. Friday and Saturday though were different; I was the complete opposite from being lazy. But before I get into what happened on Friday and Saturday lets start off with Wednesday. For me Wednesday was a bit of a wind down from the Monday class, because we were doing a dish that I felt was simpler. The dishes we learned in demonstration class were Filet de rouget a l’ains (red snapper), Lotte au poivre vert (mon fish), Filet de feltan a la duglere (halibut) and Escalope de saumon en papillotte (salmon). The way that the salmon was cooked was actually pretty neat; it was also pretty different compared to the other recipes we’ve learned in the past. The previous recipes we’ve learned were all generally cooked in oil or butter, but this was just seasoned and cooked. Making the vessel that contained the salmon was also quite neat; you don’t even need tape or glue to hold the edges together. In the next demonstration class we learned how to make sautee chicken with a mushroom and tomato sauce which tasted so very good. The other thing was we had to debone the chicken whole. We also did a few other recipes that day which were Pintate au chou, perdix pochee a l’estragon and Margret de conard aux champignons sauvages.

The practical for Wednesday which was the Filet de rouget a l’ains (red snapper), went pretty well for me. Preparing the fish was a tiny bit hard but after filleting it, it wasn’t so bad. The rest of the recipe went by pretty smoothly, the fish stock was good, the vegetable was okay and the extra dish we had to make (rice pilaf) was okay too. When I presented I was quite happy with my dish, but the chef told me that my vegetables were a bit over cooked and that I should be a little gentler when stirring the rice with my fork. The practical on Friday night was a bit tougher than the previous fish recipe. First off we had to debone a whole chicken; the deboning process was a bit tough for me at first. Now that I think about it though it actually isn’t too bad, at first I wasn’t sure which bones stayed and which were to be removed. I also wasn’t too sure on which parts of the chicken bone that were left I was supposed to cut the tips off of. After deboning the chicken the rest of the dish actually went by pretty smoothly with a few exceptions of course. Those few exceptions were that I burned my sauce a bit and by making the sauce more of a darker brown color it gives it more of a bitter taste. The end product was decent, it could have been a lot more runny, needed a bit more salt and of course the bitterness. The vegetables that went into the dish weren’t hard to do at all; I cut my tomatoes a bit larger than what I should have though. At the end everything came together, I seared my chicken perfectly and plated all correct. We also had to do an extra dish on the side since we have so much left over time, the chef made us do which ever cut we wanted to do of a potato. I decided to make them into little balls and cook them anglais style and then sautee them in butter (which I forgot to do, due to the time factor).

Now with the school part out of the picture, we move onto the other exciting part of Friday and Saturday! Friday before any of my classes started, I went to the NAC (National Arts Centre) to volunteer in the kitchen. I got there at 8am with Dat; we got settled and went straight to work. The task they had us to was make salmon roses, one of the chefs at NAC would slice the salmon for us and we’d roll it into a rose (I later learned his name was Trevor). When we thought we had finished all that was needed, it turned out that we were short a few salmon roses. So Chef Bento came by and inspected each and every one of them. He saw some were a bit larger than what was needed, and asked us to redo some of them. After readjusting some of the larger salmon roses, we were able to squeeze out another 32 pieces. Once the salmon was complete, we were sent off to another section of the kitchen and were told to wrap lettuce and daikon into bundles. These bundles were for the appetizer, they were to stand in the middle of the plate on top of some hummus to hold it up. So we did 50 of the lettuce/daikon wraps and had to get ready to go back to school for class. So we went back to class, did the class thing, went home, slept and were suppose to wake up bright and early but ended up sleeping in till about 8. I was suppose to meet Dat and Lisanne for breakfast, but I was so tired from the night before I kept sleeping till the time I had to leave for the NAC. Got to the NAC at about 10am and started work right away. The first thing they had me do was use a machine to roughly peel potatoes and then finish off the job with my paring knife. At first I wasn’t sure how to use the machine that well, so I was a bit slow to start off. Then the chef working beside me showed me a few small tricks and after that I was zooming through the potatoes. Once the potatoes were finished off, we headed over to the other side of the kitchen and started plating the part of the appetizer that could go on before service. Which were the salmon, coleslaw, beats, blue cheese and the hummus in the middle to hold up the salad. We all worked quite quickly, each with a task to do and complete. We had to do a total of about 600-700 plates and we zoomed through it like it was nothing. After the plating of the appetizers we went for a short break, because of the adrenaline I wasn’t too fond of the break (it made me a bit tired from lack of adrenaline). After the break though we got to do the fun stuff, we got to plate the main course blanks. A blank is a plate with only the vegetables or side garnish and the protein (which would have been the lamb, beef steak and salmon) would be put on seconds before service. So we were like a well oiled machine and zoomed through all of that pretty quickly as well. With the blanks done we started getting ready to bring up all the food to our stations and prep for service. I was paired with Stephen and we went with Chef Madan to his station and help him setup for service. About 20-30 minutes after we moved all the plates and food up, we started stacking the appetizer plates to be ready for service. Then once the gala was getting a move on, and we finished the appetizer plates, everything else pretty much came like wildfire. Stephen and I were busy restacking clean new plates for the desserts, when done we went out and saw that the whole kitchen crew was plating all of the main course meals. Pretty much right after the main course was done we went off and began plating the dessert, which was a frozen parfait (the parfait was quite heavenly with a nice rum taste to it). BOOM BOOM BOOM as quickly as we came in, the dishes went out even quicker. The whole service was probably about 45 minutes to an hour (or more long), but it felt like only 15-25 minutes had only passed by. Once the last dessert went out, I felt a sense of accomplishment; I was there to help plate over 150+ dishes.

