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International Istanbul Gastronomy Festival starts in February 2016. Don’t miss it!

International Istanbul Gastronomy festival which is organized by Cooks and Chefs Federation of Turkey is going to start on 11 – 14 Feb 2016  in Tuyap Convention Center which is located in Beylikduzu. Organisation which is the biggest gastronomy festival and competition in Turkey, has been performed for 13 years. Orginasation which is going to happen with the collaboration with WACS, is hosting the gastronomy pioneers in our country at the international level. Intense interest is expected to this festival as much as past years, due to the participation of many important associations and federations around the World. This festival allows to take big steps in the integration of the Turkish cuisine and World cuisine and it is going to introduce the flavours of the World to its followers. Following the past successful organisations, Istanbul Gastronomy Festival gets the title “Continental” which is awarded by WACS, allows young chefs of our country to compete at the international level.

 

Master chefs from around the World who has the possibility of sightseeing around Istanbul and compete at the same time, is going to be hosted with colourful events. Festival also contributes to our country in terms of tourism, brings new chefs to the culture of Turkish and World gastronomy and it undertakes a bridge role in order to make known of Turkish cuisine around World.

 

We are going to witness the fierce fighting of Turkish and World chefs who is going to compete over 70 categories in order to gain medals. Special trainings given to Turkish chefs, they are going to be a jury member at the international level. In recent years, 52 Turkish chefs have qualified to be a jury member. COCFED has a massive contribution to the Turkish gastronomy with this major ongoing festival. COCFED trains intern chefs at World standarts with its new schools and certification programmes around Turkey.

 

Istanbul Gastronomy Festival which generates a huge presentation point in terms of national and international gastronomy brands located in Turkey, provides an opportunity to brands to introduce theirselves and increase their popularity in the festival area. Brands which participated to this festival in recent years, have gained acceleration at their presentation point. This year, organisation will be happening on a larger and wider area compared to last year and it brings the opportunity of a better presentation for brands.

 

For more informations, please contact with COOKS AND CHEFS FEDERATİON OF TURKEY by mail [email protected] or visit the official website for the admission requirements and online applications. http://www.istanbulgastronomyfestival.com

 
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RyssbyGymnasiet, cooking school from Sweden, enters RQCE program

RyssbyGymnasiet is a restaurant school, which has a long tradition of educating students and aspiring chefs. RyssbyGymnasiet offers upper secondary and adult education. The school has existed for over 100 years and today we have a modern teaching facility with modern purpose built premises. RyssbyGymnasiet has students from all over Sweden and offers boarding for those who live far away from school.

RyssbyGymnasiet is KRAV-certified (eco-labelled) and we work with an ecological mindset. We want to give our students a genuine food and cooking expertise. One of our specialties is meat from game, everything from carving to gastronomy. We want to take advantage of using the game on our properties hunted by our hunting students. We are also very successful in cooking competitions. We trained two students who later became Chef of the Year in Sweden and also were members of the Swedish National Chef team. We are also members of the Regional Culinary Heritage in Småland and our teachers and instructors are members of the Swedish Chef Association. We also work closely with a large number of first-class restaurants and restauranteurs, to give our students the best possible internships.

RyssbyGymnasiet is beautifully located in southern Sweden, Småland, between Växjö and Ljungby.

 

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Worldchefs welcomes Duni to the family

Worldchefs, the global authority of chefs welcomes a new sponsor, Duni, to the Worldchefs family.

President Charles Carroll, CEC, AAC, shares, “ Being a chef is not just about know-how in the kitchen. The table setting plays an integral part in delivering the final dining experience to our guests and we believe there will be many insights and knowledge in this department that Duni can share with us.”

Duni is a leading supplier of attractive and convenient products for table setting and take-away. The Duni brand is sold in more than 40 markets and enjoys a number one position in Central and Northern Europe. Duni has some 2,100 employees in 18 countries, headquarters in Malmö and production units in Sweden, Germany and Poland. Sales for 2014 amounted to SEK 4,249 m and Duni is listed on NASDAQ Stockholm.

Duni is an ever present inspiring brand creating a good food mood where people meet and eat – a supplier of attractive and convenient products for all kinds of table settings and take-away. It is an inspiring brand for all eating and drinking occasions: fine, fun and casual dining, a grab-a-bite in the pub or a lingering business lunch, a tasty take-away from a food truck or an after work meal at the nearby pop-up restaurant.

Says Tino Andersson, Director Corporate Marketing & Communications, “Food, drinks and meals present golden moments for people to enjoy the company of each other. If the mood is fine and the food is great, the feeling is good; it’s an opportunity to recharge and treat yourself, family and friends, whether you’re away or at home, sitting down or on your feet.

