Category Archives: Kitchen Counter Cooking School

Food Writing Boot Camp in Washington D.C. on October 9th

Anyone who has taken my food writing classes knows that I have great passion for teaching. So I’m excited that my D.C. stop for  The The Kitchen Counter Cooking School paperback tour includes one stop featuring a writing class.

On Oct. 9, I’ll  be at D.C.’s famous Politics & Prose bookstore from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. teaching a “Food Writing Boot camp” focused on some key fundamentals of food writing. We’ll touch on several areas, from narrative food writing, to recipes to writing exercises to help learn the keys to writing delicious detail. Students will leave armed with a portion of the thick work book that I use for my weekend-long Hungry for Words boot camps at Richard Hugo House in Seattle that includes more writing exercises, loads of writing examples from a dozen writers and a lengthy reading list. It’s $40 ($35 for Politics & Prose members) for the two-hour class. Since its food writing, we’ll also have small bites to nibble on. Unlike the photo, there will be no yelling. In fact, I’m kind of a low talker, so you may need to lean in to hear me. More info at Politics & Prose.

If you’re in D.C., you can also catch me on Let’s Talk Live (NewsChannel 8) around 11 a.m. that Tuesday morning. I’ll be doing an interview and a demo and recommend some long distance moving services if you’re moving here. Tune in to find out what I’ll be cooking up.

By the way, I’m planning a series of food writing classes in 2013 in various parts of the country and – drum roll – Paris! To get updates, just drop me a line.

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How about cocktails or lunch in San Francisco?

Looking for a place to mingle with food-minded folks in the San Francisco area? Well, have I got two fun, food-centered events for you.

I’ll be in San Fran Oct. 12-13 to promote the paperback launch of my second book, The Kitchen Cooking School.

My first stop is a cocktail party at the city’s fabulous food-focused bookstore, Omnivore Books on Food at 6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 12. Totally free, totally fun. Come mingle and pick up a signed copy of my book.

The next event is a lovely luncheon at Rakestraw Books in Danville, Calif. on Saturday, Oct. 13. I’ll discuss the book and sign copies. Lunch starts at noon. It’s $10 per person. Don’t forget to RSVP through Rakestraw’s site.

Looking forward to seeing and/or meeting you!

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In Seattle? Come to a knife sharpening party for the paperback launch Sept. 25th or 26th

Normally, I try to avoid inviting dull party guests. But we’re having a party and your knives are invited, especially the dull ones.

The paperback of The Kitchen Counter Cooking School goes on sale Tuesday, September 25th. To mark this extraordinary occasion, I’ll be doing two events in greater Seattle. The first will be at the fabulous culinary book store, The Book Larder, on the day it goes on sale. It’s going to be a super fun event, with stations set up around the store for comparative tastings of everyday cooking staples, a sampling of recipes and some lovely wine. But, there’s more! Also on hand will be my pal Bill Magee, who will be bringing his mobile knife sharpening operation, Cutlery on Wheels. You’ll get a chance to try out a variety of knife styles and brands – and, if you bring your knives, he’ll be able to either sharpen on site or arrange to drop them off at your home or work. Everyone will get some fun swag, plus we’ll have some prizes, including a $20 gift certificate for knife sharpening. Cost is $20 and includes a signed copy of the paperback.

Can’t make that one? Fear not. The fun shifts to Third Place Books in Bothell on Wednesday, Sept. 26th. We’ll do the comparative tastings, I’ll talk about the project and Bill will be on hand with his truck for sharpening there, too. That event is free. RSVP ahead of time for a special gift.

Cutlery on Wheels charges about five or six bucks a knife; make sure you protect the blade for travel for reasons that should be obvious.

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How to do a Tasting and Why You Should

So Bon Appetit has announced that its going to do start doing it own “seal of approval,” putting its stamp on products the magazine’s team of editors and recipe testers like and recommend. I’m fine with this as a way to get more exposure for good products, but here’s what I recommend: get some friends over and find out what you like when it comes to cooking staples.

