
Volunteering at the The OMSI Science in the Kitchen Gala was a great time. The appetizer (above) that I helped Chef Sean of Roux with was delicious, and one of the most popular of the bunch. Other hits were Gabriel Rucker of Le Pigeon with his Foie Creamsicle, Woojay Poynter’s Liquid Truffle Ravioli, and also by us Roux volunteers, Tequila Pudding. Also in attendance with a mille feuille appetizer was Johnny Nunn, whom I staged with at 503. Ranking in as weirdest thing that I tried that night was Brussel Sprout Paper, and I cannot recall it’s creator. The night ran thru an interesting spectrum for me. On the one end were literally hundreds of culinary students tripping over themselves to call me “chef” and help me, and then there was me gushing as I met one of my heros Will Goldfarb as he orchestrated the massive plating of his dessert. Random cool moment: Amidst the insanity of the plating area, an unattended huge pile of black truffles. After all the hoo-ha, organizer of the event and owner of Roux Dwayne Beliakoff threw an after party for all the volunteers at Masu sushi restaurant. Arriving to the party first, I found the hugest sushi display I have ever seen in my life. Second in awesomeness to that was the open bar and the elbow rubbing with some of america’s top chefs. Meanwhile, the restaurant was extremely busy, and the suprise I found on my station on monday morning proved the I was dearly missed.
Thanks for the report. I’ve been curious how the event went.
What were the components of the Goldfarb dessert?
It was a White Cholate Marg, I didn’t get to taste it. It’s made with yogurt-tarragon foam, white chocolate ‘chantilly,’ lime sorbet, and smoked salt. White chocolate cream coats the bottom of the glass; egg-sized dollops of the barely frozen sorbet and tarragon-infused yogurt are on top of that, with flakes of smoked sel gris.