Podcast appearances and mentions of claudia fleming

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Best podcasts about claudia fleming

Latest podcast episodes about claudia fleming

Tinfoil Swans
Claudia Fleming and the Perfect Clafoutis

Tinfoil Swans

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2024 41:45


Say the name "Claudia Fleming" and those who know will probably deploy the word "legend." And if you don't recognize her name, you definitely have benefitted from her groundbreaking pastry creations and flavor combinations that plenty of people now just take for granted. Original copies of her cookbook "The Last Course," went for huge sums of money on eBay and cookbook stores until it was reissued in 2019, and her book "Delectable" made pretty much every "best cookbooks of 2022" roundup. Some of the most notable pastry chefs in the game cite her as a mentor and inspiration and she remains a huge force in the way we all eat sweets today. And if things go right — it's going be that way with sandwiches next. Fleming spoke about her days as a ballet dancer, the magic of Gramercy Tavern, getting through tough times, and the privilege of working with freaks.  For more info visit: foodandwine.com/tinfoilswans Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Foodie and the Beast
Foodie and the Beast - Dec. 10, 2023

Foodie and the Beast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2023 51:32


Hosted by David and Nycci Nellis.  On today's show:  ·        The holiday season is filled with some truly unique special events. One you definitely want to know about comes up Tuesday, Dec. 12 at The Square in D.C. Famed chocolatier Chef Ursula XVII, who has whipped up pastries for some of the best – like, for Michael White at the Michelin-starred Ai Fiori, Thomas Keller at Per Sei, and Claudia Fleming at the North Fork Table and Inn – hosts a traditional Catalan Christmas food event. She'll demo how to make those yummy Catalan 'torrons' or (nougats) and chat about yummy traditional Catalan products like cava, wines, chocolates, cheeses and olive oil. Chef Ursula joins us with all the details;                 ·        We do a lot of entertaining. Nyc is a star cook and David is the man at the sink doing the dishes. But sometimes, we just need more help than the hands at home. And when you need extra hands, the only thing that really helps are professional hands – bartenders, servers, and dishwashers. Fear not. Party Host Helpers is here, and so is the company's founder and CEO , Renee Patrone Rhinehart. She offers us the solution to our party staffing needs; ·        Lisa Lucas and Debrianna Mansini are two lively women. You may be fans of their show, “Corona Kitchen,” on YouTube and Facebook Live, and of their new book, “That Time We Ate Our Feelings,” which shares stories of their experiences growing up in foodie families;                                                                                                                ·        Not everyone needs a world-class executive chef at home, but sometimes…when you've planned something special … you do! Founded by chef Brian Arruda (former executive chef at Boulud Sud), Executive Chefs at Home is a premier global private placement agency for top chefs who come to you to curate customized dining experiences; Jake Ireland, founder & CEO of Off Hours Bourbon, offers authentically crafted bourbon made for the modern bourbon drinker. David can vouch for it personally, having enjoyed a fair portion of the sample Jake sent us on Halloween.                                                                 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Foodie and the Beast
Foodie and the Beast - Dec. 10, 2023

Foodie and the Beast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2023 51:32


Hosted by David and Nycci Nellis.   On today's show:     ·        The holiday season is filled with some truly unique special events. One you definitely want to know about comes up Tuesday, Dec. 12 at The Square in D.C. Famed chocolatier Chef Ursula XVII, who has whipped up pastries for some of the best – like, for Michael White at the Michelin-starred Ai Fiori, Thomas Keller at Per Sei, and Claudia Fleming at the North Fork Table and Inn – hosts a traditional Catalan Christmas food event. She'll demo how to make those yummy Catalan 'torrons' or (nougats) and chat about yummy traditional Catalan products like cava, wines, chocolates, cheeses and olive oil. Chef Ursula joins us with all the details;                   ·        We do a lot of entertaining. Nyc is a star cook and David is the man at the sink doing the dishes. But sometimes, we just need more help than the hands at home. And when you need extra hands, the only thing that really helps are professional hands – bartenders, servers, and dishwashers. Fear not. Party Host Helpers is here, and so is the company's founder and CEO , Renee Patrone Rhinehart. She offers us the solution to our party staffing needs;   ·        Lisa Lucas and Debrianna Mansini are two lively women. You may be fans of their show, “Corona Kitchen,” on YouTube and Facebook Live, and of their new book, “That Time We Ate Our Feelings,” which shares stories of their experiences growing up in foodie families;                                                                                                                  ·        Not everyone needs a world-class executive chef at home, but sometimes…when you've planned something special … you do! Founded by chef Brian Arruda (former executive chef at Boulud Sud), Executive Chefs at Home is a premier global private placement agency for top chefs who come to you to curate customized dining experiences;   Jake Ireland, founder & CEO of Off Hours Bourbon, offers authentically crafted bourbon made for the modern bourbon drinker. David can vouch for it personally, having enjoyed a fair portion of the sample Jake sent us on Halloween.                                                                

Foodie and the Beast
Foodie and the Beast - Dec. 10, 2023

Foodie and the Beast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2023 51:32


Hosted by David and Nycci Nellis.  On today's show:  ·        The holiday season is filled with some truly unique special events. One you definitely want to know about comes up Tuesday, Dec. 12 at The Square in D.C. Famed chocolatier Chef Ursula XVII, who has whipped up pastries for some of the best – like, for Michael White at the Michelin-starred Ai Fiori, Thomas Keller at Per Sei, and Claudia Fleming at the North Fork Table and Inn – hosts a traditional Catalan Christmas food event. She'll demo how to make those yummy Catalan 'torrons' or (nougats) and chat about yummy traditional Catalan products like cava, wines, chocolates, cheeses and olive oil. Chef Ursula joins us with all the details;                 ·        We do a lot of entertaining. Nyc is a star cook and David is the man at the sink doing the dishes. But sometimes, we just need more help than the hands at home. And when you need extra hands, the only thing that really helps are professional hands – bartenders, servers, and dishwashers. Fear not. Party Host Helpers is here, and so is the company's founder and CEO , Renee Patrone Rhinehart. She offers us the solution to our party staffing needs; ·        Lisa Lucas and Debrianna Mansini are two lively women. You may be fans of their show, “Corona Kitchen,” on YouTube and Facebook Live, and of their new book, “That Time We Ate Our Feelings,” which shares stories of their experiences growing up in foodie families;                                                                                                                ·        Not everyone needs a world-class executive chef at home, but sometimes…when you've planned something special … you do! Founded by chef Brian Arruda (former executive chef at Boulud Sud), Executive Chefs at Home is a premier global private placement agency for top chefs who come to you to curate customized dining experiences; Jake Ireland, founder & CEO of Off Hours Bourbon, offers authentically crafted bourbon made for the modern bourbon drinker. David can vouch for it personally, having enjoyed a fair portion of the sample Jake sent us on Halloween.                                                                 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Foodie and the Beast
Foodie and the Beast - Dec. 10, 2023

Foodie and the Beast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2023 51:32


Hosted by David and Nycci Nellis.   On today's show:     ·        The holiday season is filled with some truly unique special events. One you definitely want to know about comes up Tuesday, Dec. 12 at The Square in D.C. Famed chocolatier Chef Ursula XVII, who has whipped up pastries for some of the best – like, for Michael White at the Michelin-starred Ai Fiori, Thomas Keller at Per Sei, and Claudia Fleming at the North Fork Table and Inn – hosts a traditional Catalan Christmas food event. She'll demo how to make those yummy Catalan 'torrons' or (nougats) and chat about yummy traditional Catalan products like cava, wines, chocolates, cheeses and olive oil. Chef Ursula joins us with all the details;                   ·        We do a lot of entertaining. Nyc is a star cook and David is the man at the sink doing the dishes. But sometimes, we just need more help than the hands at home. And when you need extra hands, the only thing that really helps are professional hands – bartenders, servers, and dishwashers. Fear not. Party Host Helpers is here, and so is the company's founder and CEO , Renee Patrone Rhinehart. She offers us the solution to our party staffing needs;   ·        Lisa Lucas and Debrianna Mansini are two lively women. You may be fans of their show, “Corona Kitchen,” on YouTube and Facebook Live, and of their new book, “That Time We Ate Our Feelings,” which shares stories of their experiences growing up in foodie families;                                                                                                                  ·        Not everyone needs a world-class executive chef at home, but sometimes…when you've planned something special … you do! Founded by chef Brian Arruda (former executive chef at Boulud Sud), Executive Chefs at Home is a premier global private placement agency for top chefs who come to you to curate customized dining experiences;   Jake Ireland, founder & CEO of Off Hours Bourbon, offers authentically crafted bourbon made for the modern bourbon drinker. David can vouch for it personally, having enjoyed a fair portion of the sample Jake sent us on Halloween.                                                                

The TASTE Podcast
285: New York Times Food: Melissa Clark, Genevieve Ko, Emily Weinstein

The TASTE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2023 142:15


Here are three classic conversations from This Is TASTE with three key members of the New York Times food desk. Melissa Clark is a prolific cookbook author, longtime NYT columnist, and one of the most respected food writers in the game. In this interview, we talk about her days collaborating with great chefs including Daniel Boulud, David Bouley, and Claudia Fleming, as well as her action-packed cookbook career. Genevieve Ko is a deputy editor of New York Times Cooking and the Food section, as well as a prolific cookbook author and collaborator. Here we have such a great time catching up about all things cookbooks, food media, and what it's like to help run one of the best, and most popular, sections at the NYT. Lastly we sit down with Emily Weinstein, the food and cooking editor of the New York Times. We've been a great admirer of her and her colleagues' work at NYT Cooking, and we took the opportunity to talk about what makes a great story as well as some of the cooking trends Weinstein is most interested in covering. We also discuss Weinstein's long journey working at the paper, starting as a dining listings fact-checker and rising to various editorial roles, eventually taking the top spot.Do you enjoy This Is TASTE? Drop us a review on Apple, or star us on Spotify. We'd love to hear from you.

