News / Notes
City Tech Launches New Courses in International Cuisine
with a Little Help from a Neighborhood Friend
Brooklyn, NY - February 26, 2008 - To help launch a series of new courses in international cuisine, the award-winning hospitality management program at New York City College of Technology (City Tech) recently turned to Kong Tjon, a neighborhood restaurateur, to provide its advanced culinary students with a demonstration in the art of making sushi.
"Sushi making is a unique
art," says Professor Jean Claude, CHE, CCE, who teaches
both international and contemporary cuisine courses. "While
we strive in the teaching kitchens to emulate how skilled chefs
work, we often turn to 'pros' to show students first-hand how
they do things and wanted them to learn sushi making from someone
who does it with authenticity and flair."
Tjon, owner and executive chef
of Brooklyn Height's popular Sea Asian Restaurant, was snacking
on sushi in his native Hong Kong when barely out of diapers.
The original Japanese word for sushi translates as "snack,"
and there were few things that little Kong liked to snack on
more than rice topped or stuffed with fish and vegetables. He
began preparing sushi for others early in his teens.
In Hong Kong, the Tjon family
had been in the produce and restaurant business for more than
half a century. Seeking the better opportunities that the U.S.
had to offer, Kong migrated here several years ago and soon
opened Sea Asian Restaurant on Brooklyn's Clark Street across
from the historic St. George Hotel.
As Professor Claude and his class
looked on, Tjon conducted his demonstration in the middle of
the dining room a few weeks ago. "While sushi as we know
it is of Japanese origin," he began, "it can trace
its roots to China and the ancient fermentation of fish and
rice. Originally, the vinegar produced by the process broke
down different kinds of fish into amino acids, producing a variety
of distinctive flavors. But when the Chinese fermented the fish
and rice, they only ate the fish and discarded the rice. Modern
day sushi involves an altogether different and quicker process,
and people now eat both the fish and the rice."
As Tjon deftly wielded a long,
sharp knife and sliced a variety of fish and vegetables into
sometimes razor-thin strips, several of the restaurant's "Early
Bird" customers got up from their tables to watch. "It
looks so easy," observed one. "It really isn't difficult,"
Tjon replied. "All you need is a sharp knife, fresh fish,
seaweed, cucumber and other vegetables, a pot of rice cooked
with vinegar and a little bamboo mat called a 'maki-su.' In
no time at all, you can produce a meal fit for an emperor or
the fussiest of guests."
"I loved the sushi and the
presentation so much," one of the students named Alana
later said, "that I now have sushi almost every week and
have become a sushi lover!" What most impressed Alejandro,
another student, was "the chef's masterful and disciplined
knife skills, which were inspirational."
Following the demonstration, the
students and Professor Claude feasted on an assortment of sushi
and other dishes that are favorites of Sea Asian customers.
They used the occasion to celebrate their taking top honors
in the Best Centerpiece in the Show category and for finishing
in second place in the Complete Buffet category at the International
Hotel/Motel & Restaurant Show at Jacob Javits Convention
Center a few weeks before.
Tjon joins a growing list of some
of New York City's most talented chefs and other food experts
who have demonstrated their skills for the benefit of City Tech's
culinary arts students. Past presenters include Beacon's Waldy
Malouf, Union Square Café's Michael Romano '75, chef/author
James Peterson and the Food Network and Gourmet magazine's Sara
Moulton.
What the students learned at Sea
Asian Restaurant was not lost on them. A week or so after the
demonstration, they prepared trays of assorted sushi for a large
event at City Tech. In no time at all, the trays were empty
and guests were asking for more. The problem was that the students
had used up all of the vinegar-cooked rice. But a call to nearby
Sea Asian Restaurant solved their problem, as Tjon happily donated
all of the prepared rice the student chefs needed.
"The restaurant scene in
New York City and everywhere else is rapidly changing,"
says Professor Claude, "and students pursuing careers in
the culinary and pastry arts need to be trained in the preparation
of the more diverse variety of foods now available in virtually
every neighborhood in the five boroughs. Our new courses in
international cuisine are exposing them to the flavors and flavor
components characteristic of other cultures. We teach students
how to use their creativity and classical techniques to create
both familiar and original dishes. This is the foundation they
will need to build successful culinary careers in the future."
According to Department of Hospitality
Management Chair Elizabeth Schaible, "Today's culinary
professional is an artist, a businessperson, a scientist and
a cultural explorer. City Tech's new courses in international
cuisine have been designed to prepare graduates to successfully
compete in a rapidly growing and ever-changing global marketplace
by familiarizing them with the diverse tastes of nations and
the beverage selections that best complement those tastes. We
are grateful to Kong Tjon and Sea Asian Restaurant for their
generous contribution to this effort."
|
|
|
Professor Jean Claude, left, with Sea Asian Restaurant's Kong Tjon
|