free online cooking lessons while you're social distancing
Get free online cooking lessons from culinary masters while you're
social distancing
Create your own cooking school
at home.
By Sharyn Jackson Star
Tribune MARCH 20, 2020 — 9:04AM
Julia Child with a salade
Nicoise she prepared in her vacation home in Grasse, southern France, in April
1978. Always wanted to learn how to make béchamel? Or understand the difference
between champagne and cremant? Now you can. One bright side to socially distant
home life is all the newfound time to cook. But if you don’t know your paring
knife from your ginsu, you can now attend your own cooking school at home.
Many culinary masters and
food-and-drink educators are posting their knowledge on the web — some for
free. The Italian chef Massimo Bottura, whose Osteria Francescana in Modena,
Italy, scored three Michelin stars, is hosting daily live lessons on Instagram,
which he’s calling “Kitchen Quarantine.” And he doesn’t waste time getting to
the most important instruction for any chef in the time of coronavirus — or
ever. “First of all,” Bottura says, “wash your hands.”
So far, he’s gone over curry,
salad and even mac-and-cheese — yes, kid food from one of the world’s best
chefs. You have to tune in live — at 2 p.m. in Minnesota — for the his
hyper-enthusiastic lesson, but Bottura also posts a Q&A afterward, dipping
in and out of Italian and English. An extra tutorial en Italiano on that
béchamel sounds as luxurious as the sauce.
A screenshot of one of Milk
Street's cooking classes, on pasta. The online classes are now free with
registration. If you like watching people do what they do best, then go to the
always-free Bon Appétit Video channel.
The magazine’s test kitchen chefs have become cult celebrities with their
offbeat-yet-gripping shows. Chris Morocco tries to recreate a dish while
blindfolded? Sure. Carla Lalli Music teaches a celebrity how to cook while
standing back-to-back? OK.
Best of all is “Gourmet Makes,” pastry
chef Claire Saffitz’s trial-and-error epic, in which she attempts to recreate
junk food. Almost always, she struggles until lightning strikes. It’s 40
suspenseful minutes of comfort food on screen. (Bonus: Saffitz went to summer
camp in Bemidji, she says in her Combos episode.)
One could learn how to make Girl Scout Cookies from scratch, but the real
lesson is that perseverance is an indispensable kitchen ingredient.
More lessons can be learned
from the queen of cooking shows, Julia Child. Through the end of the month,
Amazon Prime members can stream her classic
series “The French Chef” for free. (The rest of the time, the show is
a paid add-on in Prime or through TPT Passport.) If you need to get over the
ick-factor of handling raw chicken, Child won’t hold your hand, but she will
show you how it’s done. “Here is our dear little friend, the chicken,” she says
in one episode in her jolly lilt, while knifing it to pieces.
The New York Times cooking team
has a YouTube channel where
Melissa Clark, Alison Roman and guests like Jamie Oliver and “Queer Eye”’s
Antoni Porowski do baked ziti, cookies and more.
Christopher Kimball’s Milk
Street magazine, which normally charges for its online
Cooking School, has taken down the paywall on more than a dozen classes.
Each class page contains videos, recipes, step-by-step photo guides and scans
of related articles from the magazine. You’ll still need to register on the
site, but there’s no payment.
America’s Test Kitchen has also
removed its paywall on its 50
“all-time favorite” recipes. The site also posts full episodes of its
cooking show, and more than 50 of the most recent episodes are free to stream.
Travel via your kitchen with recent offerings like “The Very Best Paris-Brest”
and “A Trip to Rome.”
Food Network Kitchen, the TV
channel’s educational
app with live classes, does charge by the month (or year). But you can get
a free starter month when you sign up, though you’ll have to enter credit card
information.
You don’t have to live in
Minnesota to take an online class from these Twin Cities educators.
Beginning this weekend, Cooks of Crocus Hill, the Minneapolis
and St. Paul shop and cooking school, will post video tutorials. The first:
“We’ll be talking about pantry cooking, quick and easy recipes. And ideas for
engaging your kids,” said owner Karl Benson. Check the website for more details
as they become available. Benson said he’ll be scheduling video classes with
chefs and restaurants in town. And search the blog for the series Tasty
Bits, less-than-a-minute videos with chefs and teachers about a surprise
item inside a Cooks of Crocus Hill shopping bag.
Project Success, the youth
development organization for Minneapolis Public School students, has turned its
cooking institute into an online class geared toward 9th-12th graders. Kids
will learn about recipes from different world cultures, as well as heating,
seasoning and baking. The live classes run on Instagram Wednesdays at 6 p.m.
at.instagram.com/projectsuccessorg.
And Jason Kallsen, founder of
Twin Cities Wine Education, has taken his vast knowledge of wine online. He’s
just launched the Wine Workshop,
a series of 3-day courses with an interactive social message board, so
participants can chat about the tutorials as they sample their own vino ($29).
There are also 1-hour webinars, like this Friday’s Quick Classes on
Vinho Verde and Port ($19).
Learning about wine online is
well suited to these times, Kallsen said.
“Wine has always been a magnet
for connection,” he said. “Now more so than ever, because it reminds us of
vintages and places. When you look at a bottle of wine, that’s sunshine and rainfall
from another place and another time that you’re putting in your body. Wine is
time
travel.”http://www.startribune.com/free-online-cooking-lessons-from-culinary-masters-while-you-re-social-distancing/568958782/