RESTAURANT STRATEGY
Chatting with Pastry Chef Instructor and YouTube Influencer, Steven Konopelski

RESTAURANT STRATEGY

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 79:11


#213 - Chatting with Pastry Chef Instructor and YouTube Influencer, Steven Konopelski ***** This week's episode is brought to you by: MARGIN EDGE Take control of your costs with using MarginEdge. Best of all? No contract. No setup fee. Free and unlimited training and support. VISIT: marginedge.com/chip ***** This week's episode is brought to you by: 7SHIFTS 7shifts is the team management platform for restaurants. From hiring, to scheduling, training and retaining, they’ve got the tools you need to help you run your business with ease. Better understand your restaurant, hit your labor targets, and keep your entire team connected. Plus, 7shifts integrates with POS and payroll systems you already use and trust! Join over 30,000 restaurants using 7shifts today. Restaurant Strategy listeners get 3 months free. VISIT: https://www.7shifts.com/restaurantstrategy ***** Steven Konopelski has taken an unusual path to get to cooking, but it's that unique journey that makes his story that much more compelling. After a career as a ballet dancer and Broadway chorus boy, he became enamored with the culinary world. Specifically, the land of sweets. His Act 2 turned into something far bigger than he could've ever imagined and led him to working with some of the industry's biggest names including the one-and-only Claudia Fleming. He now works as an educator for the Escoffier School of Culinary Arts, and is here to share his story. ESCOFFIER SCHOOL LINKS: Website - https://www.escoffier.edu/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/escoffierschool Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/escoffierschools/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/escoffierschool LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/school/auguste-escoffier-school-of-culinary-arts/ STEVE'S LINKS: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/chefstevekonopelski/?hl=en TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@chefstevekonopelski YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@SteveKonopelski ***** Want to learn more about my Restaurant Accelerator Mastermind? Click the link to schedule a FREE 30-minute Strategy Session: https://www.restaurantstrategypodcast.com/schedule ***** I will

Radio Cherry Bombe
Bonus Episode: She's My Cherry Pie, Cherry Bombe's New Podcast

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2023 47:57


Cherry Bombe has a brand new podcast and we're sharing the debut episode. The show is called She's My Cherry Pie and it's hosted by Jessie Sheehan, the author and recipe developer. Each week, Jessie talks to world-class bakers and pastry chefs about their lives, careers, and signature bakes. Jessie's first guest is Claudia Fleming, the influential pastry chef and executive director of Daily Provisions. When Claudia put a chocolate-caramel tart on the menu of NYC's Gramercy Tavern in the 1990s, she had no idea her creation would become one of the most copied restaurant desserts around. Want to bake along? Click here for Claudia's chocolate caramel tart recipe from her newest cookbook, Delectable. Thank you to Le Creuset and California Prunes for supporting She's My Cherry Pie. She's My Cherry Pie is a production of the Cherry Bombe Podcast Network. Subscribe to our newsletter and check out past transcripts here. Want to come to Cherry Bombe's Jubilee on April 15th in NYC? Get your ticket here.More on Jessie: Instagram, her Snackable Bakes cookbookMore on Claudia: Instagram, her cookbooks Delectable and The Last Course, Daily Provisions

She's My Cherry Pie
Making Chocolate Caramel Tarts With Pastry Chef Claudia Fleming Of Daily Provisions

She's My Cherry Pie

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 46:41


Welcome to the debut episode of She's My Cherry Pie, a baking podcast hosted by Jessie Sheehan. In our first episode, Jessie interviews Claudia Fleming, the influential pastry chef and executive director of Daily Provisions. When Claudia put a chocolate caramel tart on the menu of NYC's Gramercy Tavern in the 1990s, she had no idea her creation would become one of the most copied restaurant desserts around. Learn about the inspiration behind the tart and get all of Claudia's tips and tricks, from achieving the perfect “Irish setter brown” for your caramel to ensuring you have a “skating-rink shine” on your ganache. Click here for Claudia's chocolate caramel tart recipe from Delectable.Thank you to Le Creuset and California Prunes for supporting our show. She's My Cherry Pie is a production of The Cherry Bombe Podcast Network. Our podcast is recorded at CityVox Studio in Manhattan. For past episodes and transcripts, click here. Subscribe to our newsletter here.More on Claudia: Instagram, her cookbooks Delectable and The Last Course

Radio Cherry Bombe
Claire Saffitz, Our #1 Interview From 2022

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2023 54:56


Happy New Year, listeners! We're happy to share this encore presentation of our most listened-to episode of 2022. Claire Saffitz, cookbook author, Cherry Bombe cover girl, and YouTube's favorite baker, joined host Kerry Diamond last year to talk about Claire's unique culinary path. It took Claire a while to figure out her place in the food world, and she shares the twists and turns it took to get where she is today. Claire also talks about her 2020 bestseller, Dessert Person; shares some tidbits about her 2022 release, What's For Dessert; and why she considers Dorie Greenspan and Claudia Fleming her mentors. Radio Cherry Bombe is recorded at Newsstand Studios at Rockefeller Center in New York City. Our theme song is by the band Tralala. Subscribe to our newsletter and check out past episodes and transcripts here. Pick up a copy of Cherry Bombe magazine's Issue 18 with Claire Saffitz on the cover here.Follow Claire on Instagram and Patreon. Get Claire's salty nut tart with rosemary recipe. Follow host Kerry Diamond on Instagram

The One Recipe
38: Claudia Fleming's Peach & Raspberry Crostata

The One Recipe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 14:34


Claudia Fleming talks to Jesse this week about being a sports fanatic, her triumphant twenty-one-year return to writing cookbooks, and her One: Peach & Raspberry Crostata. Claudia Fleming is a pastry chef, restaurateur, and the author of two cookbooks: the 2001 cult classic, The Last Course, and her newest, Delectable: Sweet & Savory Baking. You can follow Claudia on Instagram @chefclaudiafleming. Help support The One Recipe, and shows from APM Studios that bring people together, with a donation of any amount today.

peach raspberry claudia fleming crostata
Salt & Spine
Melissa Clark on bringing one-pan (and one-pot, one-tray, one-dish…) meals to the masses

Salt & Spine

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 46:06


Hi there, exciting show for you this week. Melissa Clark, one of the most prolific cookbook writers of the modern era, joins us. Read on!* Do you love Salt + Spine? We'd love if you shared this email with a friend who might want to #TalkCookbooks with us, too:Episode 146: Melissa ClarkThis week, Melissa Clark joins us to #TalkCookbooks!When we launched Salt + Spine, I wrote a short list of our dream guests — the cookbook authors who, at the time, I felt were pushing the industry in new directions or had a wealth of experience to learn from. We've been lucky to sit down with many folks from that list (from Samin Nosrat to Julia Turshen to Vivian Howard…). Today, we're marking one more off that list as Melissa joins us in-studio to discuss her latest cookbook, Dinner in One.Dubbed the “gold standard for Internet recipe writing” by Eater, Melissa Clark has been developing recipes for over a decade at The New York Times, where she started with a short sidebar on home cooking questions before joining as a columnist and reporter. (A recent search on NYT Cooking showed her byline attached to some 1,391 results!)That early NYT series Melissa authored, called “Food Chain,” offered helpful tips and answers to cooking challenges in the era before such information was one keystroke away. Today, her NYT column, “A Good Appetite,” features everything from a reinvented crab dip to her best Instant Pot recipes.And all the while, Melissa's written 45 cookbooks! She's collaborated on books with chefs like Daniel Boulud, David Bouley, and Claudia Fleming. Her 2017 home-cooking tome, Dinner: Changing the Game, features more than 200 recipes for inventive, interesting meals. She's following it up with her latest work, Dinner in One, which features recipes that use just “one” vessel—one sauté pan, one sheet tray, one pot, etc.In this week's show, we're talking with Melissa about growing up with food-loving parents who immersed her in French food and culture at an early age … how she landed at the NYT, even though she turned down their first job offer … and how dining out is critical to her recipe development process. And, of course, we're putting her to the test in our signature culinary game.Bonus Content + Recipes This WeekThis week, paid subscribers will receive two featured recipes from Melissa's Dinner in One: the Roasted Cauliflower and Potatoes with Harissa, Yogurt, and Toasted Almonds and her Ricotta Olive Oil Pound Cake.Salt + Spine is supported by listeners like you. To get full access to our exclusive content and featured recipes, and support our work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.Coming Up…* Attention Bay Area fans: Our fifth-annual Cookie Swap is coming up on Sunday, Dec. 11 featuring oodles of cookies and demos from yours truly, Kristina Cho, and more! The cookie swap is sold out, but you can join the waitlist here!* This week's episode with Melissa Clark is the last “regular” episode of the year—but we've got something really exciting in store for December. Stay tuned for more details! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit saltandspine.substack.com/subscribe

Good Food
Cookies, cakes, sugar-free desserts, pies

Good Food

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2022 57:13


Food writer Rossi Anastopoulo shares the not-always-sweet history of pie in America. Rose Levy Beranbaum delivers the gospel of snickerdoodles in an epic cookbook devoted to cookies. Brian Levy deploys fruits, nuts, grains, and dairy to create "no sugar" desserts. Former Gramercy Tavern pastry chef Claudia Fleming is back with her first cookbook in 20 years, focusing on both savory and sweet baking. Local pie maven Nicole Rucker reveals what inflation and the rising cost of staples like sugar, flour, butter, and eggs means for professional bakers. Finally, baker Sasha Piligian readies herself for Thanksgiving with a sweet potato purchase at the farmer's market.

