(I apologize for no pics just yet, I still haven't had time to figure out my mom's digital camera.)
My Monday and Wednesday classes were just classroom lecture classes. Monday is Foundations of Culinary Techniques, which is the lecture portion of my Thursday and Friday Cooking Skills class. My teacher, Chef Morris, is quite an interesting character. He likes to interrupt lulls in his lectures with cheesy jokes like "If quizzes are quizzical, then what are tests?" Har har. This guy would get along great with my mom's boyfriend, let me tell you. This class just basically teaches us a good culinary vocabulary and educates us on basic culinary principles outside of the kitchen. We spent four hours debating the difference between a bechamel sauce and a veloute sauce - FOUR HOURS. I can tell you the difference in four seconds - one is made with milk, and the other one isn't, but don't ask me which is which because after four hours of it being drilled into my brain I completely forgot. Result! (OK I googled it because I'm probably going to need to know the difference - bechamel is made with milk and veloute is made with stock. Got it?)
Wednesday is Food Safety and Sanitation. I know, that sounds like a rollicking good time, huh? Luckily, my teacher, Chef Whitcomb, is quite a looker! Imagine a young Tom Waits with a southern drawl and a chef's coat. I know, HELLO, right? Plus I found out he went to Berklee just like I did! Pretty sweet. And I get to do a 5-page research paper on mad cow disease. You know you're jealous.
But I know, Thursday and Friday is what you guys really want to hear about. This is my 5-hour-long cooking skills class with Chef Costa. He seems very young, and he manages to be approachable and intimidating at the same time. Thursday we didn't do any actual cooking, just touring the kitchen and learning how everything works. But Friday we got down to business - learning knife skills! Knife skills are the basis of every chef's technique, and without learning these, you'll probably get nowhere in culinary school. Here are the knife cuts we have to learn to begin with -
STICK CUTS
Julienne
Batonnet
Frit
SHAPES
Brunoise
Jardiniere (small dice)
Macedoine (medium dice)
Parmentier (large dice)
Fondant tourne - 7-sided, football-shaped
We also learned how to chiffonade parsley, which I thought was kind of fun. I figured out the julienne, batonnet, and dice cuts pretty quickly. The scariest one here is definitely the fondant tourne. Let me give you an image to work with here -

Yep, that's a tourne potato. I still haven't quite figured out how he did it. You have to get seven equal sides, two flat ends, and that nice football shape. You look at it and might think, "This won't be too hard." But, for me at least, it IS. I guess practice is all I need. I hope.
Then, each of us were given a whole chicken and taught to cut it into pieces. My whole life, I've always been nervous about touching raw chicken (it is kind of gross, come on) but I've gotten over it in the past year. But I've never actually cut or cooked a whole chicken! It was so much fun to learn, though, and Sunday night my mom brought home two whole chickens for me to practice on. I cut them perfectly and we roasted them with a little olive oil and thyme. It was so simple yet so delicious! I'm quite proud of myself for cutting the chicken. A week ago, I wouldn't have even attempted something like that.
Chef Costa also gave us a lesson on preparing stock. Most restaurants rely on stock as the basic foundation of all of their dishes. Stock is the main difference between restaurant cooking and home cooking. Chef Costa was preparing a stock with turkey bones, water, mirepoix (essential to every stock, it's a combination of 2 parts onion, 1 part carrot, and 1 part celery) and various spices. He earned my eternal respect, when, after the stock was finished, he picked out the turkey bones, scooped the marrow out onto a plate, and ATE IT. Sounds disgusting, but bone marrow is actually a delicious delicacy and a favorite snack for discerning chefs.
The thing that excites me most about skills class is that we'll be learning recipes in class, preparing them, and then eating them! Any class that involves eating is alright with me, especially a 5-hour-long class with no lunch break. Chef Costa actually gave us a syllabus of all the recipes we'll learn to prepare this quarter - check this out and tell me you're not as excited (and hungry) as I am!
(Notice how it starts with simple dishes and gets increasingly more difficult) -
Potato salad
Cole slaw
Duchesse potatoes
Eggs Benedict
Macaroni and cheese
Cream of mushroom soup
Tomato sauce
Gnocchi
Braised Vegetables
Consomme/chicken broth
Egg noodles
Chicken fricasse
French fries
Poached chicken breast w/basil sauce
Poached fish w/tarragon sauce
Osso Bucco
Roasted tourne carrots and rutabaga
Stuffed tomatoes
Risotto Milanese (OK I've totally made that on my own already and it was delicious!)
Potato pancakes
Risotto con funghi (that's risotto with mushrooms)
Fish ravioli with sauce Bercy
Grilled squash and zucchini
Sauteed beef tenderloin au poivre
Glazed carrots
Whipped potatoes
Grilled marinated chicken breast
Roast whole chicken with pan gravy
Herb roasted red potatoes
Fresh fettucine with herb cream sauce
Roast pork tenderloin with a Port wine demi-glace
Braised chard
Stuffed flank steak
Yep, I'm going to learn how to cook ALL of that. This should get interesting. Stay tuned!