Think of it as a wine tasting, but instead, assemble a mix of various brands or versions of one or more everyday grocery staples, such as salt, pasta, cheese, olive oil, chicken stock (above), vinegar, fresh or canned vegetables, such as tomatoes, beans, etc., peanut butter and canned tuna. I’ve even done comparative tastings with frozen peas. For instance, with parmesan cheese, you’d want to try out an array of price ranges and styles, from freshly grated authentic Parmigiano-Reggiano, to a pre-shredded supermarket to the dried, grated stuff in a can. Remove a portion from the packaging and taste each item blindly, take notes and compare. You can use small dishes, small paper plates, whatever, just make sure you mark them with a number or letter and keep track.

Online inspirations:

This is a fun experiment to do with friends and neighbors. Just ask each to bring what they’ve already got in their cupboards or fridges, or assign them something to bring. It’s a great conversation starter, and an excellent addition to a book club.

After having done this with numerous people over the past few years, here’s a few tips. Try at least three to five samples of each food products, but no more than that or it will overwhelm most people’s palates. Most people don’t have the vocabulary to articulate what they’re tasting, so I recommend It’s helpful to provide a list of descriptive words to get people thinking about what they’re tasting, such as this list of wine terms (most can be applied to food), and this list of food-related words.

What’s important isn’t what the others think, but starting to understand what you like and seeing how what you purchase and start cooking with affects the final outcome of the dish. As the French chefs taught me at Le Cordon Bleu, it’s important to taste, taste, taste as you cook — taste the ingredients you’re using before you add them, tastes multiple times as you cook a dish and taste it again before you serve it.

Recommended reading: I’m a fan of the book The Tasting Club by Dina Cheney, which provides more insight into how to conduct tastings of all kinds of ingredients, including chocolate and olives. Her book gave me the idea to start doing tastings in the first place, and I still refer to it. If you’re interested in tastings, it’s certainly worth a look.

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Reader Q&A: Why Ditch Table Salt?

I was inspired by The Kitchen Counter Cooking School, but I was wondering why you’re so against iodized table salt? I’ve heard that people need a certain amount of iodine so it is added to salt because it’s impossible to get otherwise. Any clarification would be helpful! – Sally B., Madison, Wis.

Kathleen says: I’ve had a few people ask about this, and even one person posted a comment on the site. So let me clarify. I’m not against iodine in salt, I’m just not a fan of highly processed table salt in which natural trace elements have been stripped out. I recommend unrefined salt for home cooking instead of highly processed table salt. There are many affordable, healthier and ecologically better options out there, as I recently learned from the excellent book Salted by Mark Bitterman.

Unrefined or natural salts, such as mineral or sea salts, contain a variety of trace elements, often mirroring the makeup of these minerals in the body. These include magnesium and potassium, both of which help the body metabolize sodium. Bluntly put, unrefined salt has minerals that help you process the sodium better and flush out what the body doesn’t use.

Refined salt has been through an arduous chemical transformation to strip away these trace minerals to leave it pure white and pure sodium paired with an anti-caking agent and added iodine . So you get a wee bit of iodine, but none of the trace minerals that help you break down and use the sodium more efficiently. If you’ve had that container of table salt in your cupboard for more than a year, the iodine may have likely evaporated, too.

Another reader asked, “Why do they strip all the trace mineral elements out of table salt?” Only a single digit of processed salt – about 7% - is used in food or sold to consumers as table salt. The rest is sold for a wide range of industrial applications that require chemically pure sodium chloride. Pure sodium is required to make various pharmaceuticals, baking soda, fertilizer, injection-molded plastics and explosives, among other things.

Why do they add the iodine? Some areas of the world, including the Great Lakes region of the United States, don’t have iodine as a naturally occurring mineral, so in the 1920s salt manufacturers began to add it to fight against disorders related to iodine deficiency, notably thyroid disorders such as goiter and cognitive development in infants and children. But not every area is deficient in iodine; for instance, South Carolina is sometimes referred to as the “iodine state.”

The World Health Organization combats iodine-deficiency by promoting iodized salt globally. In a famine setting, the lack of iodine — among many other nutrients – is a serious health issue. At that point, what salt tastes like or how much it’s refined doesn’t matter.