Salt & Spine
It's simple, genius. Kristen Miglore returns with her latest, Simply Genius

Salt & Spine

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 43:03


Hi there! This week's episode is coming to you a bit later than normal, as I've been under the weather fighting what feels like my 47th sinus infection over the last few years. Thankfully, we recorded this chat with the wonderful Kristen Miglore several weeks ago—with both a live audience and a non-nasally host. That said, we've got a great show for you: Kristen is back for the second time on the pod, this time sharing a new batch of Genius tips and tricks (and hacks, if you will). Plus, recipes and tons of new cookbook releases this week.

Inside Julia's Kitchen
Meet Claudia Fleming

Inside Julia's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 42:40


This week, on Inside Julia's Kitchen, host Todd Schulkin welcomes celebrated pastry chef Claudia Fleming. They discuss her role as the Executive Culinary Director for New York's Daily Provisions in New York City, her long-awaited new cookbook, Delectable, and which desserts and savory recipes she keeps coming back to. Plus, Claudia shares her Julia Moment.Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Inside Julia's Kitchen by becoming a member!Inside Julia's Kitchen is Powered by Simplecast.

The TASTE Podcast
151: Claudia Fleming

The TASTE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 58:00


What a joy it is to have Claudia Fleming live in the studio. Claudia is the executive pastry director of Union Square Hospitality Group and the author of the new cookbook Delectable: Sweet and Savory Baking. But many listeners may know Claudia best from her iconic (and once out of print) first cookbook, The Last Course. In this episode, we dive into Claudia's long career working in New York City restaurants and writing books. We find out how the pandemic brought a great opportunity to write Delectable, a book that I think should be considered a modern baking classic. I also pick her brain about some of life's biggest baking mysteries. It's so cool getting to know Claudia Fleming a bit better. Also on the show, we catch up with the cofounders of the amazing food magazine Cake Zine. Aliza Abarbanel and Tanya Bush talk about the theme of their latest issue and what makes their partnership so sweet. It's a great talk with two rising stars in food media.More from Claudia Fleming:The Tart That Launched a Thousand Tarts [TASTE]A Legendary Pastry Chef Returns to New York City [Food & Wine] Rekindling the Flame at Danny Meyer's Ci Siamo [The New York Times]How the Budino Craze Swept Across America [TASTE]Buy: Cake Zine

The TASTE Podcast
135: Melissa Clark

The TASTE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 64:30


How do you introduce Melissa Clark, a prolific cookbook author, longtime New York Times columnist, and one of the most respected food writers around? Well, first you must know that one of our absolute favorite cookbooks of all time is her 2017 tome Dinner: Changing the Game. In this episode, we talk about what inspires her weekly recipe column in the paper of record and how her latest book, Dinner in One, may be one of her most personal books yet. We also go back to her days collaborating with great chefs including Daniel Boulud, David Bouley, and Claudia Fleming. We hope you enjoy getting to know Melissa Clark a little better. Also on the show Matt catches up with Contributing Editor Aliza Abarbanel to talk all about this McTorta moment we are all living in, as well as ranking the top fast food menu items of the land.More from Melissa Clark:Take Your Cakes to the Upside Down [New York Times] Elbowing for Scallops With Melissa Clark [TASTE]How to Roast the Perfect Chicken [Youtube]The McTorta Moment [TASTE]Buy: Dinner in One

All in the Industry ®️
"On the Road" at the 2022 James Beard Awards in Chicago

All in the Industry ®️

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 66:00


On today's episode of All in the Industry®, Shari Bayer has a special “On the Road” show from the 2022 James Beard Awards in Chicago, which took place from June 11-13 in Chicago, IL. Shari's coverage includes her exclusive red carpet interviews with nominees and presenters at the Chef and Restaurant Awards at the Lyric Opera House, with a bit of our Speed Round game too! Plus, Shari has interviews with some of the winners during the awards ceremony and celebration (listed below). Congratulations to everyone! It was a wonderful awards weekend! Today's show also features Shari's PR tip to celebrate your journey; and Solo Dining experience at Chef Jason Vincent's Giant in Chicago. 2022 James Beard Awards -- Shari's red carpet and awards ceremony interviews in chronological order:Damian Sansonetti, Chaval, Portland, MENominee: Best Chef: Northwest and PacificRuben Ortega, Xochi, Houston, TX Nominee: Outstanding Pastry ChefZak Stern, Zak the Baker, Miami, FLNominee: Outstanding Baker Irene Li, Mei Mei Dumplings and Prepshift, Boston, MALeadership WinnerMavis Jay-Sanders, Drive Change, NYCLeadership WinnerChristian ClemensonActor playing James Beard, HBO Max series “Julia” JJ Johnson, FIELDTRIP, NYCNominee: Best Chef: New York StateLydia Chang, Pichet Ong, and *Peter Chang, Peter Chang, VA and MD*Nominee: Outstanding Chef(Lydia translates)Chintan Pandya and Roni Mazumdar, Dhamaka, NYCWinner: Best Chef: New York StateNominee: Best New Restaurant, NYCCaroline Schiff, Gage & Tollner, NYCNominee: Outstanding Pastry ChefKatie Button and Felix Meana, Curate, Asheville, NCWinner: Outstanding HospitalityNominee: Best Chef: SoutheastTiffany Derry, Roots Southern Table, Farmers Branch, TXNominee: Best New RestaurantNominee: Best Chef: TexasCheetie Kumar, Garland, Raleigh, NCNominee: Best Chef: SoutheastChris Williams, Lucille's Hospitality Group, Houston, TXNominee: Outstanding RestaurateurAyesha Nurdjaja, Shukette, NYCNominee: Best Chef: New York StateYia Vang, Union Hmong Kitchen, Minneapolis, MNNominee: Best Chef: MidwestManeet Chauhan, Morph Hospitality Group, Nashville, TNPresenterClare Reichenbach, CEOJames Beard FoundationEllen Yin, High Street Hospitality Group, Philadelphia, PANominee: Outstanding RestaurateurSheldon Simeon, Tin Roof, Kahului, HINominee: Best Chef: Northwest and PacificClaudia Fleming, Union Square Hospitality Group, NYCPresenter**Justin Chearno, The Four Horseman, Brooklyn, NYCWinner: Outstanding Wine ProgramAlba Huerta, Julep, Houston, TXWinner: Outstanding Bar ProgramBrandon Jew, Mister Jiu's, San Francisco, CAWinner: Best Chef: CaliforniaWinner (Media Awards): Best Restaurant and Professional Book (with Tiehlon Ho)Grace YoungHumanitarian of the YearErick Williams, Virtue Restaurant & Bar, Chicago, ILWinner: Best Chef: Great LakesKatie Button and Felix Meana, Curate, Asheville, NCWinner: Outstanding HospitalityNominee: Best Chef: SoutheastMeherwan Irani, Chai Pani, Asheville, NCWinner: Outstanding RestaurantMartin Yan Lifetime Achievement Award**Photo Courtesy of Shari Bayer.Listen at Heritage Radio Network; subscribe/rate/review our show at iTunes, Stitcher or Spotify. Follow us @allindustry. And check out Shari Bayer's YouTube Channel for two #JBFA videos with red carpet highlights and more! Thanks for being a part of All in the Industry®. HRN is home to transformative exchanges about food. Our 35+ member-supported food podcasts empower eaters to cultivate a radically better world. This month, we're asking you to join us. Become a monthly sustaining member at heritageradionetwork.org/donate.All in the Industry is Powered by Simplecast.

