A to Z Salad Bar Kicks Off in Palo Alto, La Soiree Kicks Off in San Francisco

PAUSD Salad Bar

Palo Alto Food Services is celebrating Tasting Week with us again this year. Nine Palo Alto schools will host special lunch programs over the next few days. On Friday October 12, Barron Park Elementary inaugurated the first A to Z salad bar. Kids in the hot lunch program were able to sample 26 different types of fruits and vegetables, one for each letter of the alphabet. S for strawberry, J for Jicama and W for watermelon were some of the most popular items, but the kids also rushed to letter X – for eXtra fancy pluot. Some adventurous children even tried the V – very smelly green onion. Balloons, crayons, and worksheets on healthy eating were there to complement the salad bar.

On Friday evening, adults only gathered at the San Francisco Metreon to celebrate the now traditional French Soiree of the American Chamber of Commerce. The evening buzzed with cooking and wine tasting competitions, ice carving, pulled sugar and chocolate demonstrations. Take a look at the beautiful wolf head carved in 40 pounds of chocolate! At Tasting Week we also celebrated our first donation through the live auction kindly donated by the Ritz Carlton. By the way, if you want to donate to Tasting Week online, feel free to jump in by contributing to http://www.gofundme.com/17ucx0

Making Crepes

Making Crepes

Today chef Emmanuel Robert from the Sofitel San Francisco Bay visited two classrooms at the International School of the Peninsula. First he displayed several pots of herbs and asked the children to name them. To our surprise, the kids were able to identify all of them: rosemary, thyme, mint and basil. They smelled each one of the plants and suggested a few dishes that would be appropriate for each herb, such as pasta and basil, yum.

Rosemary at ISTP

Then Chef Robert asked for volunteers to help him make crepes – everyone was a volunteer. Chef Robert explained that crepes were invented back in Roman times, they were actually the first form of bread. The children helped the Chef crack the eggs and mix the batter.

Cooking tip: Chef Robert sifts the batter to ensure all egg shells and lumps come out. Then, to ensure all egg shells and lumps come out. Then, while the crepes were cooking, the children tasted Chef Robert’s special mushrooms, mixed with oliv oil, thyme and salt. Everyone gave the mushrooms a try, even children who had never eaten a mushroom before. The crepes were definitely the highlight of the workshop – whether with fresh strawberries, jam, or cheese and ham. Thank you Chef Robert!

Pre-Tasting Week Workshop Kicks Off at International School of the Peninsula

Today Bernard Moutal, Chef at the Golden Gate Grill in San Francisco, visited the International School of the Peninsula in Palo Alto. He led a group of 2nd and 3rd graders in making palm tree pastries. Palm trees, also known as elephant ears, are made from puff pastry, which is rolled out, coated with sugar, and then the two sides are rolled up together so that they meet in the middle, making a roll that is then cut into about ¼” slides and baked.

"palmier" at ISTP

ISTP’s “Palmier”

The kids really enjoyed putting plastic gloves onto their hands before starting the workshop. They were quick to name the key ingredients used to stick the palm tree together (water and egg), but they had very creative ideas when asked what went into the puff pastry (cinnamon and eggs for instance), but in fact there is nothing more than butter, flour, salt and water. This just goes to show you that you can make something wonderful out of very simple ingredients. The key factor of success is using the best butter you can find, time and patience. Today Bernard needed even more patience than usual since our oven was very slow…but it was worth the wait!

Below you can find the recipe for the palm tree pastries. Try them with your kids and let us know if they like it!

Two Weeks Until Tasting Week 2012

Our team of volunteers is working hard to get ready for the second annual edition of Tasting Week. This year we are so lucky to host thirty chefs in fifteen schools across the Bay Area, from San Francisco to Sunnyvale. Among some of the great names participating in Tasting Week, we have Nathan Beriau from Ritz Carlton in San Francisco, Charlie Ayers from Calafia in Palo Alto, Marco Fossati from Four Seasons in East Palo Alto, John Bentley from Bentley’s in Woodside, Liv Wu from Google, and many more. All the chefs are busy preparing their workshops for the kids.

This year we are also very proud to join forces with two great organizations to kick-off and close Tasting Week. We will launch on October 12 with La Soiree in collaboration with the French American Chamber of Commerce. This will be our biggest fundraiser this year. La Soiree has lined up some amazing cooking demonstrations and competitions, as well as some really good wines.

We will celebrate the end of Tasting Week a few weeks later on November 11 at the Observation Post in the Presidio with an event for families, developed in collaboration with Omnivore World Tour, celebrating young and innovative cuisine. We have been working closely with Chefs Nathan Beriau, Cynthia Falatic, and the Cord on Bleu California Culinary Academy to come up with a very special program for children. There will be workshops for your five senses, tasty lunch kits, food trucks and music. Sign up to celebrate with us and join the fun.

Last but not least, we are hoping to raise funds to broaden the program to more schools in the future, develop more educational programs for kids about food, and invite a few schools on field trip to the restaurants participating in Tasting Week. If you support this idea, please contribute to our cause.