Duni is an ever present brand creating a good food mood where people meet and eat. We’re proud to be a partner to Worldchefs.”

 

Below a few pictures of Duni products:

 

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Worldchefs Congress & Expo 2016 greets Herve This of France as a keynote speaker

Worldchefs Congress & Expo 2016 has notable speakers ready to impart their knowledge to visiting chefs but Hervé THIS is the most mind blowing of all.

A physical chemist at INRA in France he is the founder of molecular gastronomy. So save the date for Hervé and book now: http://bit.ly/1Ey2f50

Herve This – Test-Tube Chef

It was dinnertime and Hervé This was building us a steak. Explaining that a nice sirloin is 40 percent water and 60 percent protein, the French chemistry professor dumped four tablespoons of water into six tablespoons of powdered egg. (As it happens, he was wrong: the proportions are closer to 70 percent water, 20 percent protein, and 10 percent fat.) In went a pinch of allyl isothiocyanate, for a mustardy kick.

“What about having the potato in the steak, instead of french fries on the side?,” This (pronounced Tees) asked the standing-room-only crowd of pastry chefs, professors, and fermenters who had packed an NYU lecture hall last October to hear him speak. He used a microwave propped on a table as a lectern, and moved aside his other ingredients—the dehydrated egg, along with vegetable oil, salt, and sugar—to rummage through a case of clear glass vials stoppered with black lids. He unscrewed a small bottle of methional oil, which has a cheesy-potato flavor, and the room’s freshcarpet smell gave way to baked potato mixed with high-school gym. “So here is some potato,” he said, pouring the methional into his dough. “How many potatoes do you need?” At a time when much of the culinary world believes in farming like pioneer settlers and looking its meat in the eyes, This wants us to abandon peas and carrots (“Middle Ages!”) for their constituent parts—glucose, sucrose, cellulose, amino acids, and more. He showed his audience a picture of wooden shelves stocked with rows of identical white containers and a scale. “This is the kitchen of the future,” he declared. “Beautiful boxes—some contain liquids, some contain powder.”

A celebrity academic who advises Michelin-star chefs and government officials, This is a kitchen revolutionary who seems to dash off cooking manifestos at the rate at which other people tweet and who issues the unqualified declarations of a prophet. He is regarded as the founding father of molecular gastronomy, having spent his career pushing science into the kitchen—first to e plain traditional cooking, then to dismantle it. He has sent sliced onions through an MRI machine and invented an equation for aioli. He has mummified eggs, unboiled eggs, cooked eggs without heat, and turned hard-boiled eggs transparent.

 

Now This has staked his reputation on a new way of feeding ourselves that he calls “note-by-note cooking.” It involves designing food from pure chemical compounds and is, he argues, an “obvious” approach that will help stave off the energy crisis, eliminate food waste, and end world hunger. Far from protein shakes concocted with chemistry-class staples, the meals This envisions will be made with the same care as mille-feuille or coq au vin, but they will be composed of, say, citric acid, ethanol, and glycerol. Note-by-note recipes call on kitchen essentials like water, oil, and sodium chloride (a k a salt) and use classic techniques like frying, broiling, and baking along with molecular-gastronomy methods like dehydration and spherification. Many of the finished dishes resemble creations from El Bullí, the now-closed Catalonian restaurant that put modernist cuisine on the world map, with powders and foams arranged beside brightly colored rectangles of food that could be crunchy or creamy, depending on how they were prepared. Bulk might come from powdered wheat starch instead of pasta; a sauce could be thickened with iota carrageenan, a seaweed e tract, in place of heavy cream; liquids are chiefly water and cooking oil; and plates may be dolled up by running combs over whisked piles of pea-protein dough. In time, This says, “the comb will be the ultimate culinary tool.”

 

This had traveled to New York to promote Note by Note Cooking, his 23rd book, and was also pitching the annual note-by-note cooking contest, held in Paris. In the NYU classroom, This had people sufficiently rattled that they began interrupting him. The head of a company that makes cricket-flour protein bars raised his hand. He was concerned, he began, that no one knows enough about macro- and micronutrients to use the note-by-note method to re-create—

“Not re-create. Create!,” This interjected. The white sludge of egg protein he was mixing was not really a steak, he explained with practiced patience. He does not want to simulate steak—or chicken, or salmon, or pears. He wants to invent new foods that offer new flavors. Calling the mixture “steak” had been a bit of theater to make the abstract concept of note-by-note more familiar. To eliminate confusion, however, he would give the dish a different name: Dirac, in honor of the British theoretical physicist Paul Dirac (This likes naming dishes and sauces after scientists). “If you have beef and carrot” to work with and nothing more, “you make one mixture,” This said. “But if you have the 300 compounds in beef and the 500 in carrots, then the number of combinations is much better and all the possibilities exist! I can make anything! It’s the same as electronic music.”