Radio Cherry Bombe
Claire Saffitz is a Dessert Person

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2022 56:32


It took a while for YouTube's favorite baker, Claire Saffitz, to figure out her calling. Claire joins host Kerry Diamond to talk about her early days as a culinary student in Paris, her first and only restaurant job, and how food media became her thing. Claire also shares a few tidbits about her upcoming cookbook; what she learned in the process of writing her debut cookbook, the bestselling Dessert Person; and why she considers Dorie Greenspan and Claudia Fleming her mentors. Thank you to Kerrygold, the makers of butter and cheese with milk from Irish grass-fed cows, for supporting our show. Vi​​sit KerrygoldUSA.com for more.Radio Cherry Bombe is recorded at Rockefeller Center in New York City. Our theme song is by the band Tra La La.Subscribe to our newsletter at cherrybombe.com/newsletter-signup. For past episodes and transcripts, visit cherrybombe.com/radio-cherry-bombeMore on Claire: Instagram, Dessert Person, YouTube

Radio Cherry Bombe
Chef Hillary Sterling of Ci Siamo Has Arrived

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2022 41:43


Chef Hillary Sterling is one of the most respected chefs on the New York scene, having worked over the years at Mesa Grill, Lupa, A Voce, and Vic's, honing her craft and becoming known for beautiful, seasonal, Italian-inspired cuisine. Today, Chef Hillary helms the kitchen—the very open kitchen—at Ci Siamo, the highly anticipated restaurant from Union Square Hospitality Group that opened in Manhattan West this past October. Hillary joins host Kerry Diamond to talk about her early days bussing tables as a teen in Montauk, her decision to become a chef, working with the legendary pastry chef Claudia Fleming, and the highlights of the Ci Siamo menu. Today's show is supported by Territory Foods. For more, visit territoryfoods.com. Use code CHERRY75 for $75 off your first three weeks.Radio Cherry Bombe is recorded at Newsstand Studios at Rockefeller Center. Our theme song is by the band Tra La La.Subscribe to our newsletter at https://cherrybombe.com/newsletter-signup. For past episodes and transcripts, visit https://cherrybombe.com/radio-cherry-bombeFor more about Chef Hillary:Info: https://www.cisiamonyc.com/team-member/hillarybrsterling-1/Instagram: @chefhillarysterling

Add Passion and Stir
Arianna Huffington and Claudia Fleming on De-stressing

Add Passion and Stir

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2021 44:48


In this episode of Add Passion and Stir from early 2019, Thrive Global Founder and CEO Arianna Huffington and renowned pastry chef and North Fork Table and Inn owner Claudia Fleming discuss a topic very relevant today: the effects of stress and exhaustion on creativity, productivity and health. “For all of us, what moves the needle, whether it's in a non-profit or for-profit business, are creative ideas. They are the first to be sacrificed when we are exhausted… If your life is just about productivity and there is no joy, there is something wrong,” explains Huffington. Fleming uses her influence as a chef to effect change. “Food is politics. You can't get away from the fact that agribusiness runs a good portion of our government. I think there's no greater way to effect change than by bringing people together. As chefs, we do that,” she explains.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

All in the Industry ®️

On today's episode of All in the Industry®, Shari Bayer's guest is David Burke, one of the best known and most respected chefs in modern American cuisine, who is fueled by passion, grit and a knack for artful innovation. Acknowledged as a leading pioneer in American cooking, Burke, a proud New Jerseyan who was born in Brooklyn, is recognized internationally for his revolutionary techniques, exceptional skills, successful restaurant empire and many TV appearances. In the parlance of today's celebrity driven culture, he is a rock star of the culinary world. Today's show also includes Shari's PR tip to have grit; Speed Round; Industry News Discussion about Bobby Flay parting ways with the Food Network after 27 years; and Solo Dining experience at Ci Siamo in Manhattan West Plaza -- the newest restaurant from Danny Meyer's Union Square Hospitality Group.Photo Courtesy of David Burke.Listen at Heritage Radio Network; subscribe/rate/review our show at iTunes, Stitcher or Spotify. Follow us @allindustry. Thanks for being a part of All in the Industry®. Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support All in the Industry by becoming a member!All in the Industry is Powered by Simplecast.

The Splendid Table
698: A Holiday Jubilee with Toni Tipton-Martin and Questlove

The Splendid Table

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2020 50:32


Festive discussions of celebration, community, and cooking with Questlove, Toni Tipton-Martin, Raquel Pelzel, and Claudia Fleming. Broadcast dates for this episode: December 20, 2019 (originally aired) December 25, 2020 (rebroadcast)

The Big Food Talk
A Pastry Chef from Long Island Creates an Iconic Cookbook & Career

The Big Food Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 30:11


Today I'm speaking with Claudia Fleming, a James Beard award winning pastry chef and former owner of the North Fork Inn, here on Long Island. Claudia has had an illustrious career, working at the famed Tribeca Grill and Grammercy Tavern. Claudia is now famous among pastry chefs and home cooks for her iconic, out-of-print cookbook called, The Last Course. In this episode of the Big Food Talk we discuss her passion for food, struggles and achievements as well as what's in store for the future. Support Long Island's restaurants and join the Big Food Talk mailing list for exclusive giveaways and listener only discounts. https://bigfoodtalk.com/claudia-fleming-the-last-course/ Here's the list of questions we discuss through this week's episode. How did Tribeca Grill transform your career? Claudia talks about how the staff was obsessed with cooking for people. If a friend or colleague came into the restaurant, the kitchen would kick into overdrive just to please that guest. How does the kitchen staff execute meal service with such precision? The dance or orchestration happens through practice. One can assume the longer a kitchen staff works together as a unit, the more they can feel each others rhythm and pacing to deliver meal service at a high level. Claudia learned early on in her career to be able to rely on other people to help get the job done even if it was competitive in the kitchen. What was different about working at Grammercy Tavern vs Tribeca Grill? For Claudia, a key moment in her career is the time spent in France between Tribeca Grill and Grammercy Tavern. Times had changed when she landed at Grammercy Tavern. A kinder, gentler kitchen is how she describes it. Did you feel like you had enough experience for the job? Looking back, Claudia is pretty clear she was in way over head at Grammercy Tavern. For the rest of the world, tasting her desserts and in awe of her skill, we wouldn't be able to tell. It was her relationships she established and her maturity that helped pushed her career along. Claudia clearly had a great work ethic as she reveals as well. What was your inspiration for The Last Course? The cookbook The Last Course was a culmination of her careers work and represented her repertoire at Grammercy Tavern. Claudia never thought about making a cookbook before but they had a large literary clientele, where one thing led to another and next thing you know she's a published author. It's a little more complicated than this summary so listen in to get the full story on this iconic cookbook. Why did you decide to move back to Long Island? For Claudia, the answer was simple. Now married and looking for a different lifestyle with her husband, they decided to open The North Fork Inn. It was a simple concept. No fancy hooks, just great food and service and it worked. Sourcing local ingredients and cooking with passion always Want to find out which dessert Claudia loves the most? You'll have to download and listen to the full episode to hear the rest of our discussion. How some of her dishes were happy accidents or how preparing simple food isn't as easy you think.

Bleav in Hot Takes on a Plate
Desserts with Claudia Fleming

Bleav in Hot Takes on a Plate

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2020 25:49


Claudia Fleming is one of America’s most influential and revered pastry chefs. So imagine how she reacts when Rob Petrone tries to tell her that milk chocolate is better than dark chocolate. (Yeah, not good.) The James Beard Award winner joins Rob to debate desserts and share her future plans now that she’s sold her acclaimed restaurant, The North Fork Table & Inn on Long Island.For more on Claudia and how to order The Last Course: https://www.chefclaudiafleming.com/

While The Cookies Cool
#2 WTCC - Chef Julie Selonke

While The Cookies Cool

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2020 68:56


In this episode, we had the pleasure of interviewing Chef Julie Selonke. We had a great time and even got to nerd-out a little bit about Star Wars at the beginning. If that's not your thing, skip to about the 10 minute mark, where the interview begins! Chef Julie Selonke is the Program Coordinator, as well as a Chef Instructor, for Oakland Community College's Culinary Studies Institute. She got her culinary start at Oakland Hills Country Club, under Chef Brian Walsh, ultimately spending nearly 10 years there, as Sous Chef and Interim Executive Chef. She honed her skills at Tribute Restaurant, working for Chef Takashi Yagahashi, where she worked alongside some of the country's biggest chefs, including Eric Ripert, Marcus Samuelson, David Burke, Massahara Morimoto, and Claudia Fleming. She has experience as a private chef, is a Certified Executive Chef through the American Culinary Federation, and was honored as the ACF Regional Educator of the Year. She is one of the kindest people you'll ever have the pleasure to meet, and we had a wonderful conversation with her, so please enjoy! If you're interested in supporting our podcast and helping to fund future episodes, please consider heading to https://anchor.fm/while-the-cookies-cool/support; thank you! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/while-the-cookies-cool/support

Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street Radio
Baking Q&A with Claudia Fleming

Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 52:15


Legendary pastry chef Claudia Fleming gives us a crash-course in baking. We discuss her tried-and-true techniques, her all-time favorite desserts and her experience working at New York City’s Jams in the 1980s. Plus, reporter Alli Fam brings us the story of green crabs, an invasive species whose population is on the rise; Bianca Bosker walks us through the fascinating history of tablescaping; and we present a recipe for Thai street food at home. Get this week's recipe, Thai Grilled Pork Skewers: https://www.177milkstreet.com/recipes/thai-grilled-pork-skewers-moo-ping-barbeque-dinner-chili-lime This week's sponsor: Go to masterclass.com/MILK for 15% off your Annual MasterClass All-Access Pass.

