Thursday, March 25, 2010

Thank you Elizabeth Prueitt

Dear Elizabeth Prueitt:

You don't know me, but I've stood in line and enjoyed your pastries at your bakery, Tartine, on 18th & Guerrero enough times to be eager to buy your cookbook.  Now I teach high school students in San Francisco. I told them about your delicious desserts and showed them this book. Both of my classes wanted to make your lemon meringue cake and here is what we found out:

  • Chiffon cake is really fun to make, particularly beating the egg whites separately with a little sugar so that they "poof up into a cloud."  More than one student wanted to dive into that bowl, it looked so much like a cozy blanket.
  • That caramel layer?  Man, I don't know what we did, our caramel ended up hard and chewy - and yummy.  We warmed it in a double boiler the next day to soften it, and even though we weren't completely in on the idea of caramel and lemon, that caramel layer? IT MADE THE CAKE.
  • I've never seen so many students smile here as we blow-torched the outer meringue.

Thank you, Elizabeth, for your contributions to the world of desserts and for making your recipes accessible.  I know a few students of mine will now be looking for your shop and will tell their friends when they see your lemon meringue cake, "I made that," and their voices will be full of pride.

All My Best,

Chef Cravens

Friday, March 12, 2010

Dolma & Bastilla


A Mediterranean plate of Dolmathes (dolma) and Bastilla (Moroccan Chicken Pie).

Last week we went back to the classic Middle East for a few reasons.  We had quite a time with grains and beans the week before, and had stretched the envelope of traditional fare more than I had expected.  That and we wanted to explore Prom food options that might be easy, in budget and enjoyable.

So first up, lavash.  Rolled flat bread with a few kinds of spreads to fill and roll, in much the way we rolled maki sushi:  a traditional version with our own housemade hummus with lettuce and vegetables and a westernized version with a turkey and herbed cream cheese interior.  Hands down, they enjoyed eating the slices when compared to finger sandwiches, but the overall consensus was that the hummus thing wouldn't fly at Prom.  Most students had not had hummus before, many liked it, but there was concern that prom goers would be afraid of it.  But rolled turkey, rolled steak(what?! in budget??), rolled cheeses, definitely.  They loved the ease of boom, 10 sandwiches in one movement.  We agreed we'd make smaller ones for prom, so there would be less danger of spills on a beautiful outfit.  The things one needs to think about when preparing food..

Next we got out jars of brined grape leaves and made dolma.  I love dolma, but have never actually made them, and I have to say, they are even better when you make them yourself (as with pretty much everything else).  Students enjoyed rolling them, liked seeing that we then weighed them down while they were steaming, but they did not like the idea of eating them cold the next day.  They did break them open to taste the rice filling, a pilaf flavored with onions, dill, allspice and currants.  I could hear "it's not that bad" whispers at the other end of the table as we ate.

And finally, phyllo dough.  Loved it, just wished we had more time to bake. We made a sheet cake version of the Moroccan chicken pie, Bastilla, and also made triangles of Spanikopita and cylinder rolls filled with sweetened cream cheese and strawberry sauce. Between our short class period and our eager eaters, desserts sometimes don't make it on the plate, but the approval on working with phyllo dough is still on the table.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Economic Units And Humans



This is our economic unit of vegetarian maki sushi, 25 cents per piece, before overhead.  Not bad for our first time on the mat.

It is an interesting time to apply reality in economics to the classroom.  We thought we would coordinate with the economics class and figure out how much each individual piece of something we make might cost (to keep things simple we added food and labor costs together, ignoring overhead and things like service taxes).  

We warmed up on sushi in our first class and then for the combined class, used potstickers as an economic unit of study.  Needless to say our combined class was fun, even tasty, but it was not what I would call a controlled environment.  Notice no pictures of potstickers (and note to self: do not combine 2 classes of hungry teenagers right before lunch and cook great smelling food that can be eaten with the fingers).

I often get questions on food served in school;  since we teach our Culinary Arts class in the cafeteria, it is a natural question and a tough one to respond to.  We all want better.  It is difficult to display acceptance for something we are all quietly (or less quietly) ashamed of.  And we know its economic unit, how much it costs ($2.74 per student, give or take a few cents).

Now it looks like I'm becoming an economic unit, measured to be cut.  And so is my boss. And my principal. And our Spanish teacher. And our wellness counselor.  With this first round of cuts, 482 teachers and 163 administrators for SFUSD received provisional notices that our services are not required.  I feel a little bit like that end piece of sushi that might need to be trimmed off and thrown away.  None of us have been fired yet, but the problem is big enough where the only thing that is known is that this is the safest measure to take.

Most of us notice-receivers probably think that our individual situations don't justify this action-- my reasoning is because my principal, myself and my CTE boss created this class and got this position written.  We see this class actively engage students every day in hands on learning.  The results have been positive enough that we were also recently told that my position will remain written in. And now with these layoffs, it is possible someone else could take this position over because I am the new kid on the block.  In a way it sounds safe and fair.  Just like pre-portioned meals in nice, neat, plastic sealed packets.  

I'm not writing this with bitterness, we are facing a big, nasty-no-matter-how-you-slice-it-problem.  Culinary Arts the way we teach it here is an elective class I'm passionate about ( I am not doing it for the money, believe me), but if there really is no money, I can't expect to take precedence over core classes and services that are also being cut - or to keep my job over someone else who has been here longer and is qualified.  At this point, I still hope better learning doesn't get sacrificed with the cutting, portioning, slicing and dicing - it is hard to see how it won't.

Our world is not an economic unit.  We know this after our financial crisis came to the forefront.  We've tried to make it so, with our justifications for requiring more efficiency and more numbers to make more profit and our willingness to turn around and let those numbers guide us and our ethics. We see how it has created problems on every level, from bank bankruptcies to school food.  

Our world is human.  We need to teach our children how to be humans.  How to not be swayed off their work by the hundreds of text messages (think 300-600) our average student gets daily.  We need to focus on how to connect with our students in this commerce driven, passive and distracting world we have created for them and help them actively understand that you can think for yourself and that you can think enough of yourself to take pride in everything you do. And to our adults, we need to connect with them to help them understand how having our state reduce its educational funding to the lowest amount of money spent per child in the country is something we really can be ashamed of - more than the $2.74 meals served to our students everyday.