Once everything was completed, all the dishes and carts were brought back down; we all had a toast with Chef Bento. The team that I was able to work with Saturday night was an amazing group. They all knew exactly what they were doing, when and where they were doing that task. They were so cool that I went out for some drinks with them afterwards. I had a lot of fun volunteering at the NAC Black and White Gala, and had hoped to go there again (which I will be in the future). Saturday left me extremely tired with about 11 hours of work and then having some drinks after.




This here was the awesome team I worked with (stephen left before we could get the picture taken)
The A Team 1

Le Cordon Bleu students with Chef Jose Bento
Cordon Bleu crew with Chef Bento

Just some of the plates we had to plate that night
Appetizer ROW


Demonstration 21 which includes the red snapper
Demostration 21

Demonstration 22 which includes the sautee chicken with tomato and mushroom sauce
Demostration 22

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Turnips AHOY!


Caneton aux navets, originally uploaded by FinasZ.

Woo what a long day yesterday was; I never did enjoy having 3 classes in a row. First up was a demonstration class, then the practical class and then I had a demo assist for basic pastry. Today was a day that most of the class has been dreading, it was the day that we had to turn 70 turnips! Man all weekend ever chance I had I was practicing turing, I even had a study session with some classmates to practice turning. During the weekend things went well, I was turning pretty well minus the fact that I was taking my sweet time. The demonstration was pretty short compared to most of our other demos; we only did 3 dishes again. The 3 dishes that we learned were canetor aux navets (a duck dish), poulet cocotte grand-mere (similar to a roast chicken) and contre filet roti pommes chateau (something like a roast beef). The chicken and beef dish were pretty simple to make, there wasn’t anything too insanely hard about it. The duck dish however was a bit harder to do, we had to truss the duck, then cook it and then turn 70 turnips and after that glaze the duck with a sauce.

During practical class I started off pretty well, I went right on with the duck, trussing it was a big different from the chicken but none the less still the same. After I went on with searing my duck and got a start on the turnips. My duck seared pretty well, so I put it into the oven to let it begin cooking and went back to my turnips. For some reason I was turing a lot slower than I normally was and was struggling quite a bit with it. There was a shortage of turnips and the chef lowered the number of turned turnips down to about 50, but even then I was only able to finish about 30 turnips within the time I had. After that everything went pretty smoothly, I had a nice glaze on my duck and the sauce was seasoned correctly. My day was pretty good, other than the fact that I wasn’t able to complete the turned turnips.

As the lessons go by I learn how to control my time better, I’ve learned that I can’t be spending a long time focusing only on one topic. Now I give myself a time and if I can’t reach the goal I had I move onto the next task so I can complete the overall goal. I also figured I still need to practice a lot more, which I do everyday .




