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Teaching Taste The Most Fundamental Skill for the Successful Chef

Teaching Taste The Most Fundamental Skill for the Successful Chef. Chef Christopher Koetke Executive Director Kendall College School of Culinary Arts Vice President, Laureate International Universities Center for Culinary Excellence chris.koetke@kendall.edu. Teaching Taste.

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Teaching Taste The Most Fundamental Skill for the Successful Chef

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  1. Teaching TasteThe Most Fundamental Skill for the Successful Chef Chef Christopher Koetke Executive Director Kendall College School of Culinary Arts Vice President, Laureate International Universities Center for Culinary Excellence chris.koetke@kendall.edu

  2. Teaching Taste • Setting a taste context • Role of taste • Taste 101 • Teaching taste

  3. Do Our Students Taste? • How we train our children • Johnny • Jean • And voila—what should we expect?

  4. The Role of Taste Tasting is different than eating!! • Interpretation of food as: • Safe to eat • Nutritional needs • Define who you are • Delicious to eat--pleasure • Quality control

  5. Taste 101: Visual • Precursor to the chemical /physical appreciation • Is it safe to eat? • Do I want to eat it? • Consider color, height, shape • Color and shape ex. • What is absurd? • Open kitchens • Action stations

  6. Taste 101: Hearing • Can you really hear food? • Bubbles • Crunch • Sizzle • Kitchen sounds

  7. Taste 101: Olfaction • First chemical interpretation of food • Is it safe to eat? • Do I want to eat it? • Two pathways • Nasal • Retronasal • Alert system

  8. Taste 101: Olfactory “Taste” • 20,000 aromas • Many levels of intensity • Some very small • Complexity • Memory • Nostril differences • Social training • Thermal role

  9. Taste 101: Taste • Final Chemical Analysis of food • 5 tastes: sweet, salt, acid, bitter, umami • The tongue map—taste buds in the mouth • Super tasters: 25% population (2/3 women) • Importance of finish

  10. Taste 101: Texture • Mouth “feel” • Thermal • Particulate • Slimy, fatty, sticky, etc. • Spicy

  11. Taste 101: Other factors • History and associations • Social groups • Religion • Individual perceptions and biological differences • Others??...

  12. Teaching Taste • Assessing our assumptions • Assume the students can’t recognize taste • Assume they have no taste library • Assume that they have no words for taste • Learn about our own taste, preferences, and preconceived ideas

  13. Teaching Taste • Objective: • Build skills • Build tasting library • Build vocabulary (not with a list) • Build an impulse to taste • Build a control

  14. Teaching Taste • The basics: • Ask lots of questions, prod and struggle • Assign words and categorize them • Make students write down words • Have fun! Disarm them • Make sure everyone contributes

  15. Teaching Taste • Organized tastings: • Up and down tasting • Redefine a familiar definition/experience • Comparative tastings (start very diverse) • Single tastings (start with familiar, build on library experiences)

  16. Teaching Taste • Non-organized tastings: • Reinforce tastings through curriculum • Take every chance to build library • Do not give answers! • Use the individual experience to teach the group • Use extremes • Use comparative tastings—i.e. the sauce

  17. Teaching Taste T • TAAT: • Taste • Analyze • Adjust • Taste A A T

  18. Teaching Taste • Advanced techniques: • Complexity • Maillard reaction • BBQ potato chips • Spicy nacho sauce • Balance and the circle • Vinaigrette • Sauces

  19. THANK YOUTeaching TasteThe Most Fundamental Skill for the Successful Chef Chef Christopher Koetke CEC CCE HAAC chris.koetke@kendall.edu

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