Being an employee of The Chopping Block for 12 years has given me a great opportunity to teach our students and help them create some wonderful recipes from the numerous cooking classes we offer.
Our 20th anniversary celebration kicked off last Saturday at Lincoln Square, and it was so much fun! The next celebration will occur at our Merchandise Mart location this Saturday, April 8th, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. There will be food, wine, cocktails, games, cooking classes featuring current chefs and some of our alumni chefs from over the years. We’re also offering 20% discounts on most of the items in our retail spaces. This is a Chopping Block celebration like none other that we’ve ever thrown!
If you’ve ever taken any of our classes, attended a private event or wandered into our retail stores, you’ll notice how much our staff has this enormous passion for food and cooking. A lot of that is thanks to the passion for food, cooking and teaching that our Owner/Chef Shelley Young has demonstrated for the past 20 years.
I'm honoring this occasion of our 20th anniversary by looking back on some of my favorite recipes that I’ve taught at The Chopping Block.
So I thought I would have a dinner party for my niece Vicki and her friend Josh featuring some of my favorite Chopping Block recipes.
Offering those classes was a bold and timely move at the time, but those classes were very well received by the community. The classes weren’t limited only to the LGBTQ community; they were open to anyone who wanted to take part. It was definitely cool to offer a class where people from the gay and lesbian community could bring family, friends, their partners, and a few even chose to take the class as their first date.
My favorite recipe from that particular series was the Wild Mushroom and Gruyere Bread Pudding. It’s made with an assortment of fresh and dried mushrooms, Gruyere cheese, which adds a wonderful nutty note, and rich custard made from eggs, milk and heavy cream. It’s made with herbs and spices that add another layer of warmth and complexity. And at the heart of course are cubes of day old bread.
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 pound assorted mushrooms, cleaned and sliced
2 shallots, sliced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 ounce dried porcini mushrooms soaked in 1/2 cup dry sherry
1 teaspoon herbs de Provence
2 tablespoons parsley, rough chopped
Salt and pepper to taste
5 eggs
1 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
1 1/2 cups whole milk
Freshly grated nutmeg
1 loaf day old French bread, cubed
1 cup grated Gruyere cheese
Preheat the oven to 350º. Heat a sauté pan over medium high heat and add the butter and olive oil. Sauté the mushrooms until they are golden brown, stirring often. Add the shallots and garlic and continue to cook an additional minute. Add the soaked mushrooms, sherry, herbs de Provence, parsley and season to taste with salt and pepper.
It was paired with a silky-rich sauce flavored with red wine, fresh thyme, shallots, beef stock and Dijon mustard and finished with cold-diced butter and, finally, sprinkled with some rough chopped parsley.
We have a recipe for a Sweet Olive Oil Cake that is featured in some of our Italian menus. This cake excels in taste and texture because of its ingredients, and it doesn’t require much fan fare after baking. Just a dusting of powdered sugar, maybe served alongside with some preserves or as I did with a variety of fresh berries, macerated in a bit of sugar and a tablespoon of Grand Marnier. The freshness of the citrus zests, the crunch of the almonds, the savory and sweet anise flavors of fennel seed and the olive oil gives this cake an exotic taste that’s worth trying and serving anytime.
Happy birthday to The Chopping Block! We'll see you this Saturday at the second of our 20th anniversary celebrations.