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Monday, April 19, 2010

How to Pull Mozzarella with Samin Nosrat



Home Ec: Cooking Basics with Samin Nosrat

Have you been wondering what that hand-pulled mozzarella on every restaurant menu is all about? Have you noticed that it's impossibly tender, better than even the most expensive imported Italian mozzarella?

Come spend an afternoon with chef Samin Nosrat for a delicious and demystifying hands-on cheese-pulling class. Put your mozzarella-making skills in practice and get ready for the arrival of tomato season!

Samin will talk and walk you through the intricacies of pulling the perfect ball of fresh mozzarella, and then it'll be your turn! Everyone will then get to pull several balls of mozzarella (it takes a while to get a hang of it!) under her guidance. You'll even get to try your hand at making a creamy burrata mozzarella!

Each student will take home his/her mozzarella, as well as a recipe book with ideas for cooking with your fresh mozzarella, step-by-step instructions for pulling mozzarella, and a list of trusted cheese purveyors and resources.

You'll leave empowered and informed, knowing how to make delicate, tender fresh mozzarella for the perfect salad, pizza or antipasto plate.

WHAT

How to Pull Mozzarella with Samin Nosrat

WHEN
May 1
4 pm- 6:30 pm


WHERE
4629 Martin Luther King Junior Way
(At the corner of 47th and MLK)
Oakland, CA 94609


TICKETS
$55
To Enroll: Visit
the event page at Brown Paper Tickets
There are two scholarship positions available at a reduced price. Scholarship students are responsible for minimal help with class set-up and breakdown. Please contact Samin directly at saminnosrat@yahoo.com for details.


CLASS SIZE
18 students max.
Each student will pull and take home several balls of his/her own fresh mozzarella and a recipe guide.


ABOUT SAMIN NOSRAT
A professional cook and freelance writer, Samin Nosrat looks to tradition, culture and history for inspiration. Trained in the Chez Panisse kitchen, she cooked there for several years before moving to Italy, where she worked closely with the Tuscan butcher Dario Cecchini and chef Benedetta Vitali for nearly two years. She spent five years as the sous chef and "farmwife" at Eccolo restaurant, butchering, brining, and preserving nearly everything in an effort to make the restaurant as self-sustaining as possible. Her writing has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, Meatpaper, and Edible San Francisco, as well as on her blog, Ciao Samin.



1 comment:

  1. I'd love to do the mozzarella class! So sorry I can't. Another time?

    I had no idea that you had worked with Dario il pazzo! He was so very kind to us just after 9/11; a month or so after that day of horror, at a small event of northern and central Italy butchers and winemakers, Dario was the star, and he introduced us as being from Berkeley, and led the whole group, in a salute to the USA, singing "Volare..."

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