Cooking Classes @ Fig & Olive

Talk about afternoon delight! For the first time, Fig & Olive Melrose Place is offering cooking classes, so naturally I had to be among the first to try. I joined a small group of culinarily inclined folks and Executive Chef Pascal Lorange to create some very simple yet sensational springtime dishes. OMG!! It was so fun, interactive, informative and totally stress-free.

Instead of having to prep everything ourselves, recipes were handed out and portioned-out ingredients were provided to each of us as we followed the chef’s demo and took notes. The end result was an absolutely delicious and healthy French Riviera-inspired four-course feast full of fresh, seasonal ingredients. Chef Pascal uses so many fabulous olive oils in place of butter and cream, so it’s very easy to veganize many of the dishes. I can’t wait for his next class this summer–maybe I’ll see YOU there?!!

A little sparkling to get things started ...

To start: A little sparkling refreshment with strawberries. Absolute perfection.

Tools of the trade

A copy of the recipes, pen for taking notes and a few ingredients await at each student’s table.

Chef Pascal

Chef Pascal explaining what we can expect during the two-hour class.

Zucchini carpaccio in the making

No cooking, just slicing. The simple ingredients for Fig & Olive’s famous (and deliciously simple) zucchini carpaccio.

Playing the mandoline

Chef Pascal uses a Japanese mandoline to slice the zucchini, but he says a knife works just as well.

Fig & Olive's zucchini carpaccio

The famed zucchini carpaccio: I learned the key to getting this dish right is to make the slices the width of a quarter.

Zucchini carpaccio isn't complete without olive oil

Simply drizzle Fig & Olive olive oil over sliced zucchini, salt, pepper, pine nuts and Parmesan. That’s all there is to it!

Fresh ingredients from the farm

Next up: The main ingredients for the chilled cucumber soup.

Definitely not too many cooks in the kitchen

Making the chilled cucumber soup … they did all the work and then we ate it. That’s my kind of cooking class!

Fig & Olive cucumber soup

I could drink this every day: Chilled cucumber soup with mint, lemon, orange, and pink peppercorn. So clean, so beautifully textured, so spicy.

Marpop is finally cooking!

Thyme is on my side … getting a little more hands-on with the sea bass en papillote.

Parchment paper wraps a delicious present

No, that’s not a calzone. It’s sea bass en papillote (“in parchment”). I wrapped it myself.

Fig & Olive sea bass en papillote

So fragrant, delicate and full of flavor. Sea bass en papillote marinated with lemon thyme, carrot, zucchini, heirloom tomato, fennel and eggplant. You can use other veggies based on what’s in season and forgo the fish if you want to keep it strictly veg.

An apple (or two) a day ...

Of course, no meal is complete without dessert. Each student was given pre-cut Granny Smith apples and a sheet of pastry dough.

Fig & Olive apple tart

My new favorite dessert: Apple tart with caramelized apples and apricot glaze. The apples could be substituted with any fruit that’s in season.

Bon appetit!

How sweet it is! Maybe next time I can take the whole tray with me. Think they’ll notice?

More info: www.figandolive.com

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *