Dinner with a Chef – John Brooks

Some people who have been invited to my home for dinner are often intimidated by me, whizzing about the kitchen at a frantic pace preparing nineteen different things at once. Everyone always asks me the obligatory, “if you need any help, let me know.” To which I always dishonestly reply with, “I sure will!” but I never do. No one works in my kitchen with me, but me. Sometimes Adrian is allowed, but really, I like to go it solo in there. I have a system of ins and outs, pass throughs, go arounds. I know where everything is and should go when I’m done. I can find anything in a third of a second and it only slows me down to have to explain, in minute detail, where to find something or how to chop something. If you don’t know what a Microplane or a Mandoline is or you can’t figure out how to chop the cilantro for salsa, then please….just pour yourself a glass of wine and put your feet up. I could really use the space. 

Then I got to invite a real chef into my home. An honest to goodness, works every day in the hot hell of a small commercial kitchen chef. Our awesome friend, John Brooks (chef of Smoken Bones Cookshack which I wrote about for Guilty Kitchen), colloquially known as Chef Thunda to his friends had a great idea to do a beer and food pairing in our home. “Let’s cook with beer!” I couldn’t think of anything I’d rather do on a Sunday night. So it was set. We kind of half heartedly figured out which beer we were to use (Brooklyn Brewery’s Black Chocolate Stout) and then see sawed for a week or so on what we were actually going to do with it.

Probably the quickest thing to come to mind was dessert, of course, but John wanted something much more creative. We talked about doing lamb shanks for a while, which had me drooling…but then that idea got tanked after John arrived at our house. Pulling random items of food out of a backpack, we were greeted by an assortment of delicacies. Dark chocolate, annato seeds, goat Brie, red onion, jicama, masa flour, chorizo…I was in heaven.

After discussing a few things, John laid it out. Mexican food! Chocolate stout = Mole! Of course, it’s brilliant. What goes better with chocolate than spice and lush rich sauce? My only foray into chocolate with spices were my double chocolate chili brownie cookies. But this sounded even better. I pulled a chicken from the freezer (the remnants of our summer flock) and began defrosting. What else could I add? Cilantro, yucca root, spices, achiote paste, mole spices, goose fat for cooking the tostadas, and cous cous for an extra starch.

John started whipping up a yucca and jicama slaw while I made appetizers with the goat Brie, some other soft cheese we had, some Stilton and a loaf of fresh sourdough I had baked for the occasion. Then I sat back, filled up my glass with beer and let John do his magic. It was glorious, and possibly only the second time in my life I have ever let anyone take over my kitchen completely. I helped when I was needed, breaking down the chicken and fetching implements, but John did the rest and fixed us up a grand meal.

The mole was rich and had a note of bitterness to it that I loved. There wasn’t too much spice and the beer gave it a complexity that I’ve never had before. The tostadas cooked in goose fat were tasty, crispy and golden in colour and I will make them again. I should have paid more attention to the ingredients going into all the dishes cast across the counters, but I was too busy enjoying myself. It was like being at a restaurant in my own house.

Lucky for me, we also had our professional dishwasher on hand to clean up a true chef’s mess. Working from the top of your head can be distracting and doing dishes as you go is simply not an option when you have your hands in three different pots, a pan, two bowls and a rolling pin.

I’d love to tell you that I meticulously wrote down every ingredient he stirred into that rich mole, or into the jicama pickles, or the yucca and jicama slaw, or the rich and crispy tostadas but I was just too busy laughing, relaxing, drinking and having a night off.

Maybe next time I plan a little bit better and actually write something down. But for now, enjoy our night in photos and words and look forward to the next installment, of which I hope there are many!

 

On another note, I wanted to say thank you to all that voted for me in the EAT Magazine exceptional Eats Awards. I received second place in the rather wordy category of: “I Eat, Therefore I Tweet”. So thank you all!

16 comments to Dinner with a Chef – John Brooks

  • Mr. Guilty

    That was a great evening. Watching Elizabeth sit back I think was my favourite part! OK that’s not true. Watching the pile of amazing craft beer bottles collect came second only to the memories that will last for a lifetime.

    John, come over any time! Next step, to try and see if I can boot Elizabeth out of the kitchen one of these days…… I’m coming Elizabeth.. you wait.

  • I never accept help either. I know what needs to be done and when. I’ve been known to pass off the veggie tray.
    Deanna recently posted..Croque MonsieurMy Profile

  • This is UNBELIEVABLE!
    Bev Weidner recently posted..Citrus Sunshine SalsaMy Profile

  • I totally know what you mean about being a whirling dervish in the kitchen… it just feels easier to do everything myself, because if I have to delegate a task to someone else, I have to slow down long enough to explain what needs doing and then make sure they’re actually doing it properly. Me? Control freak? Yeah, kinda. 🙂
    That said, if I had a friend talented enough to create a meal this awesome in my kitchen, I might just be willing to step back once in a while too. That mole looks AMAZING! I must check out Smoken Bones the next time I’m visiting Vancouver Island.
    Isabelle @ Crumb recently posted..Foodbuzz 24×24: Sausage-travaganza (How to Make Sausages)My Profile

  • I struggled with co-cooking during my trip to visit my brother and sister in the Okanagan a few weeks ago! Does asking the other person to take pictures for your blog while you cook count? Because my brother did an awful lot of that! I only tend to cook with others when we’re experimenting together – like when my Mum and I made terrines and pate with all the offal bits from her pigs. Day to day, Mr. ST just knows to just stay outta my way and make yummy noises 🙂
    Christine recently posted..Lake Country Coffee HouseMy Profile

  • What a lovely and exciting evening you all had and good for you for sitting back and watching with a beer. Now I have to go and look up most of the food/ingredients you mentioned in this post because I don’t know what half of them are!

    Wonderful photos!
    Paula recently posted..Apple Pizza PieMy Profile

  • What a fabulous experience – it kind of makes me want to give up control in my kitchen too sometime (yup, I have trouble with that too!) I can’t get anything done without my professional dishwasher either 🙂
    Cara recently posted..Chocolate Raspberry Cupcakes for Love Your HeartMy Profile

  • You are a lucky one to both cook the most delicious food and be served by chefs and have a great time doing this. This blog has great photos as well. Very professional. I will follow you more.

  • Renz

    John Brooks is a man of taste and I am looking forward to meet him personally, last week I enrolled with a cooking class to bring a delicious taste to my love ones…

  • beautydeleon

    When I can have a dinner with a Chef, probably I could have a stomachache eating all what he cooked! Gosh! It will be an amazing experience!

  • Theriz26

    Wow! you’re so lucky to taste the delicious food that chef John Brooks prepared. Thanks for the post and for sharing your unforgettable experience with chef John.

  • I completely understand the feeling! When I was in culinary arts school I was always extremely nervous being around the chefs and having them judge my performance. I can’t imagine having one of my instructors in my house. At least you weren’t being graded! Thanks for sharing this great story and bringing back some great memories!

  • Kim

    I have to laugh because a similar thing happened in my kitchen tonight. I asked Barry to snap a photo of me butter-poached a piece of fish. By the one he figured out how to get the setting fight, I was already done. So next time, I’ll just find a free hand to take the photo myself.

    And what an awesome experience to have a he’d in your kitchen! Mine’s wide open but I don’t have any takers.

    [K]

  • […] year ago: Paleo Blueberry Muffins Two years ago: Dinner with a Chef Three years ago: Spice Rubbed Pork Chops Four years ago: Miso […]

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