Iron Chef, day 1: Team prepares for food fight against other universities
After the first training session for the Iron Chef competition, Chef James Piggott says the 91³Ō¹Ļ student team has the right ingredients to win the intra-university culinary cookoff.
But while Piggott hopes 91³Ō¹Ļ will win ā especially since the competition is being held here for the first time ā he says victory isnāt the most important thing.
āIf they walk away with a smile on their face and pick up a few new skills, thatās a job well done,ā says Piggott, executive chef of residential dining at 91³Ō¹Ļ's New College, who is training the student team.
āBut letās not lie. Itās fun to win.ā
For the first time ever, the 91³Ō¹Ļ is hosting the annual Iron Chef competition. 91³Ō¹Ļ News is following the student chefs chosen to represent the university in an culinary cook-off against the University of Massachusetts Amherst and other schools on Feb. 24ā26.
Read more about the Iron Chef team trials in 91³Ō¹Ļ News
The Iron Chef team and coach James Piggott gather for a high-five before their first practice on Tuesday (photo by Geoffrey Vendeville)
At practice Tuesday evening at New College, students Felipe Branco, Brettany Colette, Jordan Su and Ailin Xi were asked to prepare an appetizer and main course using salmon ā one of the proteins that may be in the mystery box of ingredients they receive on the day of the competition. They were also allowed to use ingredients from the cafeteria kitchen.
The time limit was two hours ā the same cutoff time as the competition.
Wearing new personalized chefsā coats and hats, the team toured the store room and meat fridge. At just after six oāclock, Piggott started the timer. The students quickly split into teams of two.
Su and Xi whipped up the appetizer ā smoked salmon with a pickled radish slaw ā while Branco and Colette prepared the main dish, a salmon with beurre blanc sauce on multi-grain risotto with parsnip crisps.
The team has good chemistry and was able to choose a menu quickly, Branco said.
āWe have different backgrounds, which is good. If I have an idea thatās, letās say, more Latin American, they add an Asian perspective. It builds some nice flavours.ā
Read more about the competition
From left, Chef James Piggott shows the students the store room, Jordan Su makes a sauce for the appetizer (top right), Felipie Branco and Brettany Colette (bottom right) plate the main course (photos by Geoffrey Vendevlile)
When the clock ran out, the students presented their dishes to Piggott for tasting and critique.
At next Tuesday's practice, the chef will choose three students to face off against the top student chefs at other universities at the Iron Chef competition. The fourth student will be an understudy this year, but guaranteed a spot on the team next time.
Day 1 report card
Chef Piggott: āThey would lose 20 per cent right off the top for kitchen cleanliness because thatās part of organization. But food wise, Iād probably give them an 85. The only things were ā there were some portion-size issues, and there was the overcooking of the salmon. If Iām looking at the overall picture and deducting marks from 100 per cent, Iām taking a few points off for the salmon being overcooked. Iām taking a few points off here and there for the (small) portion size of the main course.
āOverall that brings them closer to 75 per cent. But thatās because theyāre losing big marks for organization and cleanliness. They had stuff spread everywhere. We need to work on that. But overall, fantastic job.ā