Posts filed under Leadership

Walrus and Carpenter All About Oysters on the Beach

Each year Taylor Shellfish Farms in association with the Puget Sound Restoration Fund host an amazing evening event that always has a waiting list.

Gone are the trappings of the standard gala fund raiser. No white tablecloths here or soaring centerpieces. Rather this sought after event features the sea, seasoned shuckers, crisp cold white wines and oysters fresh from the tideline.

After gathering at the Queen Anne Taylor Oyster Bar for appetizers, the lucky guests board a coach bus along with long time oyster enthusiasts Jon Rowley and Betsy Peabody and head towards Shelton, WA.

There Bill Taylor of Taylor Shellfish Farms joins the group. Once aboard, he shares the history of Taylor Shellfish Farms from its early days as a small startup company over a hundred years ago to its status as the primary supplier of quality shellfish today to leading American chefs.

When the coach stops, guests are greeted by an evening beach lit by lanterns and shuckers waiting to share with diners some of the world’s best oysters, fresh from the sea.

As guests walk to the beach, they are greeted by Marco Pinchot, Taylor’s Director of Brand Marketing, who sees each has a complimentary Taylor shucking knife along with a please-return wineglass – all for a reason.

That’s because waiting down on the beach is cold iced wine and shuckers standing behind deep iced trays of fresh-from-the sea oysters. Those attending the event can then enjoy as many fresh in-the-shell oysters as they like OR learn direct from the pros how to open their very own oysters.

Either way one can’t lose. But wait – it gets even better because there are oysters roasting on the grill and more chilled wine. As guests savor their last oysters, Betsy Peabody recites from memory the entire poem "The Walrus and the Carpenter" from Lewis Carroll's classic Through the Looking Glass.. Impressive! 

After enjoying a warming cup of chowder, it’s time to board the coach and bring the evening to a close.

All in all, the Walrus and Carpenter event is the perfect way to learn more and enjoy more oysters, all while supporting the Puget Sound Restoration Fund, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving water conditions, increasing native species and restoring local habitat.

Like wine and oysters, the Puget Sound Restoration Fund and Taylor Shellfish Farms are a perfect match. Why not join them next year and enjoy the best while preserving the best?

Your Culinary World Copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel  2015

CHEF is a Movie Even the CIA Could Love

There are foodie films and then there are movies that reach beyond Hollywood’s stereotypes about romantic soufflés into the art of heart of why professional cooks cook. One wonderfully different film that pulls no punches is Jon Favreau’s new film CHEF.

And, no, this film is not about the military CIA but rather the far more peace and creative CIA (Culinary Institute of America) in upstate New York, Texas and California.

The authenticity of this film is amazing from knife skills to how chefs create. The story begins as Chef Carl Casper (written and played by Jon Favreau) faces culinary boredom as a ‘successful’ high-end Los Angeles chef who has been cooking the same boring dishes for five long years. Mon dieu!

                     

When Chef Casper learns that he is about to be reviewed by the famed critic Ramsey Michel (played to perfection by Oliver Platt) he decides to alter the long established menu and create something new and innovative.

His urge to create brings him into direct conflict with the restaurant’s owner (played as a cold hearted money man by Dustin Hoffman). The result is a disaster that literally goes viral thanks to the Internet and soon the Chef is unemployed, drifting without a compass professionally or personally.

The rest of the film follows the Chef with humor and pathos as he rediscovers thanks to a food truck, an insightful son and fine friends that cuisine to be authentic must reach beyond the kitchen and connect with life.

In the end there is laughter and music and joy for both the Chef and the audience lucky enough to catch this uniquely honest film that in the end does more than show the stress and strain of the back of the house. It captures as few films do the true reason cuisine is an art – when well done we can changes lives: including our own.

Your Culinary World Copyright Ana Kinkaid/Peter Schlagel 2014