Thanks to the Disboards (see post above), I found out that the 2010 competition would take place within driving distance. Didn't take long to secure hotel reservations, discover that the CIA has student restaurants (secure reservations for those), arrange for comp time and reserve a couple of gala spots.
Normally, this would be a slow, relaxed, reliving of the experience through posting pictures and providing some commentary on the non-visual. Normally. But there is a constraint I am contending with (in my own mind), that is, most of the students we interacted with - and photographed - are graduating TOMORROW, and I fear that, unless I post their pictures TONIGHT, they may not be aware they exist.
My mission is to post as many pictures as possible, without totally compromising chronology (which, in this case, affects the story line), before going to sleep (and getting up for work in 10 hours). And, she's off.....
My plan was to leave home around noon, for a 6 hour drive, to arrive near the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) with some buffer time, before our 7:30 reservation at Caterina de' Medici. I started work at 3:30 am (my project includes members from UK and India), and turned off the computer at 11:30 am. Jumped in the shower, ready to go at noon, but my traveling companion (DS21) and gotten a 1:00 message from DH. A little weary, and wondering if I might miss the reservation, we loaded the car (threw stuff in the trunk), and arranged granola bars and juice boxes for ready access in the back seat. We managed to arrive at CIA around 7:10, found the parking ramp (easily) and checked in for our reservation pretty much on time. I don't have many pictures, but here is what I have.
Table, Menu
Amuse Bouche
Appetizers
Bresceola, goat cheese
Salted Cod
Entrees
Trout (I know, it looks like salmon, but it IS trout)
Quail
Dessert
Cheese
Coffee Pane Cotta
Slightly crooked picture of the open kitchen and baking oven (left)
Unusual, but oddly pretty chandeliers - Murano glass (Munchkinland in glass)
Summary:
- Very pleasant meal
- Memory retention inversely proportional to fatigue
- Most entrees in the $20-$30 range (fair value, but not a major "deal")
- Range of entree offerings was wide - remeniscent of Disney-before-the-Dining-Plan. Each menu at the different restaurants had about 10 different entrees, none of them boring - quail, rabbit, sweetbreads, chateaubriand, boar chops (that's free range pig), trout, etc.
For more on the restaurant (description, reservations, etc.)
CLICK HERE
I had made reservations at all the restaurants for the convenience of not having to leave campus between Bocuse events. It was slowly beginning to dawn on my that this adventure was going to be much better than expected.
Stay tuned!! (you know, SUBSCRIBE!!)
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