One Woman Kitchen
Pastry Chef Claudia Fleming - A Decadent Dance of Desserts

One Woman Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2020 46:21


Claudia Fleming is one of the most beloved pastry chefs in America. She gained international acclaim as the pastry chef at the three-starred Gramercy Tavern along with Chef Tom Colicchio. Credited with blending sweet and with savory in her remarkable desserts with chocolate caramel tarts with sea salt among her most famous. Her book "The Last Course: The Desserts of The Gramercy Tavern" became a cult classic and was published to great fanfare. Claudia is also a winner of the coveted James Beard Outstanding Pastry Chef Award .  Reading Nancy Silverton's book changed her life, and how to make the perfect caramel. Claudia shares her story of going from ballerina to superstar pastry chef with author and chef Rozanne Gold.

One Woman Kitchen
Pastry Chef Claudia Fleming - A Decadent Dance of Desserts

One Woman Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2020 46:20


Claudia Fleming is one of the most beloved pastry chefs in America. She gained international acclaim as the pastry chef at the three-starred Gramercy Tavern along with Chef Tom Colicchio. Credited with blending sweet and with savory in her remarkable desserts with chocolate caramel tarts with sea salt among her most famous. Her book "The Last Course: The Desserts of The Gramercy Tavern" became a cult classic and was published to great fanfare. Claudia is also a winner of the coveted James Beard Outstanding Pastry Chef Award .  Reading Nancy Silverton's book changed her life, and how to make the perfect caramel. Claudia shares her story of going from ballerina to superstar pastry chef with author and chef Rozanne Gold.  

Radio Cherry Bombe
Resy CMO Victoria Vaynberg on Menus, Marketing, and Motherhood

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2020 36:53


If snagging a hot restaurant reservation is your favorite competitive sport, you need to know Victoria Vaynberg. As the chief marketing officer of Resy, Victoria is helping expand what the reservations platform is all about. She and host Kerry Diamond talk about Resy’s Women of Food dinner series, marketing advice for small businesses, and her life with one-year-old twin daughters. Fun fact: Victoria is a member of a podcast club. Think book club, but with podcasts. Plus, find out why Nat Paull of Beatrix Bakes in Melbourne, Australia, thinks pastry chef and Last Course author Claudia Fleming is the bombe! Thank you to Rioja Wines, our new sponsor, for supporting this episode of Radio Cherry Bombe! Rioja is the premier winemaking region in Spain that’s home to more than 600 wineries. To learn more visit riojawine.com/us.

Special Sauce with Ed Levine
Special Sauce: Claudia Fleming on the Pitfalls of Your Passion [2/2]

Special Sauce with Ed Levine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2020 36:30


On this week's Special Sauce, I continue my conversation with visionary pastry chef Claudia Fleming. But before we get to Claudia's captivating story, Kenji fields a question from Serious Eater Joan Moore, who wants to know how long the blade on her Cuisinart food processor should last. After Kenji delivers his characteristically thoughtful answer, Claudia and I pick up where we left off last week, and talk about her harrowing and moving journey. We start off by examining why she and her late husband, the prodigiously talented chef Gerry Hayden, decided to pack up their knives and scrapers, leave New York City, and buy an inn on the North Fork of Long Island, despite the fact that at the time, Claudia was, as she says, "kind of the it-girl when we left. I was on top of the world." Turns out, the move was made in part for Gerry. "I felt like I was eclipsing the larger talent in the relationship," Claudia says. "He devoted his entire life to being a chef, a cook. I loved him very much and wanted him to have his time. I hope that doesn't sound patronizing. I wanted him to live his dream and I wanted to help facilitate that." The inn hardly turned out to be a panacea. "It was a little money pit and it was a bit like The Shining," Claudia remembers. "It was kind of crazy. The inn was literally falling down and falling apart... There were lots of hysterical things about that. But it was kind of creepy and scary, too." If there was a single lesson Claudia took away from the experience, aside from the necessity of being well capitalized, it was this: "Beware of your passion. It can kill you." The battle to keep the dream of the inn alive took a tragic turn when Gerry was diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease. Claudia became chief caregiver to Gerry, even as she was running the inn. And yet somehow they persevered. "I got my strength from him," Claudia says, explaining how she managed to keep everything running. "I'm like, 'How is he doing this?' It was incredible. I'm like, 'If he can do it, I can do it with him.'" Claudia and I also spend some time talking about the reissuing (a rare occurrence in the cookbook world) of her profoundly influential book, The Last Course: The Desserts of Gramercy Tavern. I ask Claudia what she set out to do with the book. "I was trying to make restaurant desserts more accessible by deconstructing them," she says. It was also a way for her to advance the idea of dessert as something more than just something sweet to end a meal. "I think maybe I was or am a frustrated cook," Claudia says, "so I started making dessert just like another course: the last course. It became less about sweet than about just another course that wraps up the dinner. It didn't come out of left field." To close out the episode, Daniel Gritzer checks in from the Serious Eats test kitchen and schools us on grilling pork chops. "Grilling pork chops can present similar problems as chicken breasts. The meat is lean and prone to drying out, even with the slightest overcooking. With a few simple steps, though, you can guarantee that your pork chops will be juicy and perfect every time." I urge all Serious Eaters to check this episode out, just because Claudia Fleming's story is so moving. --- The full transcript for this episode can be found over here at Serious Eats: https://www.seriouseats.com/preview?record=452053

Special Sauce with Ed Levine
Special Sauce: Kenji on Vegetarian Chile Verde, Claudia Fleming on Lego Desserts [1/2]

Special Sauce with Ed Levine

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2020 31:37


There are forgotten giants in the food world, people who have profoundly influenced what we eat, but whose names we barely know. James Beard Award-winning pastry chef Claudia Fleming is one of those people. She is the author, along with Melissa Clark of the New York Times, of The Last Course: The Desserts of Gramercy Tavern, which you'll find on the bookshelf of anyone who's serious about dessert. She is also my guest on the next two episodes of Special Sauce, and man does she have some stories to tell! First, in this week's episode, Claudia talks about ice cream, dance, and dessert construction; then, in next week's episode, she'll talk about love and loss. When Claudia first became a pastry chef, it was the era of vertical desserts, which she wasn't thrilled about. As she says in the book, "I wasn't very interested in Legos. I wanted it to taste like something." She expanded on that notion in the interview. "They make things that stacked on top of each other and how high can we make it before it falls down," she says. "Technically, the only way to do that is with tons of sugar and it's almost inedible. You'd have this tiny edible thing on the plate and then you have all of these things on top." Claudia has a gender-based theory for why that trend came about, and why her approach is different: "I think it's a more feminine approach because- I'm going to be really sexist- boys like to build things. Women nourish more. I'm being incredibly generalistic and very sexist, but that's my experience." But before we hear from Claudia, Serious Eater Ryder Cobean asks Kenji for a non-meat alternative to use in Kenji's very fine pressure cooker chile verde. Kenji offers up two ideas. One is soy-based and not so surprising. The other, however, shocked the hell out of me. I'm not giving it away here, but I will give you a hint: It's a fruit I most often associate with the Caribbean. Finally, we hear from our beloved Pastry Wizard Stella Parks about how to improve your banana bread, no matter which recipe you use. Pastry chef legend Claudia Fleming on the rise and fall of Lego-like desserts, Kenji on losing the meat in his pressure cooker chile verde, and BraveTart weighing in on banana bread. Quite an episode of Special Sauce. --- The full transcript for this episode can be found over here at Serious Eats: https://www.seriouseats.com/2020/02/claudia-fleming-1-1.html