We look forward to hearing your feedback, on this site or on our Facebook page.

Sneak Preview of Tasting Week 2012

Juana Briones Elementary

Yesterday local Palo Alto chef and cookbook author Laura Stec came to Juana Briones Elementary to give a cooking class to 4th graders. First Laura worked with the students on classifying seasonal fruits and vegetables and talked about how microorganisms in the soil help food grow. Then she did a demonstration of caramelized peas.

When the children expressed surprise at how sweet the peas tasted, Laura reminded them that caramelization happens at 330 degrees while water boils at 100 degrees – so if a vegetable does not taste good to us when it is boiled perhaps we should try sautéing it instead to bring out the sweetness in it!

May, 17th, 2012, Chefs move to school

Then Laura made a multi-fruit smoothie. There was not a drop left after the class. The kids were overwhelming positive and they asked Laura if she could come back every day!

This is just a sneak preview of the great events coming up during Tasting Week 2012 from October 12 to October 2012. Save the dates!

Palo Alto Hot Lunch Improvement Project

Gunn High School, October 20, Chef Gerald Hirigoyen

Following the success of our first Palo Alto Tasting Week event in October 2011, a few volunteers are embarking on a project to improve the Hot Lunch program in Palo Alto.

After several meetings with PTA presidents, consultants specialized in school lunches, restaurant chefs, the California Farm to School program, the slow Food movement, the District Food Services and several friends who share the same passion for the topic, I am happy to share some positive news. Alva Spence from Sodexo and Cathy Mak from Palo Alto Food Services are willing to partner with us on this initiative but we will need significant parent, student and staff support to make it successful.

Terman, October 18, Chef Bruno Ponsot

Here are some ideas we are considering for the Palo Alto district:

  • Introducing new healthy and tasty entrees twice a week starting January 2012
  • Moving to seasonal fruits and vegetables through the Buy Fresh Buy Local program
  • Launching a sandwich deli bar in high school
  • Launching a pilot project to cook from scratch in high school
  • Changing the design of the lunch queue to increase adoption of healthy and tasty items

We are looking for a group of volunteers to help us with the initiative, which I would like to call the “Palo Alto Tasty Lunch Initiative”.

Lavanda, October 22, Wine Event

If you are interested in helping with consulting on menu selection, communication within your school, student involvement, fundraising, lunch room organization, farm to school relationships, and more, please send me a quick note indicating your interest. rebecca@tastingweek.com

Tasting Week 2011 Ends With a Grand Finale

We said goodbye to Tasting Week 2011 on Wednesday, October 26 at Juana Briones Elementary School. It was the last day, but definitely not the least. We had three chefs visiting the school on the same day, as well as the now famous A to Z salad bar from Food Services.

Chef Charlie Ayers at Juana Briones Elementary School.

Chef Charlie Ayers from Calafia Café in Palo Alto (and former executive Chef at Google), took two classes of fifth graders on a discovery of the fifth taste – umami. This taste was discovered in the 1980s by a Japanese researcher. It is the taste that you find in mushrooms, soy sauce and meat. It is also called “deliciousness” – what a wonderful concept! Chef Charlie treated the children like true scientists and explorers – he had them try a roasted shiitake mushroom, followed by a little goblet of soy sauce, followed by beef stock and a crispy parmesan cracker. The children were very focused on the feelings in their mouth and had lots of very scientific comments to make about the amount of sodium in each bite and the aftertaste in their mouths.

Chef Nathan Beriau at Juana Briones Elementary School

Meanwhile, Chef Nathan Beriau from the Ritz Carlton in San Francisco travelled to the land of salt. He brought samples of salt from many different countries: France, England, Hawaii and the Philippines, to name just a few of them. He explained the origin of salt, its role in food preservation and the extraordinary value of salt a few centuries ago. The children smelled, touched and tasted all the different grains of salt. Then to finish off the presentation he gave them each a chocolate cookie he
had made (with a pinch of salt!).

Chef Brendy Monsada at Juana Briones Elementary School

Meanwhile, Chef Brendy Monsada was busy making beautiful salads with peeled cucumbers, orzo, tomatoes, and even blue cheese. The children huddled around him with wide eyes as if he were preparing a magic potion. To finish off his workshop, he let the children choose between a lemon tart or a chocolate tart. The children were absolutely thrilled.

Matt Nagle, Principal, Juana Briones Elementary School, Ivan Bertoux, Cultural Affairs Attache, Consulat de France, San Francisco, Rebecca Scholl, Tasting Week, Romain Serman, Consul General de France, San Francisco, Kevin Skelly, Superintendent, Palo Alto Unified School District

We had several famous visitors during this day. The Consul General of France, Romain Serman, along with the Cultural Affairs Attache from France, came to celebrate the final day of Tasting Week.