But in most industrialized countries where people have an adequate diet, there are other options for getting iodine. Some argue that salt isn’t the most effective way to get iodine in your system, and eating foods with iodine are a better bet. Most dairy products contain iodine, as does seafood, kelp and seaweed, such as the kind used in sushi rolls. For the non-seafood eaters, you can also get iodine by eating spinach, asparagus, garlic, strawberries, lima beans, mushrooms, sesame seeds, zucchini, Swiss chard, collard greens and turnip greens. Another option is to take a multi-vitamin with iodine.

I used to advocate kosher salt, but after reading Salted, I learned that it too can be highly processed with most of the minerals stripped out. So I now recommend sea salt or sel gris for daily cooking which includes important minerals that your body needs, notably magnesium, calcium, potassium, and sometimes – depending on the provenance – many more. In my kitchen, I used a variety of salts and one of my standards is Trapani’s a natural sea salt with iodine from Italy.

Try this: Get some table salt and some sea salt. Put them in a bowl and compare the color, texture and taste. This is fun to do with friends; ask them to bring whatever salt they have at home if they’ve got something other than table salt. You don’t have to eat highly processed sodium that doesn’t taste good. Salt is used in such limited quantities in cooking, and life is short. Buy decent salt, get yourself some real flavor and extra minerals.

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Reader Mail: How to Cut an Onion?

My book club read The Sharper Your Knife and we all loved it. So I got a copy of The Kitchen Counter Cooking School and I was so inspired, I went ahead and got the chef’s knife from block set we received as a wedding gift 11 years ago sharpened for the first time! I’ve read through your description on how to cut an onion, but I think I’m doing something wrong. Do you have any photos of this process online anywhere? Heather C., Houston

Kathleen says: Ah, it warms my heart to hear about people getting their knives out in the kitchen. As it happens, I have a video we made last summer in which I demonstrate basic knife skills, including the way the chefs at Le Cordon Bleu showed me how to chop an onion. You can also go to the cooking lessons page for a free video on knife skills from Rouxbe.com.

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The Cooking Crisis: How to Get People Off the Couch and Into the Kitchen?

This weekend, Mark Bittman wrote a terrific piece in The New York Times titled “Is Junk Food Really Cheaper?” The arguments and premise — that no matter how you measure it, home cooking is more affordable and healthy than convenience foods — essentially summarizes the message of The Kitchen Counter Cooking School which goes on sale this Thursday.

Thanks to both government subsidies for big agriculture and the commercialization of our food production, Americans spend less money on food as a percentage of their income than any other country, about 10 percent. (By comparison, we spent 25% on food in 1930; in Ethiopia, about 70% of their income goes toward food.)  The “cheap factor” might be why we also waste more food than any country — about 40-plus percent —  according to the excellent book American Wasteland by Jonathan Bloom.

Here’s the fundamental question. If it’s cheaper and healthier to cook from scratch, why don’t more people do it? Michael Pollan noted that we collectively spend less time cooking in a piece in the Times back in 2009 (although this seems to have increased slightly in the onset of the recession.) I agree with all of Bittman’s commentary on the reasons, all of which are supported by a recent survey on the excuses people give for not cooking, which range from the notion of “time poverty,” that people don’t have time to cook, that cooking is too difficult, to their disdain for getting their kitchens dirty.

It doesn’t help that convenience foods have been engineered to be addictive and easy-to-eat (and over-eat), from its balance of the holy trinity of sugar, salt and fat to the amount of fiber it contains (or doesn’t). You want to know why cheap white bread or fast food doesn’t contain much fiber? Fiber fills you up. The less fiber a food product contains, the easier it is to eat (and purchase) more of it.  All of that combined with decades of conflicted messaging from multinational food companies that cooking is not worth the effort created a confusing and complex food culture. After all, we live in a society where we’re told both they need to eat more fruits and vegetables, and that sugar-laden cereals are “part of a complete breakfast.” That kind of product engineering and bullshit marketing are among the reasons cited in a United Nations summit called for holding food and beverage companies accountable for both their products and the damage they inflict on individuals.

But one intriguing fact persists, and it’s at the heart of the new book. A main reason that 28% of people in that survey cited as their biggest obstacle to cooking? They don’t know how.  You can tell people to eat steam broccoli and grilled lean proteins all you want, but if they don’t know how to steam or grill anything, than what do you expect? The glut of television shows don’t have much impact on getting people to cook, either. As one woman I met through the project in the new book said, “I’m ashamed to admit it, but I’ve eaten Tuna Helper while watching Gordon Ramsey.”

Part of the project at the heart of the new book involved going through a group of volunteers’ kitchens to evaluate their fridges, pantries and freezers and talking to them about their relationship with food and cooking. We watched them cook a go-to meal and then offered them a series of cooking lessons with the aid of other culinary professionals. The result? Just a few simple lessons can help trigger small changes that yield big results. In one case, a volunteer cut her trips to the fast food lane from several times a week to less than twice per month. By doing so, she cut nearly 200,000 mostly empty calories over the course of a year, the equivalent of spending 550 hours on a treadmill. This is part of the reason that, as a general rule, the more people cook, the less they weigh.

Here are just a few key things I learned both from the project and subsequent research:

  • Confidence: Cooks with more confidence cook more often, try more varied food choices and rely less on convenience foods. They tend to rethink value when shopping or purchasing food, often ditching bulk purchasing and boxed products. “I learned that fast food wasn’t a good value,” one project volunteer told me. “It costs less and takes less time to pack an apple and a sandwich. It just takes a little more planning.”
  • Knife skills: Many inexperienced home cooks are put off by recipes due to the time they think it will take to prepare the ingredients. “Learning to use a knife changed everything,” one volunteer told me. “I don’t look at recipes anymore and think, ‘that’s too much work.’ I see ‘half a onion chopped’ and think ‘oh, that will take me under a minute.” I’m such a believe in the power of knife skills that I convinced the online cooking school Rouxbe to offer everyone on the planet a free knife skill lesson.
  • Fundamentals: Depending on what individuals routinely consumed, learning to prepare a few staple meals shifted their buying and eating habits. One woman used to buy a lot of frozen dinners, but she ditched them as her cooking skills improved. “I figured out that I could make 12 servings of a casserole for the same price as a couple boxes which contained four. Plus, I know what’s in it and mine tastes way better.”

Bittman is right; what we need in our society is a fundamental shift in the way that people think about cooking. As he notes, cigarette smoking used to be cool. Now, smokers tend to be treated as social pariahs.  How do we make the same kind of seismic shift to get people to take back their kitchens, one meal at a time? I’ll be talking about this very topic as part of an evening program titled  ”Power of Home Cooking” next week in New York City with authors Pam Anderson and Lauren Shockey at the Institute of Culinary Education on Tuesday, October 4th. If you’re in NYC and interested in this subject, I encourage you to come out!

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Few Good Food Links: The Rise (and Possible Fall?) of Processed Foods

So, I was perusing ”Kitchen RoyaltyAn illustrated tour of the top chefs (and the many products they endorse) in the food world” by Robert Klara at Adweek the Barnum-like world of brands and chefs. (Thanks to SteamyKitchen for the link.) Looking through his past articles, I also came upon this gem that corresponds perfectly with the new book: “Banquet in a Box: Frozen meals are miracles of convenience—with a dollop of denial.” A short piece, but nonetheless an insightful look at the evolution of TV dinners. When they launched, the meals promoted the technology that allowed one to avoid missing even a moment of television. Now, the same meals try to play up a dubious “farm to table” connection to not-so-delicately mask the fact that, as someone Klara quotes, “you have to nuke this sucker.”

On a completely related subject, a United Nations summit this week urged holding food companies accountable for their role in making everyone obese and unhealthy. As part of their investigation into chronic disease, the summit called for more responsible marketing of processed food to children and that trade in tobacco, alcohol and processed foods laden with fat, sugar and salt needed reform. United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon noted “there is a well-documented an shameful history of certain players in industry who ignored the science — sometimes even their own research — and put public health at risk to protect their own profits.” For a bit more d context, take a look at this story by Eliza Barclay at NPR’s blog.

All this underscores something fundamental. A study released this week by Bosch (an appliance manufacturer) revealed that 28% of those surveyed admitted they simply didn’t know how to cook. Based on my research, there’s an even larger number of people who can put together a meal, but don’t feel confident in their kitchen. If you can’t cook, or you don’t cook, you leave yourself at the mercy of companies to feed you and their primary motive is profit, not your health.

A shout-out to some of the bloggers who have reviewed the new book, which happens to be about this very subject:

  • Mommy’s Memorandum: ”[A]n excellent resource…humorous while offering real life, easy to implement guidance to making life healthier, more fun, cheaper and dare I say, easier.” (Book giveaway)
  • A Book Lover: Brittanie wrote: “This is my favorite book I have read this entire year.”
  • Urban Farm Junkie: Loved the introduction in this well-thought review by Christina Dudley on a farmer’s market blog; she compares the guilty items people keep in their cupboards to the TV dating game show “Baggage” hosted by Jerry Springer.
  • Thrifty Nifty Mommy: “This book is a stirring, practical and humorous book that shows how boosting your self-confidence in the kitchen can make your entire life easier, cheaper, healthier and more fun. It has the potential, along with programs like First Lady Michelle Obama’s ‘Let’s Move Campaign,’ to really change America ’s relationship with food and positively affect the obesity rates in the U.S.” (Book giveaway, deadline Oct. 3rd)

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Book Trailer & Reviews for The Kitchen Counter Cooking School

The Kitchen Counter Cooking School officially goes on sale in about a month (Sept. 29th). As a preview, here’s the official book trailer! I’m also pleased to announce the initial tour dates. We’ll continue to add events but as you can see, the Mike and I will be everywhere. I’m psyched since the book is getting some great pre-publication reviews and designations. It’s been selected as an Indie Next Pick for the month of October by the American Booksellers Association and earned a starred review from Kirkus Reviews. The Publishers Weekly review, just published this morning, even invoked the name of my hero, Julia Child (!) You can’t read the Kirkus one without being a subscriber, so I pasted it below.

Kirkus Reviews (starred review):
A Seattle-based writer turned chef demonstrates how readers can transform their lives with the right recipe.

After a stint at Paris’ Le Cordon Bleu, Flinn returned to the States to pen her 2008 debut, The Sharper Your Knife, The Less You Cry. But after the critical acclaim and the endless book touring subsided, the author found herself at a loss for her next project until she stumbled across the TV program What Not to Wear. Envisioning a cooking class that would dig through pantries and cupboards in a manner befitting the show’s hosts, Flinn took on a group of nine culinary novitiates and imparted technique and skill, giving them confidence in the kitchen. The author began by taking inventory of each participants’ refrigerator, cabinets and eating habits. A friend’s step-daughter, Sabra, was a disaster in the kitchen, so she usually relied on frozen dinners. One of her go-to concoctions, “White Trash Garlic Bread,” is enough to give any reader, no matter how unseasoned a chef, pause: “She slathered one-half of a soft hamburger bun with Gold ’n Soft margarine, added a few hearty shakes of generic garlic salt, and topped it with dried Parmesan cheese from a can.” Another woman admitted to buying in bulk, only to later feel awful about the amount of food she wasted. Flinn’s chronicle of her culinary coaching discusses how her students fared, and acknowledges how the process led her to clean out her own cupboards: ‘I am in a battle with myself. It seemed that I had as much to learn as the peopleI’d just visited.’  The author’s humble approach is inviting and shows why her students were enthusiastic.”

You can pre-order the book from Amazon, Barnes and Noble or your local independent bookstore. If you’d like to pre-order a signed copy, drop us an email. We’ll buy  it from my local bookstore, Elliott Bay Book Co., sign it and ship it the day it comes out (Sept. 29th). Plus, I’ll slip in a special little gift…

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Galleys!

Officially known as “uncorrected proofs,” a box of bound galleys for the new book arrived today. The inside design is lovely, too.

Amazon officially listed it on the site this week, too. Crazy.

We’re in full book tour planning mode right now. If you’d like to see if we can set something up in your ‘hood, drop me a line.

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