HIS, WHO IS 60, has diaphanous white hair and the long, soft shape of an éclair. He delivers blunt judgments. “By the way, applied sciences don’t e ist, but that’s another story,” he announced after a woman introduced herself as working in the applied sciences. Or: “I have to tell you, note-by-note is already done in many countries, but not in America. And this is sad for you. You are late.” As This lectured, he threw his left fist into his right biceps for the “up yours” bras d’honneur more often than he paused for water, and answered many questions with an exasperated “But I don’t care!”

As the Dirac cooked in the microwave, This outlined his plan for farmers to buy extraction kits—about $5,000 apiece—so they can sell polyphenols instead of produce. These edible powders last forever, This said: farewell, food spoilage. Shipping the pure compounds takes less money and fuel than transporting the sacks of sugar, protein, ash, and water we call tomatoes. Or, he added, homeowners could just save their grass clippings when they mow their lawns. “You could extract the sugar and amino acids and keep them in a box and sell them,” This said. “Or eat them!”

This is already feeding himself note by note. On days when he can’t leave his lab for lunch, he’ll dip into a large sack of powdered plant protein to whip up some of the Dirac that people were just then passing around the lecture hall. His favorite faux wine sauce is a mixture of dissolved grape phenolics, tartaric acid, and water. (From the recipe: “If you like, add a little diacetyl in solution to some oil, then add a drop of 1-octen-3-ol in solution (20 parts per million) to some oil.”)

The Dirac eventually reached my seat. The mass of lumpy white proteins clung to a fork with the consistency of scrambled eggs mi ed with Elmer’s glue. Before I could chew it, the Dirac melted on my tongue, releasing potato and mushroom flavors and a vague aftertaste of Roquefort, but nothing close to sirloin. It felt in the mouth like a sticky Cheez Doodle robbed of its flavoring powder. Considering how snack foods are assembled, Dirac is in many ways the second cousin of the Doodle. The Coca-Cola, Twinkies, and Starbursts being sold at the deli across from NYU’s campus are early iterations of note-by-note, assembled, as so many packaged foods are, from chemical compounds that could have come from This’s food pantry of the future. They fall short of what This calls “pure note-by-note”—foods made only of compounds that have been fractionated as far as possible—but he acknowledges a likeness.

The Dirac on my plate was a far cry from the note-by-note meals This envisions, which he says should tantalize the tongue. The winners of the 2014 contest, a 21-year-old Belgian medical student named Frédéric Clarembeau and his partner, Elodie Ricquebourg, came closer to this vision with the dish they created, Palette de saveurs aux notes d’Asie. Their creation looks from the photograph posted online as though it could have a place on any Manhattan tasting menu: a soup garnished with cream and saffron threads, accompanied by a meticulous arrangement of grilled bread, fried chicken, and Parmesan crisps. When I spoke with Clarembeau, he e plained that the “soup” was freeze-dried coconut e tract and gellan gum (a bacteria by-product) presented in two contrasting consistencies: in a hot liquid form, and as a cold whipped cream that wouldn’t melt. He had prepared a red garnish by squeezing a jelled soy-sauce mi ture from a syringe onto an ice cube, and the “chicken” was really wheat starch, gluten, milk protein, glutamate, and centrifuged carrot fibers pulverized in a coffee grinder and then pan-fried.

A caramelized sauce flavored with limonene and geraniol—aromatic chemicals used more often in cosmetics than in cooking—topped off the creation. Clarembeau and Ricquebourg’s recipe was judged on feasibility, originality, and flavor complexity, though Clarembeau admitted to me that their dish “wasn’t mind-blowing, but it tasted good.”

Some in the NYU crowd worried that note-by-note would gut the emotional and cultural role of food. A valid concern, and yet it seemed that the audience had overlooked the cooking that is integral to This’s plan. The ingredients may be unconventional, but working them into appetizing meals still requires a chef’s creativity, not to mention the usual stirring and sautéing. “If cooking were only a matter of technique it would be a very sad thing indeed,” This writes in his book. “Cooking is able to transcend mere doing by virtue of the fact that it also has an artistic aspect.”