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Since “La Semaine du Gout” started off as a French Celebration in France 22 years ago, Romain was thrilled to see how Palo Alto was adapting the event locally. The children from teacher Halimah Van Tuyl took him to visit their rosemary garden and their own class kitchen where they cook every single week. We also were happy to host Kevin Skelly, Palo Alto School District Superintendent, who thanked the Tasting Week team for bringing such a fun event to Palo Alto schools. As his mother always says “much depends upon dinner”.

Thank you to all the volunteers who made this Tasting Week possible. In particular Armelle Soustiel, Carla Matlin, Florence Thomas, Jian Ma, Lea Bowmer and Joel Barbier. And a big thanks to Alva Spence from Food Services for hosting the popular A to Z salad bar.

We look forward to seeing you all next year!

Stay tuned for more exciting news on the website. We will soon be sharing the Chef’s recipes and the progress of our Palo Alto Hot Lunch initiative.

The Path Towards Better Lunches in Palo Alto

Georgeanne Brennan at Terman Middle School

Today, on October 25, 2011, several Palo Alto parents met at Terman Middle School to eat the school hot lunch and listen to Georgeanne Brennan, award-winning cookbook writer, reporter and specialist in school lunches.

Georgeanne shared her experience in helping the districts of Oakland and Los Angeles to improve their hot lunch programs. She also gave an account of her trip to France, to explore the French school lunches. Georgeanne picked France because of the low obesity rate among children in this country. Highlights of her trip are included in her report attached to the resource page of this website. Georgeanne explained that the success of the hot lunch program in France is not only due to the variety of the menu. Their success is also linked to other factors, namely that lunch follows recess, children must stay at a table during a minimum of 30 minutes, and the food is served in real plates with real knives and forks.

Salad Bar at Terman Middle School

As parents from the Palo Alto district, we then had a healthy discussion about our vision for school lunches and the challenges we need to overcome. In a single hour of discussion, we came up with a flurry of suggestions. They included involving the kids as panelists in the selection of new school lunch items, replacing “sporks” with real
forks and spoons, trying out recess before lunch, inviting parents and grandparents to sit down at the table with the children to encourage mealtime discussions, requesting transperence on the origin of foods served in our district, banning certain items from the menu altogether, putting microwave ovens in the schools for children bringing their own lunches to school, setting up a “foodboosters” program for parents to contribute financially to the hot lunch program, expanding the seating options for children to eat lunch, involving local gardens in the food program, and many more ideas.

If we can come up with these many ideas in 60 minutes, imagine what we can do with perseverance, patience and determination throughout this school year. Palo Alto Tasting Week gave us a glimpse into the wonderful possibilities of discovery through food and cooking. This celebration has started a meaningful dialogue on the improvement of food in our schools and the impact of food on our community. This is where it all starts.

Wine Event at Lavanda, in Downtown Palo Alto

Lavanda, October 22, Wine Event

On Saturday 22nd, 2011, in downtown Palo Alto, Lavanda Restaurant opened its doors to a special wine tasting event hosted by “Tasting week”. There, a group of wine aficionados tasted and compared French and Californian wines paired with unique bites. The tasting was blind (wine is revealed at the end) and the organizers, Aurelia Setton, volunteer expert in wine, Rapahel Knapp, Wine importer from returntoterroir and Bruce Schmidt, Lavanda restaurant owner had set up this tasting to be tricky! First, they surprised us with a Picpoul (yes, this is a grape type), which was from France Languedoc region but tasted like a California Sauvignon Blanc! Then, we went on to tasting a Gewurztraminer from Anderson Valley, California. It was sweet and elegant, the majority of the group thought it was a French wine….The 2 reds where just as much of a surprise: the first one was a very nice 2005 Cabernet Sauvignon matched with a delicate chicken liver crostini. I don’t like chicken liver, but this tasted sweet and mild. Loved the pairing! The last wine was a Tannat (a French grape) from the South West of France. The truffled mushroom talagio cheese crostini was marvelous with it!

What a discovery for all of us! Even the Mayor of Palo Alto was there, ready to be surprised.

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Carrots

chef Craig Von Foerster and Principal Matt Nagle at Juana Briones Elementary school

On Friday Juana Briones Elementary school hosted chef Craig Von Foerster, Executive Chef at the Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, voted one the top 5 best restaurants in the San Francisco Bay in the Zagat. Chef Craig came all the way from Big Sur with a full carload of…carrots. The kids were a little intrigued at first, but ended up completely enthralled. He showed them the difference between supermarket bagged mini-carrots and fresh carrots from his garden. He showed them white, yellow, and purple carrots.

chef Craig Von Foerster

He made carrot soup and pickled carrots. And finished with a giant carrot cake. And while he was preparing his carrots, he answered dozens of questions from the children about his favorite and least favorite foods, his origin, what it is like working in a restaurant, and much more. At the end of the presentation, the children all lined up to get Chef Craig’s authograph on their plate!

A few moms snuck in to grab a taste of carrot soup and to talk with Chef Craig. Next year we need to plan a workshop for parents too!