Come into Chef Charlotte Langley’s kitchen and listen to her making cheese and potato pierogi.  A classic dish, and one of her favourite Sunday comfort foods.  She also talks about rocking culinary school, her home province of PEI, and why she moved away from cooking in fine-dining restaurants.  She’s feisty, passionate and lives most of her life in the Land of Po.  Press play to find out what that means!

Check out Charlotte’s website for links to many of the fabulous things she does!  chefcharlottelangley.com

And follow her on IG (@chefcharlottelangley) and Twitter (@ChefCharLangley) for the latest info and updates on current projects.

 

Feist’s latest album PLEASURE was recorded in Stinson Beach, California; Upstate New York; and Paris, and for that California session, Adrienne Amato came to cook for the musicians and crew.  The recording studio and the kitchen were separated by a thin wall, which meant that Adrienne cooked very quietly.  The experience in Stinson Beach led to the creation of a cookbook, PLEASURES: THE MEALS OF AN ALBUM, and all profits from the sale of the book go to Community Foods Centres Canada, an umbrella network that funds food security and food justice programs all over the country.

Come hang out with us in Adrienne’s kitchen as Feist and Ade make South African Seed Bread and Ariel Engle’s Halloumi Soup, both recipes from the book.  We ended up sitting there all afternoon, talking about family meals, Adrienne’s vinyl-listening room in her childhood home in Zimbabwe, algorithms, butter tarts, Feist’s favourite restaurant on earth, if she has a listener in mind when she writes, and music they listen to when they cook.  This is a wonderfully intimate conversation, and it’s full of surprises and insights.

 

Adrienne has worked in mental health for over 25 years and is currently a psychotherapist in private practice. She has also made several arts/culturally based documentary films, and is a regular curator of musical events. Her films have won numerous awards, screening at prestigious festivals such as Rotterdam, Clermont-Ferrand, and Doc Leipzig, as well as being broadcast on TVO and CBC. Her filmography includes Forgotten Mother (1989), A Brief Life (1992), First Break (1997, National Film Board), National Anthem of Nowhere (2007), Side Girl, (2012) and To the End of Poverty, (2013) which was made for TVO as part of the international Why Poverty? Series.  She is currently completing a feature length documentary film, Mbira Talks, in collaboration with Fifth Town Films.

 

Other goodness:

The Heat: A Kitchen (R)evolution, a documentary film by Maya Gallus

Arts and Crafts

Contramar

 

 

 

 

 

 

Both of these delicious recipes are featured in Leslie and Adrienne’s cookbook: PLEASURES: THE MEALS OF AN ALBUM.  All of the proceeds from the sale of the book go to Community Food Centres Canada, an…

At the beginning of Chef Caren McSherry’s new cookbook, Starters, Salads and Sexy Sides, Chef Lynn Crawford writes: “Caren McSherry is truly a Canadian culinary icon. I can tell you that she is one of the most passionate, talented, generous, smart, creative, hilarious, life-loving, food-loving people I have ever met.”  Caren lives in Vancouver, Canada and she’s often on TV and radio in British Columbia. She’s the founder and owner of the Gourmet Warehouse, a food and housewares emporium that stocks a wide-range of products from all over the world.  She’s the author of seven cookbooks, and in 1978, she founded Caren’s Cooking School, which is Canada’s longest-running, privately owned school.

Caren worked as a flight attendant for many years and she took advantage of free flights to take cooking classes all over the world.  And she didn’t like tofu until she created this Spicy Asian Glazed Tofu which she made for Sunday night dinner.

 

Listen to Jesse Brown, writer, journalist, founder of CANADALANDthe incredibly popular news site and podcast network that focuses on media criticism and media reporting.  He’s making Spaghetti Carbonara.  Known by some as the guy who broke the Jian Ghomeshi story, and by others (including himself) as “unapologetically sensational”, Jesse makes podcasts that always wrestle with the important stories of the moment. 

At the end of the day, after marching on Loblaws, Jesse goes home and will sometimes make this easy, comforting, classic dish.  Cook along with him as he talks about pissing off CBC executives, arguing at the dinner table, and Dr. Snuggles.

 

 

The second half of the school year is right around the corner, and Laura Keogh and Ceri Marsh (authors of HOW TO FEED A FAMILY and THE SCHOOL YEAR SURVIVAL COOKBOOK) have some tips for how to make busy weeks a little less fraught. They started their blog Sweet Potato Chronicles- The Never-Ending Story of the Well-Fed Family while they were on maternity leave from FASHION magazine.  Their evenings of glitzy cocktail parties turned into night feedings and research on how to feed kids.  And they decided to share their hard-earned strategies with the world.  Listen as they make Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie (two pies, actually, one for dinner and one for the freezer to be pulled out on a Wednesday when you need an easy meal).  There’s a pretty great strategy right there!
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Sharon Hapton created the non-profit organization Soup Sisters in 2009.  Since then, volunteers have made over 1 million servings of soup to nourish women and children fleeing domestic violence, and to help youth in crisis.  For her, soup is the ultimate comfort food, and she believes that people experiencing difficulty need good food more than ever.  Sharon made Jann Arden’s Kitchen Sink Chicken Soup for the podcast, a recipe from the third Soup Sisters cookbook THE SOUP SISTERS FAMILY COOKBOOK.  Sharon is totally inspiring, and she chops vegetables like a champ.  For more information about Soup Sisters go to www.soupsisters.org.