Features

Jun 12, 2025, 9:27

From the NRA Show Floor

Saturday, 01 June 2013 12:49

In 2013, bright flavors, “free from,” healthier horizons and the “new” convenience took center stage at the biggest foodservice tradeshow in the nation, held in Chicago in May. And are advances in ordering technology taking the “personal” out of service?

Courtesy of Olson Communications

The recent National Restaurant Association (NRA) Restaurant, Hotel-Motel Show in May, like every year, provided a lot to be excited about. The show brings together operators across all segments of the industry. While talk among attendees focused on a number of the events away from McCormick Place, the NRA Show exhibit hall still delivered the latest products, flavors, equipment and technological advances.

The show featured several themes that are evident of the industry’s issues, challenges and trends. These themes could be found throughout the show floor and included healthy eating, beverages and flavor bursts.

Healthful and Uncomplicated Flavor
Complex, yet uncomplicated, was the flavor theme common to many new products. Preparations seen at the show in culinary demonstrations and around trendy Chicago restaurants that were a hit during the show featured simple ingredients, nothing fussy or overdone.

On Thomas Keller Day at the CIA, the Play’s the Thing

Saturday, 01 June 2013 12:46

The iconic chef led top staff, purveyors and protégés in Sense of Urgency.

Expecting a cooking demonstration from one of the world’s greatest chefs, students at The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) instead were treated to something completely different from Thomas Kelleron May 13.

The college hosted Thomas Keller Day at its Hyde Park, N.Y., campus with a keynote address from Keller and breakout sessions covering various restaurant business topics.

The day was scheduled to conclude with a “culinary presentation.” Instead of a traditional demo, however, Keller made his stage debut, leading his celebrated restaurants’ top staff members, including Eli Kaimeh ’00 of Per Se, purveyors and celebrated protégés such as Grant Achatz ’94 and Jonathan Benno ’93 in a one-act play.

“You often hear it said that restaurants are like theater, with a front of the house, a behind-the-scenes crew, a colorful cast of characters, a creative script,” Keller said. “Today we thought we’d take it literally.”

Sense of Urgency was the result—a performance developed by Keller’s team that portrays an evening of service at The French Laundry in Yountville, Calif., and named for the wording on a plaque that hangs under the kitchen clocks in all of Keller’s restaurants. The French Laundry is a Michelin Guide three-star restaurant that was honored as the World’s Best Restaurant by U.K.-based Restaurant magazine in 2003. “We observe the process of execution and the importance of relationships between the purveyors, farmers, and craftsmen of the products these chefs will use to serve their guests,” explains the playbill.

Nearly 1,000 CIA students attended the performance and hundreds more participated in the earlier presentation and breakout sessions, which were simulcast to the college’s campuses in Texas and California. Twenty lucky students were selected to have lunch with Keller.


Photo:Playbill for Sense of Urgency, a one-act play by Thomas Keller—featuring Grant Achatz, Jonathan Benno and others—that debuted at The Culinary Institute of America during Thomas Keller Day at the college’s Hyde Park, N.Y., campus on May 13, 2013.Courtesy ofCIA/Phil Mansfield.

The Culinary Institute of America Honors “Augie” Recipients

Tuesday, 30 April 2013 03:00

Seventh-annual awards focus on thought-leadership values and why food matters.

The seventh-annual Leadership Awards—the Augies—from The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) were presented to four individuals who exemplify, in spirit and deed, the CIA’s four core value pillars:

• Honored for his dedication to professional excellence and innovation: Daniel Humm, executive chef, Eleven Madison Park and The NoMad Hotel, New York City

• Honored for creating restaurant menus that promote health and wellness: Clifford Pleau ’81, corporate executive chef, Seasons 52, Orlando, Fla.

• Honored for his contribution to the understanding of world cuisines and cultures: Rick Bayless, chef/owner, Frontera Grill, Topolobampo and Xoco, Chicago

Bayless Honored as Inaugural Namesake for “Great Chefs Kitchen”

Tuesday, 30 April 2013 03:00

One of Kendall College’s 14 commercial kitchens will annually recognize a great chef or cook.

Celebrity chef Rick Bayless was on hand April 12 to speak with students, faculty and staff as the Kendall College School of Culinary Arts in Chicago honored him with a dedication of the “Great Chefs Kitchen.” The commercial kitchen lab that has served culinary students since the Riverworks campus’ opening in 2005 will bear Bayless’ name for the inaugural year of this new program that will annually honor a chef who has significantly influenced and shaped American foodways.

In the foodservice realm, Bayless, owner of Frontera Grill, Topolobampo, Xoco and other well-known eateries in greater Chicago, is arguably America’s foremost expert on authentic regional Mexican cuisine. His PBS television series, “Mexico – One Plate at a Time,” along with his gourmet retail lines and award-winning cookbooks, have made Bayless a household name from coast to coast.

Wine Drinking in the United States Enters a New Era

Tuesday, 30 April 2013 03:00

 

Napa Technology reports 2013 wine trends as wine experts weigh in from the field.

Napa Technology, developer of WineStation 3.0, conducted its third-annual survey* asking leading wine-industry professionals to share what they see happening in wine trends in restaurants, arenas, hotels, cruise ships and retail venues.

Informed predictions for 2013 include a continued effort to reach Millennials, greater emphasis on women wine drinkers and a general pronouncement that wines-by-the-glass programs should stretch beyond the “known” varietals and provide more choices.

Last year’s Napa Technology survey revealed that ordering wines by the glass was on the rise, driven by a more sophisticated and younger customer, but that the Baby Boomer generation were a mighty purchasing force not to be ignored. 

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