Even if his plan to save the world falls short, note-by-note could—and aims to—give rise to a new kind of culinary experience that moves past the constraints of nature’s grocery store. DJs fill clubs by playing synthetic beats that sound nothing like any music made with traditional instruments. So why can’t chefs break loose, too?

The NYU foodies were not entirely sold. “I don’t think there’s anyone who left the room who was like, ‘Wow! I can’t wait to have a note-by-note dinner,’ ” Anne McBride, the adjunct faculty member who’d invited This to speak, told me later.

When people call note-by-note disgusting or a threat to the future of food, This hears only the same objections he received in the 1980s when he preached the gospel of now-standard restaurant techniques and ingredients like sous-vide cooking and hydrocolloids. As with molecular gastronomy, This has started by implanting note-by-note in haute kitchens, hoping the 99 percent will follow. Already, Pierre Gagnaire, a three-Michelin-star chef and This’s longtime collaborator, has served note-by-note-style dishes in his restaurants. One Gagnaire dessert, the Chick Corea, uses ascorbic acid, beta-carotene, calcium lactate, centrifuged apple, and other ingredients to create lemon-flavored liquidfilled pearls and cubes of fruit fiber that are served under a brittle green menthol crust. Le Cordon Bleu has hosted dinners to teach This’s principles to its up-and-coming gastronomes. And, a few days before visiting NYU, This had pitched Jean-Georges Vongerichten on the idea of a note-by-note café.

“If you give this new food to the king, everybody will want it,” This said at NYU, adding that he doesn’t care about foodies. It’s the meat-andpotatoes folks he’s after. Or, as he hopes they will be called, the Dirac people.

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Day 2 of the Asia Presidents Forum – Young Chefs Cook Up a Storm

The young chefs had a great exchange with the local young chefs in Huaxi on Day 2 of the Asia Presidents Forum. 
 
Young chefs from different nationalities were paired up and visited the local market, where they had to purchase ingredients within a set budget for a 'one wok dish'. These dishes were then presented to the panel of judges, including Dr Rick Stephen and Vice president Bian of CCA.
According to Alan Orreal from the Young Chefs Development committee,” The teams had so much fun and good bonding. We created chaos and everyone loved it; the stall owners wanted to take photos with the young chefs and followed them everywhere!” 
 
Says Jasper Jek, Young Chef Ambassador, “It is a good cross-cultural event, and in just one morning, we learnt a lot about the local produce and ingredients as well.” 
 

Young Chefs Cook Up a Storm

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Asia Presidents Forum 2015 in China

Day 1 of Asia Presidents Forum started with a huge bang. The CCA organised an impressive welcome reception, with the award-winning huaxi dance troupe putting up an inspiring performance and a feast featuring the local delights and its house brand of wuliangye spirit.  

 

Shares Clinton Zhu from CCA,

” 8 years ago, i attended the Asia Presidents Forum in Malaysia as a young chef and I was so impressed and said to myself ' I want to be part of this organisation ; China wants to be part of this. I am so happy that 8 years later, China can host the Asia Presidents Forum. “

Asia Presidents Forum 2015 in China Opens with Fanfare

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Worldchefs Congress & Expo in Thessaloniki 2016 – Teaser

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A first in Finland: 106.25 meters long Pavlova

Saturday 11th of July, Lionel Lallement, Best Pastry Craftsman of France 1989 prepared with the help of two other French chefs, Jacques Coadic and Sébastien Jérôme, the longest strawberry pavlova ever in Finland in Heinola of 106.25 meters. It was made with Finish Strawberries and Sublime, Cream with Mascarpone and the profits of the sale of the cake was given to local charities. Many pictures were posted on  Elle & Vire Professionnel – International Facebook page.

Discover Sublime, Cream with Mascarpone here : http://bit.ly/1gFajpM

 

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Worldchefs is deeply saddened by recent bombing in Bangkok

Worldchefs is deeply saddened by the recent bombing horror in Bangkok. Our prayers are with the families, our friends and all in Thailand.

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Sublime, Cream with Mascarpone: a gourmet innovation

Do you know Sublime, Cream with Mascarpone, the most decadent innovation by Elle & Vire Professionel? Sublime, Cream with Mascarpone, made with 30% of mascarpone and 70% of Excellence Whipping Cream helps you to create ultra-gourmet desserts and pastries with exceptional hold, for 48 hours at 4°C (39.2°F). It brings a smooth, satisfying flavor to your realizations with a rich, dense and creamy texture. Discover all the technics in video for exceptional results here: http://bit.ly/1LW28SV

 

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