Chef #663518 | Joined: Nov 23, 2007 |
Latest Recipe:
My most cherished cookbook is Ruth Van Waerebeek's "Everybody Eats Well in Belgium." It has been my inspiration for most of our family’s special occasions and holiday meals and it was through exploring this book that cooking and entertaining became such a pleasurable hobby for me.
The book is out of print, but I contacted Ruth, expressing my appreciation and seeking her permission to include her recipes here. In her words: “My main concern when I wrote this book, was exactly that — that people around the globe would be able to taste these wonderful Belgian flavors! So, I don’t have any objection that you post the recipes on the web.”
http://www.recipezaar.com/cookbook.php?bookid=230004
Ruth is Belgian-born, and originally learned cooking from her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother — this is the basis for her “Everybody Eats Well in Belgium Cookbook.” She has traveled the world, chefed in Ghent, the West Indies, and New York City, and taught at Peter Kump’s Cooking School in New York.
Today, she and Vicente Escobar run a unique guest house at their home in Chile called Mapuyampay Hostal Gastronómico. Here, Ruth teaches Chilean and New World Cuisine to lucky visitors (and, someday, me).
Their place looks amazing: http://www.mapuyampay.cl
She is also executive chef for Chile’s largest winery, Concha y Toro and has created recipes to pair with their wines. Look here (click on a wine, and find the "Suggested Food Match" at the bottom of each page): http://www.conchaytorousa.com/
Here's Chef Ruth, with her second book, The Chilean Kitchen (1999), and teaching at Mapuyampay.

I first learned of Ruth (and met her once, about 10 years ago) through my friends Wendy Littlefield and Don Feinberg of Vanberg & Dewulf. They first introduced me to the pleasures of Belgian ales and cuisines (in that order) and to the notion that "great beer deserves great food."
http://www.belgianexperts.com
And what's this? Why, it's a surprise visit from the greatest beer in the world!
Belgian cooking is warm, splendid comfort food — perfect for holidays and get-togethers with family and friends. But when I'm not pretending I'm in a late 19th-century kitchen in Ghent, I am in the Caribbean making jerk chicken or chicken roti, fruit salsa, and coconut rice.
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