Cookery by the Book
The Last Course | Claudia Fleming

Cookery by the Book

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2020 16:35


The Last CourseBy Claudia Flemingwith Melissa Clark Intro: Welcome to the number one cookbook podcast, Cookery by the Book with Suzy Chase. She's just a home cook in New York City, sitting at her dining room table, talking to cookbook authors.Claudia Fleming: Hi. I'm Claudia Fleming and I'm here to speak about the rerelease and my cookbook, The Last Course.Suzy Chase: For more Cookery by the Book you can follow me on Instagram. If you enjoy this podcast, please be sure to share it with a friend. I'm always looking for new people to enjoy Cookery by the Book. Now, on with the show.Suzy Chase: Personally, the thing I love about The Last Course is it speaks to everyone, perfect for home cooks like me. You are acclaimed for having set an industry-wide standard at New York City's Gramercy Tavern with your James Beard Award-winning desserts. Gramercy Tavern is my all-time favorite restaurant here in the city. Danny Meyer said it so accurately in the cookbook, he wrote Gramercy Tavern strives to combine luxury with warm, down-to-earth hospitality. The New York Times called The Last Course a cult out-of-print cookbook. I'm not alone when I say I'm thrilled you've rereleased it. It's rare for a cookbook to be rereleased, so I'm curious to know why you chose to rerelease it now.Claudia Fleming: It wasn't my choice. The publisher reached out to me and asked if I'd be interested in reissuing the cookbook, and of course I said yes. It was so many years later. Yeah, I mean, I get weekly requests for books and I didn't have books. People were always wanting to buy the book and I guess the demand got back to them and they decided to rerelease, thankfully. Good for me, yay.Suzy Chase: Yeah, good for all of us. Before we dig into the book, I'd like to do a little walk down memory lane.Claudia Fleming: Okay.Suzy Chase: 1984, on 79th Street, you're working at Jonathan Waxman's ode to California cuisine, Jams. Then, Danny Meyer brought you to Union Square Cafe. Then Drew Nieporent hired you as the pastry assistant at Tribeca Grill in 1990. 1994 Tom Colicchio brought you on board Gramercy Tavern. Those are four visionaries in the restaurant business. I mean, what a star-studded list. Can you think of one takeaway that you learned from each of them? Jonathan, Danny, Tom, and Drew?Claudia Fleming: Oh, sure. Well, Jonathan did bring a revolutionary style of cooking and cuisine to New York and it was my first exposure to luxury dining. Every single thing you touched in that restaurant was the very best, the Ginori china, the Hockney paintings, the Italian tiles. Then of course, all the ingredients that he used. I remember there being towers of FedEx boxes that came from California with all those baby vegetables, the likes of which I'd never seen before. It was so incredibly exciting. So I think from Jonathan, it was just his approach to cooking. It was very California, it was very light and laid back. In those days we were still immersed in the French style of dining and cooking and eating, and this was just a whole new world. It was incredibly exciting and I just felt so honored to be in it and part of it.Claudia Fleming: Danny, of course as we know, is just Mr. Hospitality. Danny, I think, brought respect to those of us who worked in the industry that before that time it wasn't a job for educated, ambitious people. It was, and I think still is, a little bit of a place for lost toys or broken toys. The restaurant industry definitely attracts a different kind of personality. But still, Danny gave working in the restaurant industry respect, not to mention his brand of hospitality, which is just warm and inviting and ingratiating and a delight to be around. I mean, he really had a knack for seeking out people whose, I think, driving motivation is to please people.Claudia Fleming: Let's see, Drew. Drew, I have never met a person who remembers names, numbers. He was just the ultimate maitre d'. Of course, he got so much larger than that. He was just more of an entertainer I think than Danny was, but still that same kind of loving people who came to the restaurant and wanting to do anything to make them happy. If you met Drew once, he remembered you forever. I mean, I remember years after working for him, calling him and him calling me back within five minutes. There was no one he didn't get back to. He was amazing that way, or is amazing that way. Follow up, I would say is one of the things that Drew has taught me. Never let a phone call go on answered or a request unintended to.Claudia Fleming: And who was our last name?Suzy Chase: And Tom Colicchio.Claudia Fleming: Oh, Tom. Oh, my mentor. Tom taught me how to cook, taught me how to think about food, taught me about seasonality and locality, and informed the way I cook and create desserts to this day.Suzy Chase: In between Tribeca Grill and Gramercy Tavern, you jetted off to Paris to study pastry. Talk a little bit about that.Claudia Fleming: Jetted off. Wow, that sounds glamorous.Suzy Chase: Doesn't it?Claudia Fleming: It was a little less glamorous. I think I was living on like $20 a week. I would make a pot of lentil soup on Sunday and eat it all week long. Buying myself a piece of cheese was a luxury. Luxurious, it was not. I worked in bakeries, because after having worked in restaurants I wanted a more technically-driven education as opposed to the stylized creations that one learns when you work in a restaurant. I chose bakeries because they are so basic and traditional and technically oriented.Suzy Chase: Growing up, you didn't cook with your mother or grandmother, and you were a dancer. Needless to say, food wasn't at the forefront of your passions or thinking.Claudia Fleming: No.Suzy Chase: When did that pivot?Claudia Fleming: Once I started working at Jams I think, but make no mistake, I mean, my family, Italian-American family and my mother and her sisters were food obsessed. I think from the time they woke up until the time they went to bed, all they did was talk about food or what the next meal was going to be or how to enhance this or make this better. This is so great, but if we just did this, it would be that. I mean, it was never ever far from the forefront of their minds. My mother was an excellent cook, so we always had great food, never a frozen vegetable or a canned vegetable. I remember begging for iceberg lettuce because we had escarole and chicory and I just wanted plain old boring iceberg lettuce.Claudia Fleming: So food was very, very important in my family. I guess as a dancer it was kind of the forbidden fruit, which is perhaps why I was attracted to it. But I would have to say at Jams is when it really became something that I was attracted to as a creative outlet, because it was food cooked and presented in a way that I had never seen or imagined before.Suzy Chase: Do you think because your training wasn't as structured as that of many other pastry chefs, you can come up with interesting flavor combinations, like roasted pineapple with pink peppercorns, by thinking outside the box?Claudia Fleming: I think that's fair to say. I also was very influenced by the cooks in the kitchen. I kind of wanted to do what they were doing and I wanted to sprinkle and saute and not necessarily measure exactly and play with mis en place. So yes, I was open to experimenting and Tom was open to having me do that.Suzy Chase: Speaking of experimenting, one thing I used to love about your desserts at Gramercy Tavern was that it wouldn't be just a slice of cake or a piece of pie. There would be at least three components on the plate that I could tell were so carefully thought out and mind-blowingly delicious. Lucky for us, the last chapter in the cookbook is a collection of your signature composed desserts. Talk a little bit about that.Claudia Fleming: Again, to go back to watching the cooks compose a plate, it's what I wanted to do. I wanted to have a primary element, whether that be the tart or the cake, and then enhance it with something cold or something hot, something crunchy, something tart, an herb, a spice. I was just always looking to make things more complicated than they were. In retrospect, it was such an incredible luxury to be afforded that time to just immerse myself in flavor combinations that weren't necessarily part of the sweet kitchen. I was borrowing from the savory kitchen. I saw chefs and cooks borrower from the sweet side of the kitchen, so I thought, well, why can't I borrow from them or find complimentary things from the savory side that would be equally complimentary to desserts? That was just how I started to approach things.Suzy Chase: You use hard boiled egg yolks in your biscuits. I have never heard of this before. Can you talk a little bit about that?Claudia Fleming: It was something I learned from a woman that I worked with. It is a tenderizer and it's very Austrian. You can find it in a lot of linzer recipes.Suzy Chase: So interesting.Claudia Fleming: I know.Suzy Chase: What does the boiled egg yolk do? Does it make it fluffier, or?Claudia Fleming: It makes the dough more tender or softer.Suzy Chase: Tell me about the North Fork Table and Inn that you opened with your husband, Gerry Hayden, and Mike and Mary Mraz.Claudia Fleming: Yep. Well, let me start by telling you, I sold the North Fork Table and Inn. Last week we closed.Suzy Chase: Congratulations.Claudia Fleming: Thank you, yes, very happy. 15 years, it was a wonderful, challenging, bittersweet time. We went out there to realize a dream. It was very, very hard, but such an amazing experience to work so closely with farmers and fishermen and just all the local purveyors that we used, building relationships, people coming to the back door whenever they had something special that they wanted us to use or try, and being in a small community where everybody is just there to support everybody else. The food community out there developed or evolved so much over the years that we were there, and there were just so many likeminded people wanting to live a kinder, gentler life. It was lovely, albeit incredibly challenging and ultimately not sustainable.Suzy Chase: For the listeners who may not know your husband, that you met at Tribeca Grill, who was a pioneer in the farm to table movement, sadly passed away in 2015 from ALS, and I am so sorry.Claudia Fleming: Thank you.Suzy Chase: Could you talk a bit about cooking and grief? Has baking, cooking, and being in the kitchen helped your heart heal, or has it made it more excruciating?Claudia Fleming: I think it's different at different times. But I have to say, although I'm in the kitchen every day doing production, running a restaurant eclipsed that aspect of being at the restaurant. It's very hard to be creative when every day is crisis management and it was mostly about getting it done most of the time so I could move on to, I don't know, working on PR or solving problems or trying to figure out why we weren't doing more business this Saturday this year than we did last Saturday last year. I mean, it was just constantly evaluating the business and trying to figure it out and rationalize and reason why things were changing so dramatically all the time.Claudia Fleming: I think being busy, I'm not sure that it helps in the healing process, but it's certainly a great distraction. I kind of feel somewhat like I'm waiting to have some time to mourn, frankly, now that the restaurant is closed and I can look back at all the wonderful things we accomplished, but when you're struggling, it's very hard to recognize all that. So I look forward to being able to appreciate what we accomplished now that the struggle is subsided.Suzy Chase: Now that you've closed the inn, what are your plans to start a new chapter in your life?Claudia Fleming: Well, there is a new cookbook in the pipeline. I imagine I'll be consulting. I'm staying on with the new owners of the restaurant to do some consulting on the dessert menu. Hopefully, there'll be some travel in my future and discovery and exploration.Suzy Chase: Over the weekend. I made your recipe for individual chocolate souffle cakes on page 217. Can you describe this dish?Claudia Fleming: These are actually a Nancy Silverton adaptation from a thousand years ago. When something is this simple, the most important thing is to use the best ingredients you can get. In this instance, of course, you want to use high quality butter and farm fresh eggs, but the chocolate is really where it's at. In those days, Valrhona was where it was at. Not that it isn't anymore, but there are so many other chocolates that that one could explore with.Suzy Chase: Now, for my segment called My Favorite Cookbook, other than this cookbook, what is your all time favorite cookbook and why?Claudia Fleming: Nancy Silverton's dessert book, her first dessert book. It launched me into my passion for dessert and pastry in 1986, maybe it was. I devoured that book. I was living in Aspen that summer and the person I was staying with had a copy of the book, and I read it backwards and forwards, forwards and back. It was very classic, but with lots of twists and her interpretations. I just loved it and I love her still, after Tom is probably my greatest inspiration.Suzy Chase: Where can we find you on the web and social media?Claudia Fleming: I'm @chefclaudiafleming on Instagram and the same for Facebook.Suzy Chase: It has been so lovely chatting with you, Claudia.Suzy Chase: Thanks so much for coming on Cookery by the Book podcast.Claudia Fleming: Thank you for having me, Suzy, great to talk to you.Outro: Subscribe over on CookerybytheBook.com, and thanks for listening to the number one cookbook podcast, Cookery by the Book.

