Sunday, January 13, 2013


Installment # 2 of Diary of a madwoman uh, I mean chef, in the throes of opening a restaurant…
And I thought cleaning the grease trap would be the worst of it---no, not so!  Having completed the cleaning, painting and repairing of the dish and rest rooms, my team and I spent last week alternating between painting the front of the house (dining room) and searching the upstate for appropriate equipment and furnishings to bide our time while waiting for contractors (sheet metal, carpentry, and plumbing).  And a successful week it was! 
Our first stop was an abandoned restaurant in a mill town where the only occupants for the last 18 months had been four legged and furry or six legged and nocturnal.  We had not thought to bring a flashlight and without power, we were forced to use the light of our phones to work our way through the once bustling kitchen, now a graveyard of sticky stainless steel and crusty grill work.  The owner, however, was only too willing to let us have our pick of cooking apparatus as long as we removed it without any help from him.  And to our delight, we found two gems, a char-grill and a griddle, both table top versions in recognizable condition, a small prep table and an odd assortment of baking sheets and pans.  What a haul, except for one minor detail, the grease was as thick as that purposefully applied to automotive parts to make them move effortlessly.  For a brief second, I longed to return to the dish room and clean the grease trap for a second time.
My experience has been that Craigslist is the best place to shop for bargains, better than any auctions or used restaurant equipment stores, online or brick and mortar.  But, since I am not the only chef looking for bargains on the site, I also know from experience that, as we used to say when we were kids, you snooze you lose.  So, Saturday morning, when my search for commercial refrigeration (coolers) returned a used two door True stainless steel cooler for an unbelievably low price, off we went.  And since the seller naturally expected this to be a cash transaction, the first stop for me was the local bank. 
Here’s a riddle. What bank in this country does NOT have Saturday hours?  MY BANK! Okay, so the local branch in Central was closed, but surely, the main branch in downtown Clemson would be open.  Nope, the sign posted on the door read Mon to Fri 10 to 5, ATM in lobby open 24 hours.  Yes, of course, the ATM, and I entered the lobby.  Although the seller wanted more than I was allowed by the only bank in America closed on Saturdays, to retrieve from an ATM, I fortunately had two accounts flush with cash at the only bank in America closed on Saturdays.  And between the two of them, I would have the funds needed to buy the damn cooler.  
I withdrew my first card, and completed the transaction, entering all of the information required.  Now, as I waited for what I thought was waaay too long, I could hear the inner workings grinding and squealing as the ATM tried to push the bills out the horizontal door.  I say tried because unbelievably, only the bills that I could see on the top of the pile made it all the way out the little opening.  Those who know me well, know that I have exceptional eye hand coordination, and I am fast, but even with both hands free to grab those bottom bills, that door clamped shut before I had a chance.  Never have I ever experienced such frustration as I did when I read the words that appeared on the screen.  The bills were not removed in the allotted time.  Please see your financial institution for assistance.  What?  Financial institution?  The only one in America that is closed on Saturdays?   My second attempt at the ATM in Central, the one that sits prominently in the square in front of the only bank in America that is closed on Saturdays, was just as unsuccessful.  There the screen read, The allotted daily amount has been met  We are unable to fulfill my request. 
Fortunately due to the intercession of my husband who uses a bank that, unlike mine, IS open on Saturdays we paid the seller and the monster cooler was tied securely into a utility trailer with the help of several of the seller’s neighbors.  Euphoric at the success of our latest acquisition, I called upon our business neighbors to assist in offloading and moving the giant into our establishment.  Here is another first, right up there with the grease trap!  How do you get a refrigerator which measures 33 inches deep by 54 inches wide and 84 inches high and weighs 500 pounds, through a standard size doorway and into a room with 96 inch ceilings?  Well, I am not going to bore you with the details, but after 45 minutes, the cooler was upright, inside and the only wound was in the ceiling which will be scarred for life.   
In addition to a cooler, char-grill and griddle, our only other score for the week was made in a place I should call home---the local Goodwill store.  I think the reason that I am so fond of that store is twofold.  First, I am an antique lover and self recognized authority on certain period pieces and therefore, appreciate all things older than I am.  And second, some of my fondest memories of time spent with my mother were those when we dressed in our Sunday best including hat and gloves and went downtown to the local Salvation Army store.  It was there that I watched in awe as my mother found the diamond in the midst of quartzite and managed to talk the clerk into accepting half the price on the ticket.  The poor salesman never had a chance.  And so in the spirit of my mother, I came to be the owner of a barely used, very expensive DVD/CD/MP3/tuner with 4 speakers and sub woofer, all for half the ticket price of $ 15.00.  I think our on-premise diners will be quite pleased!  
                ‘Til next week, keep an eye out for a natural gas convection oven, sandwich station and steam table, all looking to relocate to BTB in Central, SC.   And a degreaser wouldn’t hurt either!

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.


Wednesday, January 2, 2013


Diary of a madwoman uh, I mean chef, in the throes of opening a restaurant…

As promised, here is week one in the life of Beyond the Bull, an eat smart kitchen,  located in downtown Central, SC, home of Southern Wesleyan University and next door to the very proud winners of the 2012 Chick-Fil-A Bowl, Clemson University---go Tigers!  In spite of the holidays and the high absenteeism in most business and municipal offices, we managed to get all of the systems turned on in the building, bugs exterminated, the coming soon banner hung and the dish room clean.  No, we were not without problems, but we managed to solve them all.  The most baffling one was figuring out why there was no power even though Duke Energy swore (in three separate phone calls) that they had indeed turned it on.  Yes, I replied for the third time, the outside main breaker was on, the outside individual breakers were on as were the inside breakers, and still there was no power.  Talk about redundancy!  It was not until I spied a tiny metal door thickly painted over and hidden behind fire department certification tags and gas pipes that we finally solved our dilemma.  Just three more breakers and voila, let there be light.  Gasp!  I liked it better when the light was dim and hid the dirt, droppings, floor cracks and grease in a kitchen long awaiting a new chef. 
                Unfortunately it also allowed me a better view of the dish room, the three bays of the stainless steel sink caked with ancient dried spaghetti sauce and rotten mozzarella cheese left by the previous tenant, a pizza parlor whose owner was obviously in a hurry to vacate, and an un-obscured view of the single most hated piece of equipment in all restaurants---the grease trap.   For those of you who are not familiar with this piece of equipment, the very name says it all.  The purpose of the grease trap is to trap grease (and solids like mozzarella cheese) that make it down the sink drain, preventing a clogged system further on.  And as one would suspect, leaving the contents in the grease trap for any length of time ( in this case two years) allows bacteria to grow and bugs to move in creating an odor worse than any gases produced by the human body.  Now, since my experience with grease traps has been limited to calling a service and paying someone to bring a big truck with a pump to suck out the waste, I wasn’t sure how to proceed.  So I did as I always do when presented with a problem with which I am unfamiliar.  I asked the world wide web, after all, if it is on the internet, it must be true
                Fortunately for me there were some very good demonstrations and tips as to how to clean an under the sink grease trap.  

Tip number one, wear protective clothing, goggles, mask and gloves up to your elbows.  I chose an old chef coat (to throwaway if necessary), big rubber gloves, mask, and my designer progressive lens eyeglasses (goggles would render me blind).  

Tip number two, fill a large garbage bag with kitty litter to absorb the liquid.  Double bagged just in case, the bags were filled with half the kitty litter that I had just purchased for the job.  The second half was soon added as I bailed the liquid and scraped the rubberized mozzarella depositing both into the bags.  

Tip number three, never do this when you have customers.  It didn’t really hit me (literally) until I removed the cover how important this tip was.  Even through the mask I was able to smell the odor.  I imagined the homeowners in the area were checking their toilets and the manager of the restaurant next door was yelling at the dishwasher for not having cleaned his trap when he said he did.
                One hour later, the dirty deed was done.  Thirty minutes later I was home scrubbing the smell from my nostrils in a hot shower, proud of our accomplishments at Beyond the Bull, the first week.  Along with a sparkling clean and sanitized dish room, we had water, gas, electricity a working, clean restroom, a parking lot and a banner out front that proclaimed our arrival.  It feels good to be tired when it is the result of a labor of love.

A happy and healthy New Year to All…

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

Monday, December 24, 2012


Merry Christmas to All!!!


As a writer, teacher and business owner there is almost never a day when I am not focused on a lighted 14 inch screen and tapping the keys before me.  I say almost because there are four days a year when I joyfully close my office door and turn my focus elsewhere.  They are Thanksgiving, the day after Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve day and Christmas day.  They are days for traditions---traditions like spending the day in pajamas and flip flops, cooking breakfast with my husband, hanging lights in the front yard, setting out the reindeer, watching the black and white version of “It’s A Wonderful Life”, thanking God for what is good in my life and wondering what I have done wrong to bring the bad.  I am closing my door now, a little later than usual.

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

Friday, December 14, 2012


Coming Soon…Beyond the Bull!!!

It was three years ago this month that I began my quest to raise the funds and find the perfect location for what I have been referring to as an “eat smart” restaurant, the first of its kind to serve anti-aging gastronomy.  Well, I have finally found it---8 miles and 13 minutes from my front door!   True, it is not a restaurant yet, but the space is mine as is the parking lot, antiquated kitchen, one bath and the small wrap-around porch.  One would have to be a visionary to think of the 750 SF cape as a restaurant, but then, I believe that is what I have become.  I also believe that Beyond the Bull will soon be a reality (March 2013) and a successful model for others to follow.  Next week, my team and I will begin the process of renovating, improving and otherwise transforming the space into my vision.  And, of course, I hope you will follow us as we clean, fix, design, install, apply for permits and licensing, develop menus, market, and practice, practice, practice in preparation to open what the banner hanging from the front porch proclaims:   

 
Coming soon to downtown Central, SC, population of 5000, neighbor to Clemson University and home to Southern Wesleyan University, BEYOND THE BULL, the first “eat smart” kitchen...stay tuned!

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

P.S.  Every book you purchase helps to buy FF&E!  Give your friends and loved ones the gift of health… GOOD FOOD BAD FOOD  now for sale on Amazon 

Monday, November 19, 2012


A SMART Thanksgiving

For those of you who have been subscribing to my blog, you know that the subject is worthy of repeating---inflammatory foods are the source of age related chronic disease.  And since the Thanksgiving holiday is all about food, family and friends (which it is every day for me), I thought I would help those of you who truly believe in the anti-aging way of eating, to have an anti-aging Thanksgiving feast.  And although traditional Thanksgiving foods can be highly acid forming if prepared using ingredients such as stuffing mix from a box, it is possible to have a SMART holiday that mimics those you remember fondly from childhood.  So, grab your potato masher and roasting pan and let’s have the smartest of all holiday dinners.  Happy SMART Thanksgiving to all!

A Smart Thanksgiving Menu

Vegetable cocktail
In a juicer combine celery, parsley, cucumber and apple. 
Pour one ounce of your favorite gin or vodka in a chilled martini glass.  Add the juice
and garnish with cucumber slices.

Appetizer
Asparagus wrapped in thin sliced prosciutto with
horseradish mustard sauce
Vegetarian spring rolls
Seasoned Daikon chips

Soup
Butternut and jalapeno with
kale chip garnish

Salad
Spinach, red onion and black olive with a blueberry balsamic
vinaigrette and crunchy soy nuts

Entrée
Roast Turkey with wild rice, parsley, sage and mushroom stuffing
Gravy from pan drippings and stock
Smashed maple sweet and Bliss potatoes
Cranberry chutney made with celery, raisins, vinegar,
black peppercorns, apples, chili peppers and onion
Green beans and almonds
                                   Roasted grapes

                                       Dessert
                                       Olive oil pot de crème with 
                                       fresh berries

Happy Thanksgiving and eat smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

P.S. Don't forget to order your copy of GOOD FOOD BAD FOOD in time for Christmas gift giving.  

Friday, November 16, 2012


On Sale Now
 GOOD FOOD BAD FOOD, a 230 page anti-aging diet and cook book

I am so proud!  My baby is finally born and it only took seven months, not nine.  Perfect timing because it’s beginning to look a lot like---you guessed it!  So, for those of you who have a newly-wed or beginning homemaker in your life, here is the perfect gift.  A two volume set of Cooking Skills for Life (AsGood As It Gets and Good Food BadFood) both now available in paperback on Amazon and Createspace ---  Volume 1, a how-to of cooking methods with family recipes and anecdotes from the author and Volume 2, the diet book for anti-aging cookery that includes all the information, cooking methods, ingredients, and recipes, recipes, recipes, that he or she needs to know to avoid age related chronic disease.  What better gift to give than a formula for health!

The following is an excerpt from Good Food Bad Food---

                     The cocktail course is one of my favorite ways to introduce more vegetables into my diet through the use of fresh fruit and vegetable juices.  And for those of you who, like me, enjoy alcoholic beverages, drinking your vegetables as a mixer in a cocktail will lessen the negative effects of an otherwise acid producing beverage.  From my  blog http://antiaginggastronomy.blogspot.com/
of August 19, 2012, some tips on a dinner course
which is usually left out of nutrition and diet books---

The Cocktail Course

Many years ago, before I discovered the benefits of eating an anti-aging diet, I jumped on the juicing diet fad bandwagon in one of many attempts to lose the extra pounds that I was carrying around.  I was reminded of it recently when my husband and I decided to join the annual going back to school neighborhood multi family yard sale last weekend.  Going through box after box of stored memorabilia, collectibles, and household goods, was like watching an old home movie, or turning the pages of a scrapbook of our lives.
  Like hundreds of thousands of other forty somethings in the 80s, I plunked down $ 200 more or less and bought a popular state of the art juicer, hawked by a well known sports octogenarian who swore into the camera that drinking a concoction of carrots, celery and parsley, freshly juiced every day was the key to his longevity and good health.  For one whole week, I juiced every vegetable and fruit I could get my hands on to try out the machine.  After weeks of juicing, I was no closer to a normal weight than before I had started and generally felt no different, although I did notice a tinge of permanent orange on the fingers of my left hand, no doubt from all of the carrots.  A decade later and 3000 miles away from where I had first used it, here it was again, it’s shiny stainless steel blade none the worse for wear.  So out to the yard it went with all the other boxes that had crossed the continent more than once and still remained unopened through the last two moves.  As the day wore on, it became apparent that no one was interested in a $ 200 juicer, not even for $ 30 bucks.  I took that as a sign. 


At the end of a long day of powerful deal making and highly impressive negotiations over the price of vacation themed shot glasses and tarnished silverware, there I was at my kitchen counter pondering what to do with my $ 200 juicer when suddenly it came to me.  I am always looking for more ways to prepare and consume vegetables that could then be served to offset small amounts of acid producing foods like protein and grains.  With experience I have been able to come up with enough interesting ways to prepare alkaline producing vegetables, condiments, soups, salads, and such for every meal except for one.  The one course that is particularly difficult with which to accomplish this balance is---the cocktail course.  Yes, you heard me.  That’s right.  In my family the first course to every evening meal is the cocktail.  Now, staring at the juicer I knew I had a way to convert that course to a 60/40 (alkaline to acid producing) ratio as well.
All alcoholic beverages are acid forming, whether it is vodka from potatoes, gin from juniper berries or tequila from the blue agave.  Now, I have tried to rationalize my participation in the cocktail course by thinking of the juniper berries, and blue agave, and potatoes as vegetables, of plant origin and therefore, alkaline producing, right?  Wrong!   Sugar, fermentation and distillation yield an acidic forming product.  But, here’s the good news.  A contemporary cocktail such as an appletini or cosmopolitan, is made of anywhere from 1 to 2 oz of alcohol and the rest of the glass is filled with a mixer.  Sooooo, as I eyeball my juicer staring me in the face, I realize it is the key to rendering the cocktail course from one that is acid producing to an oh-so-good alkaline forming first course.  By juicing fresh whole parsley, celery, lemon, lime, cucumbers, avocado, tomatoes, apples, carrots, beets, lettuces, chili peppers and any other vegetable of your liking (not all together, of course) and adding good spices and herbs like cinnamon, mint, basil and red pepper flakes, you can turn an acid forming classical martini of gin and dry vermouth (fortified wines are even higher in acid forming qualities), or a contemporary one like a cosmopolitan into a powerhouse of alkalinity.  Just leave out the vermouth and bottled mixers and fill to the brim with liquid vegetables, freshly juiced including the fiber.  And there-in lies the reason why no one bought my juicer.  I do believe in serendipity. 
Eat Smart Mexican Martini (my favorite cocktail thus far)---Juice celery stalks with leaves, cucumbers and lime zest.  Add the juice of one lime.  Chill a martini glass and pour in 1 1/4 ounce of Tequila.  Fill to brim with juice.  If you like a salted rim, coarse ground sea salt will do.

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012


An Evening With Two Fat Ladies

It was just about this time of year, Fall, of 1996, that two fat ladies named Clarissa Dickson Wright and Jennifer Paterson,  happened on the British culinary scene and through their love of lard and all things fresh, became an overnight sensation.  Wright and Paterson, who were indeed two fat ladies became Two Fat Ladies who rode into the opening scene of every segment of their British cookery show on a Triumph Thunderbird, Wright riding sidecar alongside a goggled and leather helmeted Paterson. Their odd personae, disdain for vegetarianism,  and lack of professional culinary skills did not hurt the popularity of the show which ran for three and a half seasons, until cut short by the death of Jennifer Paterson.  But although there were only twenty-two episodes (ten of which I have not yet seen), the popularity of their show lives on. 
I was first introduced to these larger than life talents when I happened on their show being aired on one of the cooking channels last year.  Having a fondness for tradition, and all things natural and from another time, I never missed one and in fact, felt cheated and sad when they came to an end.  Where in today’s sanitized, polished, television cooking shows can you see so much butter and lard, anchovies, garlic, unpasteurized raw egg products, sweet vermouth, game and fish, large, calorie rich meals with unusual ingredients, made by two fat ladies wielding wooden kitchen spoons, taking time outs for a cigarette break, and a celebratory cocktail and smoke at the end of every show?  
And although the duo had disdain for vegetarianism, non-fat, lo-cal and lo-sodium, their ingredients were unprocessed and came from farms and roadside markets, local fresh turned butter, as well as vegetables and fruits picked from the fields and orchards, and in many episodes, fish and game, caught or shot by Wright or Patterson on camera.  My heroes!  My hat comes off to the originators, producers and to the two fat ladies themselves for their wit, stamina, originality, and most of all, their ability to see the trees in spite of the forest. 
    Tonight, I will watch the other ten!

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012


Yes, the day has finally arrived when the second in my cooking skills for life series is available on Amazon for Kindle.  A total of 230 pages of information, tips, best blogs, cooking methods and recipes to follow to eat your way to good health!  The following is an excerpt from Good Food Bad Food, Cooking Skills for Life, Volume 2 by Chef Angela Bell.  



Lesson Five

There’s Something About Olive Oil

Olive oil is a heart healthy monounsaturated fat that, in my opinion, does not get enough attention in most American kitchens.  Yes, it is more expensive than other cooking oils, but even used in equal portions with canola oil, it is beneficial.  Good quality extra virgin olive oil contains anti-oxidants as well and should be used as often as possible.
As a first generation Italian American, I was exposed to olive oil at an early age.  But, to my dismay now, the only uses for olive oil in our household were as salad dressing, drizzled over pasta under pounds of store bought grated cheese or for a hot olive oil treatment for my frizzy dark curls.  It wasn’t until culinary school that I started my love affair with olive oil, and even then it was only because I was informed of the fact that like wine, olive oil is made from a fruit.  And like wine, there are varietals yielding a plethora of flavors.  And being a student and lover of all wines, I was naturally eager to apply the same vigilance to learning all I could about olive oil.  Consequently, I began tasting as many varieties of extra virgin olive as I could afford to get my hands on.  And to my surprise I found more than one that pleased my palate. 
Of course, now that I know of the extraordinary benefits of olive oil in fighting inflammation, I am always on the lookout for new applications and have expanded my use in recipes and cooking methods never tried before.  In addition, keep in mind throughout this book, wherever a recipe calls for canola oil, which I consider to be flavorless, you can substitute all or part olive oil.  The only warning I will give is that the flavor of the olive oil will change the flavor of the dish.  So, if you do not want the flavor of the olive oil to interfere with your results, use canola oil, if it makes no difference, go for the liquid gold.  Go for the anti-aging EVOO.
As a weekly contributor to the online newspaper oliveoiltimes.com, I have taken the liberty to include some of my most informative and popular articles for the benefit of those of you who, like me, are truly lovers of all things olive oil. 

For more information on the anti-aging diet and recipe book Good Food Bad Food, go to Amazon and take a free sneak peak, then download it and take the first step on the road to wellness.

Eat Smart, America!
Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.


P.S.  The paperback version will be launched on Amazon sometime next week, just in time for Holiday shopping.  But for now, all you Kindle owners don’t have to wait!

Sunday, October 28, 2012


Ten Reasons to Eat Smart, America


Eating smart means eating a diet packed with anti-inflammatory foods, what I refer to as anti-aging gastronomy.  Eating a diet based on the 60/40 ratio of alkaline forming to acid forming foods is anti-inflammatory, anti-aging and has multiple benefits. Here are the top ten reasons to eat smart, America.

No more mood swings

You know the moodiness that plagues you mid morning and mid afternoon and sometimes results in brain fog as well?  Most likely it is from eating sugary, refined grains (cereal and bread) at breakfast and luncheon meals.  When the body gets a load of these, it reacts with a load of insulin.  The result is elevated blood glucose from the sugar (happy, happy) followed by a plunge of blood glucose (grouchy, grouchy) when the insulin does its job.  Eating smart guarantees your family and friends can tolerate you 24/7 with no timeouts in between. 

More energy

Without the mood swings from high and low blood glucose, you will find you have more energy and are more productive at home or at work.  Eating smart results in a constant level of blood glucose where and when it should be in your body to do its work---to energize. 

Higher libido

Naturally, when you feel better all around, the feel-good feeling makes for a higher libido.  There’s no more to say about that!

More awake time

With more energy and clairvoyance, you don’t need to sleep to noon anymore and still wake tired.  Your spouse will be happy to converse with you before your morning caffeine fix and your boss will be pleasantly surprised when you arrive on time.  More awake time means more time with family and friends who can now tolerate you 24/7 with no timeouts in between.

Kick the over the counter meds

You can finally stop taking anti-inflammatory drugs for nagging aches and pains, anti-histamines for allergies and decongestants for stuffy nose and sinus.  Eating smart means eating fewer acid producing foods.  Acid producing foods cause excess mucus formation in most people resulting in symptoms of sinusitis and congestion.   

Complements from family and friends

After 4 to 6 weeks you will definitely be getting complements from family and friends.  Why?  You will see a difference in hair, skin, and nails.  Hair will be shinier (maybe even thicker since it will no longer be falling out) skin less dry and nails stronger and healthier (no more ridges).  You might not see it in the mirror, but when your long lost cousin turns up to visit after a year or two of absence he will think he came to the wrong address.  Oh, and did I mention that your clothes will fit you better?  Cutting down on sugar and refined grains and increasing vegetables, legumes, seeds and nuts will also result in shedding of the extra pounds around the middle.  That pesky “beer belly” look will slowly fade away.


Reduce risk for age related chronic disease

There may not be scientific evidence that eating a diet based on anti-aging gastronomy reduces the risk of heart disease, joint/autoimmune disease and diabetes II, but there is plenty of anecdotal evidence.  I for one can document my history of success, lowering blood glucose from 109 to 85, correcting my hyperthyroidism, and turning heart disease risk factors from bad to good, not to mention reversing the joint swelling that plagued me since my mid forties.  You won’t need a scientist to prove it to you. 


Longevity

Of course you will live longer without obesity, diabetes II, auto immune disease or heart disease!


Grow your savings account

How does eating smart mean a bigger savings account?  Here’s how:  fewer medical bills, lower household food expense, no more over the counter drugs to buy, lower expenses for dining out, less time off work and maybe even more overtime, a second job, who knows?  With all the extra energy you may even want to start a second career. 

Be a role model for your kids  

Childhood obesity and diabetes has been on the rise for decades now and needs to come to an end.  For your kids, eat smart, and they will too. 


For more information on the anti-aging diet read the book EAT SMART,AMERICA, an anti-aging diet primer by Chef Angela Bell available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble in paperback and ebook format. 


Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.

Friday, October 26, 2012



CHOP CHOP KITCHEN winter cooking classes 2012!  Yes, it is that time of year again, when big box stores and online virtual retailers drag out the tinsel and hang the lights.  Oh no, not that!  I know, it is not yet Halloween and these purveyors are already hawking layaway and gift giving ideas for the dog lovers, bookworms and techni-kids.  But, more importantly for me, it is the time of year when I once again offer cooking classes to neighbors, friends, family and even an occasional stranger, in the hope that what I teach will help them to celebrate just a little more elegantly, and with a little more panache, the best holidays for food, in my opinion---Thanksgiving and Christmas. 

Classes will recommence in November and be offered on the first and third Monday and Tuesday each month, beginning with November 5 and 6.  First class---STOCKS!   

Classes are limited to 6 to ensure individualized instruction and it is first come first serve.  For more information go to Professional Cooking for Home.

For those of you who are too far away to join us, you can always buy my books to learn the best recipes and methods for professional cooking for home, As Good As It Gets, Cooking Skills for Life, Volume 1, paperback or ebook on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.  

Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef Angela B.