Contre filet roti, pommes chateau
Contre filet roti pommes chateau

Poulet cocotte Grand-mere
Poulet cocotte Grand-mere

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Super Friday!


Petite marmite henry IV soup bowl, originally uploaded by FinasZ.

WOOO! What a great day I had on Friday, the day started off with me recovering from the lack of sleep on Wednesday night. In the demonstration we did three dishes that were taught by a retired chef who had been teaching for over 35 years named Chef Claude. The three dishes we learned all had a very rustic feel to them, they were Petite marmite henry IV, Blanquette de veau a l’ancienne and Truite pochee au court bouillon. I was a bit surprised that it only took about 10 minutes to poach the trout; I thought it would at least take 15 to 20 minutes (truite pochee au court bouillon). The dish we had to do for practical class was the petite marmite henry IV, which I’m not sure what the English would be but it had chicken, veal and beef knuckle. They were all cooked together in a cocotte, simmering on medium heat for about an hour to an hour and half. The recipe itself isn’t insanely hard to produce, except making sure it’s seasoned properly and that the meat has all fully cooked through and is not still tough.

During the practical class I started off doing pretty good, got my knuckles in the cocotte cooking and started right away on the vegetables we had to turn. At this point in time my turn skills have been improving, I just hope they will improve enough to impress the chefs before exams. After that everything was quite straight forward, remember to skim the cocotte for impurities that the meat would produce and season. We also had to make a veloute sauce, which in the end my turned out to be not thick enough but the chef let it go this one time.

I presented the dish to the chef, got some pretty good feedback but was told that the dish is more of a country dish. A dish that didn’t need to be presented in a very exquisite manner and that plating it roughly was good enough. My seasoning was also pretty good and my turning got better, which I’m very happy about. So over all I did pretty well in class today and am wishing for more of these days in the future.



Truite pochee au court bouillon
Truite pochee au court bouillon

Blanquette de veau a l'ancienne
Blanquette de veau a l'ancienne

Cool Candy sculpture
Some type of Candy sculpture 1

Thursday, February 12, 2009

GRILLIN TIME!


Cote de boeuf grille, originally uploaded by FinasZ.

Ah from deep frying and braising we come to grilling! Today was especially fun since the chef began talking about grilling and showed us how to debone and grill a nice rib eye steak. The lesson started out with the chef talking about different terms and he also mentioned about different ways of cooking eggs. Three main types of egg cooking are in the shell, out of shell unmixed and out of shell mixed. The dishes that the chef went through with us were gratin dauphinois, oeufs mollets florntine, rouget grille beurre d’anchois and cote de boeuf grille beurre marchand de vin. The first one was a potato and cheese dish, then an egg with cheese + cream, then red snapper with anchovy butter and last but not least the grilled rib eye with red wine butter.

During the practical class things went pretty smooth for me, I was getting my reduction done and my vegetables cut right away. I worked furiously to get all my vegetables cut and ready to go, but with all my concentration I completely forgot about my red wine reduction. So it burned and I had to restart, that didn’t faze me too much, so I finished up my vegetables and continued onto my meat. I got really into cleaning the rib and making sure that the rib tips were very clean and guess what, my reduction burns yet again. Now at this point I’m getting a bit frustrated, I normally don’t burn my reductions and today it happened to me twice! We had run out of shallots and panicked, but used my friend’s shallots to make more reduction in the end. Since I rushed the reduction the end product of the butter wasn’t as flavorful as it could have been. Other than that screw up, my rib eye wasn’t fully cooked, since someone turned the right side of the grill to low and only kept the left side running at max. I didn’t’ realize this till the end when I was about to remove the steak. The cool thing about that was half the rib eye was rare while the other half was medium rare. I had a lot of fun deboning the rib and then cooking it after wards, even with those slight mistakes I still kept going till the end. Oh we also had to make fries and this baked tomato stuffed with parsley, garlic and bread crumbs. The fries I made were fine, but the tomato decided to look like the leaning tower of pizza.

Over all I had a pretty good day at school, a few stressful moments but in the end I managed to pull through.



Rouget grille
Rouget grille

Oeufs mollets florentine
Oeufs mollets florentine

Gratin dauphinois
Gratin dauphinois