Andrew Talks to Chefs
Episode 104: Our Best (sound) Bites of 2019

Andrew Talks to Chefs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2019 77:13


We gathered ten favorite Andrew Talks to Chefs moments from 2019 for a fast-moving, pod year-in-review episode to close out the decade. Tom Colicchio recounts the origins of Top Chef; New Orleans's Kelly Fields shares the hidden meaning in her restaurant Willa Jean's chocolate chip cookie; pastry legend Claudia Fleming recounts her migration from dancing to cooking; Inn at Little Washington's Patrick O'Connell shares the methods he and his team employ to make every guest happy; Preeti Mistry discusses her roots as a theater kid; Kwame Onwuachi talks about the mission of his book Notes from a Young Black Chef; LA'S Genevieve Gergis and Andrew unpack their respective struggles with ADD; and we revisit a conversation with the late Anthony Bourdain ... these and other moments jumped out at us as we thought over the last 12 months, and we wanted to share them in one place before turning the page to 2020.Thanks for listening and Happy New Year!EPISODE GUIDE0:00 - 6:20     Intro6:20 - 49:15     Segment 1 (Patrick O'Connell, Kelly Fields, Kwame Onwuachi, Preeti Mistry, Tom Colicchio, Anthony Bourdain)49:15 - 53:40     Show Notes & Updates53:40 - 1:16:10     Segment 2 (Genevieve Gergis, Claudia Fleming, Jeremy Stephens, Christine Muhlke & Michael Laiskonis)1:16:10 - end    Outro***LINKS***Andrew Talks to Chefs OFFICIAL websiteInn at Little WashingtonWilla JeanKith/KinNotes from a Young Black ChefPreeti MistryTop ChefCrafted HospitalityParts UnknownBavelBestiaGalatoire'sS.Pellegrino Young Chef CompetitionNorth Fork Table & InnSignature Dishes that MatterMichael LaisonkisChristine MuhlkePhaidon

Andrew Talks to Chefs
Episode 99: Claudia Fleming (North Fork Table & Inn; author, The Last Course) and bonus guest Jeff Gordinier (Esquire magazine)

Andrew Talks to Chefs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2019 130:47


Andrew drove out to Southold, NY, this summer to visit influential pastry chef Claudia Fleming at her North Fork Table & Inn. They spoke about Claudia's Italian-Irish upbringing, her early days as an aspiring dancer, her transition to restaurant work (starting in the front of the house), and ascension to opening pastry chef at Gramercy Tavern, where she inspired generations of colleagues. Claudia worked in such seminal restaurants as the original Jams, Tribeca Grill, and Union Square Cafe, all of which are discussed in detail, as is the reissue of her cookbook The Last Course, just published last week.Joining Andrew for the intro this week is his colleague and neighbor Jeff Gordinier, food & drinks editor of Esquire magazine, whose 2019 Best New Restaurants list recently debuted. Jeff shares his extensive selection process, as well as some highlights from the list.Episode guide:1:25 - 33:40  Intro with Esquire magazine food & drinks editor Jeff Gordinier33:40 - 1:28:10 Claudia Fleming, part 11:28:40 - 1:39:28 More with Jeff Gordinier (mid-Show break)1:39:28 - 2:10:10 - Claudia Fleming, part 22:10:10 Wrap up with Jeff GordinierLinks:Andrew Talks to Chefs official websiteNorth Fork Table & Inn (Claudia's restaurant & inn)The Last Course (Claudia's book)Esquire's Best New Restaurants 2019Hungry (Jeff Gordinier's latest book)Please tell a friend about Andrew Talks to Chefs and/or rate/review us on your favorite podcast platform. Thanks for listening![photo of Claudia Fleming by Eric Striffler]

Speaking Broadly
Episode 118: Life After "The Last Course": Claudia Fleming

Speaking Broadly

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2019 43:19


What is it like to be one of the most beloved pastry chefs in America, to step away from the spotlight to prioritize your new husband's dream of opening a seaside table and inn, and to have that dream unexpectedly and devastatingly shattered? In this episode, host Dana Cowin speaks to Claudia Fleming about her life since leaving Gramercy Tavern, the reissue of her landmark book, "The Last Course", and her reinvigorated perspective on life and travel.Want to stay up to date on the latest Speaking Broadly episodes? To hear more conversations with Dana Cowin and her fierce guests, subscribe to Speaking Broadly (it’s free!) on iTunes or Stitcher. If you like what you hear, please take a moment to rate + review us on Apple’s podcast store and follow Dana on Instagram @speakingbroadly and @fwscout. Thanks for tuning in!Speaking Broadly is powered by Simplecast.

Radio Cherry Bombe
The Pastry Pro's Pastry Pro, Claudia Fleming

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2019 43:47


The Last Course is back! The influential dessert cookbook from 2001, by pastry chef Claudia Fleming and writer Melissa Clark, has been reissued. For years, The Last Course was one of the most coveted out-of-print cookbooks around; now it’s here for a new generation to discover. Claudia, who today runs North Fork Table & Inn in Southold, N.Y., stopped by Radio Cherry Bombe to talk about her beloved book, her unexpected career trajectory from dancer to world-class pastry chef, what desserts she’s best known for, and more. Be sure to tune in!Plus, stay tuned to find out who food and brand marketer Julia Marino from Seattle, Washington, thinks is the bombe.Thank you to Le Cordon Bleu culinary schools and Emmi cheese from Switzerland for supporting our show. 

Andrew Talks to Chefs
Episode 98: Signature Dishes That Matter with Christine Muhlke & Michael Laiskonis

Andrew Talks to Chefs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2019 65:52


A fun episode for both professional cooks and chefs, and "civilian" food geeks alike: Christine Muhlke, co-curator and writer of the new Phaidon book Signature Dishes That Matter, joins Andrew to kick around the notion of signature dishes, how she and her collaborators made their selections, and even some dishes that didn't make the cut. Joining them is acclaimed pastry chef Michael Laiskonis, currently of Recolte, and a food scholar in his own right.The conversation ranges from the 1600s to 2018, from street food to haute cuisine, from nouvelle to New American, and touches on chefs ranging from Claudia Fleming to Wolfgang Puck, Paul Bocuse to David Chang, Alice Waters to Dan Barber.Special thanks to Benno restaurant for hosting this conversation.Visit the official Andrew Talks to Chefs website to explore past episodes, join our mailing list, leave a voicemail or comment, and keep up with Andrew's blog.Here's a thought: If you like what you hear, please tell your chef-fascinated friends, subscribe to Andrew Talks to Chefs (it's free) on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Stitcher, follow us on your favorite social media platforms @ChefPodcast, and/or rate or review us on Apple's Podcast store. Thanks for listening!

Pastry Arts Podcast
Daniel Skurnick: Executive Pastry Chef of Buddakan & Le CouCou in NYC

Pastry Arts Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2019 35:12


In this episode, we talk with Executive Pastry Chef Daniel Skurnick. After graduating from the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, Daniel Skurnick spent a year in Thailand, living with a migratory hunter-gatherer tribe and learning their culture and cooking techniques. Once back in the U.S., he worked in the pastry departments at Gramercy Tavern, Bouley, and Jean-Georges in New York City and was executive pastry chef for both Morimoto NYC and Morimoto Waikiki. Today Skurnick serves as the Executive Pastry Chef of Buddakan and Le CouCou restaurants in New York. In the episode we discuss: From living with a migratory tribe in Thailand to a career in pastry Learning from Claudia Fleming at Gramercy Tavern Working with Johnny Iuzzini at Jean-Georges and Nougatine Mastering Asian desserts with the Iron Chef at Morimoto Juggling high-volume Asian inspired desserts at Buddakan with French fine dining at Le CouCou Giving the commencement address at CIA And much more!               

