Intelligent Travel

Cooking Classes on the Road

| Comments (5)
One of the best travel souvenirs to bring home is being able to recreate the dishes you ate on the road. Freda Moon offers a quick guide to some local, authentic cooking courses in the two places where she divides her time, Mexico City and northern California.

Seasons of My Heart Cooking SchoolIt was in Oaxaca City, the capital of one of the poorest and most politically turbulent states in Mexico, that I first fully understood the lengths to which people go for an incredible meal.

Inside the city's cavernous central market air is thick with the smokey, chocolatey, chile-scented flavors for which this southern Mexican state is famous. The market's dimly lit interior, overflowing with vendors, buyers and hungry hordes of European tourists, is as daunting as it is thrilling. To eat one's way through the market's many food stalls--sweet rolls dipped in savory hot chocolate for breakfast; spiced dried grasshoppers at snack time; rich, earthy mole or fire-grilled carne asada for lunch--is an act of choreographed culinary devotion. There's never enough time to taste everything, but a true believer does his or her best.

On the streets and among the stalls of this small but bustling city, I encountered people who'd come from around the world to eat and, to my surprise, to learn to cook the cuisine that Mexican food expert Susana Trilling calls Oaxaca's "native foods."

Throughout the town I noticed that restaurants, shops and hotels catered to travelers--not food television celebrities, but middle-class foodies--who came eager to learn how to cook regional specialties. One such place, Trilling's Seasons of My Heart Cooking School, has established itself as an international destination. The school is outside of town (it sits between two small villages in the hills above Oaxaca's Etla Valley)

Upon returning to my native northern California, I started to see similar small-scale, regional and specialty cooking schools at every turn.

The Apple FarmIn Anderson Valley, California, The Philo Apple Farm (above) lets visitors spend a weekend on a working farm. Over three days guests prepare four meals made with mostly local, seasonal ingredients and spend their nights in elegant cottages overlooking the orchard and gardens.

On the Mendocino Coast--in the former logging and fishing town of Fort Bragg, California--the old company store is now home to a raw foods cooking school, Living Light Institute. The school teaches raw foodists (and curious health food enthusiasts) from around the world how to create delicious meals without cooking ingredients above 115 degrees. Through an elaborate processing of nuts, seeds, fruits and vegetables, students learn to prepare everything from Vegan "Crab" Cakes (made by mixing, forming and then dehydrating julienned vegetables, nutritional yeast, almond paste and kelp powder), to a decadent Chocolate-Orange Mousse using evaporated cane juice and avocado puree.

At the Culinary Institute of America's Napa Valley campus, their food enthusiast programs--Flavors of Wine Country, Live-Fire Cooking, and more--allow non-chefs to learn in a professional chef environment. Farther south, in Culver City, the New School of Cooking comes highly recommended. The one-day intensives cost less than $100 (including ingredients and the right to "stuff yourself silly") and include sessions in the Street Foods of Mexico, a Turkish Summer Sampler, a Fresh Pasta Workshop and Fish Basics. Up north, in Seattle, there's Diane's Market Kitchen and Rover's Restaurant Workshops, which both fill up quickly.

There are so many of these schools across the West that it'd take a book, not a blog post, to cover them all.

Photos: Above, chef Susana Trilling prepares a meal at her cooking school; Below the cabins overlooking the orchards at the Philo Apple Farm.

5 Comments

Shane said:

Food travel is another good way of adventure holiday able you to learn lots of cuisine.

Its a really nice thing what you eat while traveling you remember its recipe and try it at home and teach it to others as well.That is a wonderful travel experience you enjoy and taste various kinds of cuisines it is really cool and adventurous.

Ben Keene said:

For anyone else looking to learn more about Mexican cooking methods, my mom only had good things to say about Ana Garcia's La Villa Bonita when she returned from Tepoztlan last summer.

David said:

I note the recipes so many time but it is very difficult to recreate the same taste.Even if you know the recipe you can't make it similar in taste.It is not like chemical formula in chemistry.Cooking is an art.Best Downtown Hotels in USA

Italian said:

If In want a good dinner, I mostly do Italian food, like http://www.droparecipe.com/recipes/view/bruschetta but last day I thought about if Mexico have something similar as Pre dinner food.

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

Archives

About This Blog

Cultural, Authentic & Sustainable: This is your brain on travel. We showcase the essence of place, what's unique and original, and what locals cherish most about where they live. And we highlight places, practices, and people that are on the front lines of sustainable travel—travel that preserves places’ essential uniqueness for future generations. more...

Subscribe and Share




 Subscribe to RSS feed

Find Us on Facebook

Our Flickr Site

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


Recent Comments

Italian on Cooking Classes on the Road: If In want a good dinner, I mostly do Italian food, like http://www.droparecipe.com/recipes/view/bru
David on Cooking Classes on the Road: I note the recipes so many time but it is very difficult to recreate the same taste.Even if you know
Ben Keene on Cooking Classes on the Road: For anyone else looking to learn more about Mexican cooking methods, my mom only had good things to
victorian inn bed and breakfast on Cooking Classes on the Road: Its a really nice thing what you eat while traveling you remember its recipe and try it at home and
Shane on Cooking Classes on the Road: Food travel is another good way of adventure holiday able you to learn lots of cuisine.

Awards

Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin