May 22, 2012

Cooking with Kids Holiday Camp in the News!

Doncha just love the big mouth??

What a picture!

The Kitchen Studio and I were recently featured in The Frederick Gazette for our kid’s holiday cooking camp.  This is a special two-day camp we run every year over the holiday break between Christmas and New Year’s Day.

This year our focus was on holiday foods from around the world, and boy, did those kids and teens whip up some tasty treats!

Here’s a little sample from the article:

“They could have spent their Christmas break at home playing video games or watching movies.

But instead, the 12 junior chefs in Christine Van Bloem’s The Kitchen Studio Cooking School, put on their aprons, pushed up their sleeves and spent two days of the winter break chopping veggies, mashing potatoes, grating, measuring, baking and learning to cook delicious holiday dishes from all parts of the world.

Like a military general commanding her troops, Van Bloem, of Frederick, stood surrounded by her little chefs in the middle of her kitchen in an office building on Buckeystown Pike on Tuesday and guided them as they worked to prepare a meal of English meat pie, German potato dumplings, Dutch desert pastry and whipped cream.”

Sounds good…right?  You can read the full article here.

Since we’re cooking with kids (all the time!), I thought we’d let you know that Kitchen Studio summer camp registration opens on March 1. This summer we’ll be offering a full 8 weeks of cooking camps for kids ages 6-8, 8-11, and 12-17.  You’ll be able to register at www.KitchenStudioFrederick.com.  Until then, keep on cooking!

Chef Christine

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Gotta Break Some Eggs in the News!!

Photo by Bill Green of The Frederick News Post

Don’t know if you’ve had a chance to check out the food section of this week’s Frederick News Post, but there is a huuuuuge article on the cooking camps we’re offering at The Kitchen Studio this summer, specifically our Celebrity Chef camp.  You can see the full article  by Rochelle Myers (with a picture too!) here, but just in case you don’t want to click through, here it is:

Teaching the joys of cooking
Kids cook like celebrity chefs at camp

 by Rochelle Myers
 

There is a group of children ages 8 to 11 standing around a steel kitchen work table. About two-thirds of them are holding plastic spoons that have been lightly laced with cayenne pepper.

Chef Christine Van Bloem had just instructed a child to add some of the cayenne to some flank steak destined for fajitas, prompting him to ask what cayenne pepper tastes like.

“I’m never gonna lie to you,” Van Bloem said. “I think it’s not very good on its own, but if you want to try it …”

Most of the kids were game, and so they stood about waiting for a cue from Van Bloem to try the pepper.

At her signal, the spoons disappeared into waiting mouths. There is a brief pause, and then the kids start screwing up their faces in the universal “yuck” expression.

As the tasters run off for cups of milk to dull out the burning sensations on their tongues, I am reminded of the principle of professional cookery that everything must be tasted. These kids may not have known what straight cayenne pepper tasted like, and Van Bloem warned them that they probably wouldn’t like it, but this is Celebrity Chef Camp — and these kids are eager to learn as much as they can about the world of real chefs.

Celebrity Chef Camp took place June 21 through 25 at The Kitchen Studio in Frederick , where Van Bloem used a different group of celebrity chefs each day to inspire her participants.

The week was photographed for Van Bloem’s “Gotta Break Some Eggs” website (gottabreaksomeeggs.com), where campers could enjoy a taste of their own celebrity. A segment aired by WHAG NBC-25 reinforced the kids’ star power, and their parents videotaped their newfound skills on the last day of camp. Through it all, the kids never stopped learning the real hands-on techniques used by celebrity chefs to produce delicious food.

“The whole idea of Celebrity Chef Camp is to capitalize on how kids are so enraptured by cooking shows. They are very familiar with celebrity chefs from TV. This camp gives a taste of that, and each day’s activities are designed to be in the style of a different celebrity chef,” Van Bloem said.

The first day was inspired by Mario Batali and Giada de Laurentiis: Campers cut their teeth by learning to make ricotta cheese and pasta dough, which they transformed into ricotta-filled ravioli. Rick Bayless and Bobby Flay inspired a Tex-Mex menu of fajitas and corn-black bean salad, followed by churros, while Rachael Ray’s approach to quick and easy food translated to zucchini fries and panko-crusted chicken. Duff Goldman of the TV program “Ace of Cakes” inspired a cake-centric day, during which campers learned how to use fondant to decorate cupcakes. The camp wrapped up Friday with the kids preparing a dish they learned earlier in the week for their parents’ cameras.

Van Bloem uses a hands-on approach to involve children in learning cooking skills. For example, she stands behind a child with her hands on the girl’s hands when showing her how to use a chef’s knife. The knife is long and sharp — exactly the sort wielded by a celebrity chef on television — and the girl’s hands appear small next to the enormous blade.

With the help of Van Bloem’s physical guidance, the girl cuts the garlic clove evenly and safely.

Van Bloem also uses lessons learned from celebrity chefs to illustrate helpful cooking techniques. For example, she cites Rachael Ray’s “garbage bowl” — a bowl set on the counter to collect cooking waste. Van Bloem uses a garbage bowl to collect corn cobs as she slices corn off the cob for a black bean and corn salad.

“Anytime you invoke a chef’s name that’s familiar, it changes kids — it energizes them,” she said.

“I try to adapt recipes like the black bean and corn salad to introduce new flavors to kids without overwhelming them with flavors. I’m not talking about hiding vegetables in a dish — I will never lie to kids,” Van Bloem said. “A lot of parents try to overwhelm their kids with a side of asparagus, rather than adding a little asparagus to a salad.”

Her efforts pay off when the campers gather around a table to scoop up the black bean and corn salad for lunch.

“Are they using good technique? Are they doing something cool? Then camp was a success,” she said.

Needless to say, I’m thrilled with the article because I think it really captures my work with kids, and that’s all I can ask for.

I love working with your kids, teaching them how to cook, and of course, making them wash the dishes too.  Thanks for letting me cook with them.  It’s really a lot of fun. :)

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