Add Passion and Stir
Arianna Huffington: Sound Asleep and Still Changing The World

Add Passion and Stir

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2019 43:02


Why is sleep the best remedy for just about everything? Billy Shore sits down with Thrive Global Founder and CEO Arianna Huffington and pastry chef and North Fork Table & Inn owner Claudia Fleming to talk about the effects of stress and exhaustion on creativity, productivity and health. “90% of the health care problems we deal with are stress-related and preventable,” says Huffington. “If your life is just about productivity and there is no joy, there is something wrong,” she explains, talking about how her Thrive Global platform helps people improve their well-being and performance. Fleming is aware of her own tendency to overwork. “You can literally never stop. You can stay all night, but if you don’t say ‘I’m leaving’, you can hang out all the time and not be very productive,” she says. Huffington also discusses how technology and our acrimonious political climate are creating additional stress that can be crippling. “There is absolutely no benefit in living in a perpetual state of outrage. We need to be very protective of our energy and use it wisely, use it to bring about change rather than simply venting,” she advises. Fleming sees her role as a chef as innately political. “Food is politics. You can’t get away from the fact that agribusiness runs a good portion of our government,” she explains. Listen to this thoughtful discussion on the dangers of exhaustion and burnout and recalibrate your understanding of creativity, productivity and performance.

All in the Industry ®️
Episode 207: Claudia Fleming, The North Fork Table & Inn

All in the Industry ®️

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2019 47:16


On today's episode of All in the Industry®, host Shari Bayer's guest is Claudia Fleming, the Proprietor & Pastry Chef at The North Fork Table & Inn in Southold, Long Island, NY. When Claudia was named Outstanding Pastry Chef by the James Beard Foundation in 2000, it was a well-earned recognition of the new chic, sophisticated, unfussy and casually graceful style she introduced - and continues - in her classically inspired, seasonal desserts and pastries.Claudia’s craft and approach to ingredients reflects the time she spent working in restaurants in New York (Jams, Union Square Cafe, Montrachet, TriBeCa Grill, and Gramercy Tavern) and in Paris (Fauchon). In 2005, Claudia along with her late husband, chef Gerry Hayden, left Manhattan to open The North Fork Table & Inn, in Long Island’s farm-filled wine country, living and working close to food producers. They set out to serve extraordinary food in a simply adorned, formal room, to create a dining experience like that found in the European countryside; and they succeeded. Claudia's exquisite book, The Last Course: Desserts from Gramercy Tavern, (Random House 2001), is prized by cooks and collectors alike. Her recipes have also been featured in numerous national publications, and she has served as a judge on TV's Chopped and Top Chef: Just Desserts Today's show also features Shari's PR tip, Speed Round, Industry News discussion, and Solo Dining experience at Chef Cedric Vongerichten's Wayan in NYC. Listen at Heritage Radio Network; subscribe/rate/review our show at iTunes, Stitcher or Spotify. Follow us @allindustry. Thanks for being a part of All in the Industry®! Photo courtesy of Claudia Fleming. All in the Industry is powered by Simplecast.

Cookbook Love Podcast
Episode 25: What’s on the Cookbook Horizon in 2019 with Jenny Hartin of The Cookbook Junkies and Publicity Director for Eat Your Books

Cookbook Love Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2019 65:01


Today is a jam-packed episode as I welcome back for her 2nd interview, Jenny Hartin, of The Cookbook Junkies and publicity director for Eat Your Books.  Today in our conversation, Jenny and I discuss what’s on the horizon for cookbooks in 2019 and new books Jenny’s excited about including Gnocchi Solo Gnocchi and The New Pie. We also discuss the work done by Eat Your Books in their Best of the best cookbooks list for 2018, as well as the upcoming revision of the classic dessert cookbook The Last Course by Claudia Fleming, pastry chef at Gramercy Tavern. The Last Course, as a used book commands over $80/copy, so the new revision is highly anticipated as a way to access this classic book at a lower price point. Jenny and I also discuss cookbook award programs, including how books are submitted to these awards, and how the books are judged, and the method that Eat Your Books uses to look at book sales for their yearly cookbook popularity lists. One last topic we discuss is an article in the Washington Post about Magnolia Table by Joanna Gaines. This book sold over 1M copies but didn’t make the “Best of 2018” list published by WashPo. How does this happen that over 1M people buy the book, and presumably like the book, but the WashPo doesn’t give it any kudos on their lists?   Things We Mention In This Episode: Free Masterclass 6 Practices of a Published Cookbook Author Eat Your Books Digital Books Preview Feature Gnocchi Solo Gnocchi by Christine Hickman Gnocchi Solo Gnocchi Review on Eat Your Books The New Pie on Eat Your Books   What’s on the horizon for cookbooks in 2019 Cookbook Awards Gourmand Book Awards IACP Cookbook Awards James Beard Cookbook Awards   Join the waitlist for the next opening of the Cookbook Writers Academy Download checklist for first-time cookbook writers  “Are You Ready to Write a Cookbook” Please join our Cookbook Love Podcast Facebook Group Instagram @cookbooklovepodcast or @greenapron

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore
492 Part One: Feeling the Joy with Stephan Bogardus

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2018 67:38


In this part one episode with Stephan BeGardus, we discuss: DESIRE is going to get you way further than talent. How the love of learning can get you far, and learning from unlikely sources. When you sign up to be a chef, you essentially sign up to be a teacher. How building relationships with like minded professionals can bring you to incredible heights. How putting your nose to the cutting board and working side by side with like minded professionals will bring business to new heights. Taking responsibility for everything in the kitchen at all times. Don't try to be something you're not, just be the most authentic version of you that you can be, and what you can bring to the table. How the guy with crazy desire can surpass the guy with all the talent in the world. Chef Stephan Bogardus is a rising culinary talent whose journey has brought him full circle to his native Long Island and The North Fork Table & Inn. Informed by the region's bounty and the personal relationships with local purveyors, Bogardus' progressive American menu focuses on new interpretations of familiar dishes. Bogardus, who grew up in Cutchogue on Long Island's North Fork, began cooking at age 13 on a local food truck. After graduating from the Culinary Institute of America in 2009, he returned to Long Island and, armed with his resume and a set of knives, he knocked on the door of The North Fork Table & Inn. He was hired by chef/proprietors Gerry Hayden and Claudia Fleming, training directly under Hayden. In 2010, Bogardus headed to Palm Beach to work for Daniel Boulud's Dinex Group. He returned to the North Fork Table & Inn in 2012 as Chef de Cuisine. At the time, Hayden's diagnosis of ALS meant that Bogardus would serve as the hands for his mentor's mind, forging a unique bond between the two chefs. In 2013, Bogardus left for upstate New York to serve as Executive Chef at the Locust Hill Country Club in Rochester. In the fall of 2015, feeling that Bogardus was the natural successor to chef Hayden after his passing, Claudia Fleming called him home to serve as Executive Chef. Since his return, Bogardus and The North Fork Table & Inn have earned rave reviews from Newsday and The New York Times. Outside the kitchen, Bogardus is an accomplished bow hunter, avid yoga practitioner, and Ducati aficionado. Show notes… Favorite Success Quote or Mantra. "Feel the joy." Thanks for Listening! Thanks so much for joining today! Have some feedback you'd like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below! If you enjoyed this episode, please share it using the social media buttons you see at the top of the post. Also, please leave an honest review for the Restaurant Unstoppable Podcast on iTunes! Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show, and I read each and every one of them. And finally, don't forget to subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Huge thanks to Stephan for joining me for another awesome episode. Until part TWO!  

What About?
Lucky Peach

What About?

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2017 44:56


Host Jeremy Leslie talks with Peter Meehan about the Lucky Peach story Life, And How It Happens To A Cook. The piece, written by Peter himself, explores the personal and professional life of acclaimed chef Claudia Fleming. Presented by WeTransfer Studios. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

lucky peach claudia fleming peter meehan
The Connected Table Live
Oysters & Chablis & The North Fork Table

The Connected Table Live

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2017 50:06


A visit with Claudia Fleming, James Beard Award Winning Pastry Chef and a Proprietor at The North Fork Table & Inn on Long Island's bucolic North Shore. Executive Chef Stephan Bogardus discusses his locally inspired menu. What are the best wines to pair with fresh oysters? Journalist and oyster scholar, Rowan Jacobson, author of "The Essential Oyster," explains how "terroir" affects different species of oysters as much as it does styles of wine. He says Chablis wines are the classic pairing.This show is broadcast live on Wednesday's at 2PM ET on W4CY Radio – (www.w4cy.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (http://www.talk4radio.com/) on the Talk 4 Media Network (http://www.talk4media.com/).

The Line
Episode 13: Chef Jake Novick-Finder of Gristmill

The Line

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2016 46:30


On the season finale of The Line, host Eli Sussman is joined in the studio by Chef Jake Novick-Finder of Gristmill. At just 12 years old, Jake started his first internship at Chanterelle in New York City, followed by extended periods at Gramercy Tavern during Claudia Fleming's tenure, Union Square Café, and a chocolate shop in Paris. Now, as the executive chef and owner of Gristmill in Park Slope, he creates a seasonal rotating menu sourced from farmers and purveyors in the Northeast, including his mother's personal farm in Rhinebeck, NY.