Working on my final product Capstone #5

In my capstone product I am up to the stage were I am working on final product, That means writing my script and reheasing over and over till I pretty much memorize the entire thing. Here is the script

Ted Talk Script

By Jack F.

Up until a month ago the only thing I knew about food was how it got from my plate to my stomach. For my passion project I choose cooking because I wanted to learn how to cut, use an oven, hard boil eggs and much more. But I still needed needed to know, How does the cultural and geographical aspects of a country impact its cuisine.

Let’s talk about japanese cuisine and sushi. Japan is an island on the pacific ocean and fish is a main food. Sushi is the food most people think of when they think of japanese food and cuisine. It is usually rice with raw fish or vegetables. Let’s talk about the fish part of it. Fish is eaten in japan and in many different ways such as raw or cooked, wrapped and rolled in things or even put in soups. It is part of japanese culture and most people’s daily life in japan. Many people work on the docks of Japan as fishermen or working in the fish markets on the coasts of Japan.

The other part of sushi is the rice which is another primary food in japan. Rice is part of every japanese person’s daily life. Japan is the ninth largest rice producer in the world.  85% of the 2.3 million farms in Japan grow rice. The reason they are ninth in the world is because there are eight countries in the world that are better at them at it. Just joking Japan is a small country and they can only have a certain about of farms that can only grow a certain amount of rice. The rice season in japan is May through June in the north. In the south, the rice seasons are April through May, also spring but in earlier spring.

Now, let’s travel over to Italy and experience their geography, culture and cuisine.

Italy’s culture and geography impact’s it’s cuisine. Everything in Italy impacts it’s cuisine, including the land with the sea to the south, the mountains to the north and the volcanoes – they all impact Italy’s cuisine.

The climate in the north of Italy and the south of Italy are different so the foods are different. For example, in the north, pasta is harder to dry so fresh pasta like pappardelle and tagliatelle are popular there. Another example is in the south where it’s warm, dry pasta like spaghetti and rigatoni are popular. In the north the weather is colder and the landscape is mountainous, and the south is the opposite which is hot with long summers and many flatlands.

Italians life is lived around the kitchen and because of that there are many recipes that are passed down through the years. For example, does anybody know the company called Rao’s tomato sauce? They have commercials that explain the dedication to the recipe and tradition to making this tomato sauce.

In Italy there are different places that are good for growing different things. Central Italy is known for growing vegetables and poultry. The south is known for fish and dry pasta. The north is known for hearty meats.

Tuscany is in central Italy and is known for wine, meat, vegetables and fruit. Italy’s drinks are just as important as it’s food.

Cheeses from different parts of Italy are also different.  In northern Italy cheeses are mostly made from cow’s milk. In central Italy, cow’s milk is also commonly used. The south is known for using sheep’s milk and making a cheese called pecorino. The tradition for aging parmesan was a tradition from the Ancient Romans. The Romans were also a big influence on Italian cuisine.

To learn more, I visited a chef named Robb Garceau. Robb also runs a catering company. I spoke with him , and he showed me around the kitchen that he works in all day long in Queens,New York.

The kitchen was the most exciting part as it was really big and there was an area just for desserts and pastry and also a bigger area just for poultry.

Robb told me about his journey to becoming a successful chef, he told me a crazy story about how he was asked to cook in a kitchen and did not know how to saute but he said when he started cooking it was love at first site and he decided to leave college and go to culinary school.

I have to practice that just about 20 times a day. You wold think I would be joking no way Jose I literally have to practice that about 20 times a day

 

 

Answering Your Main Inquiry Question Capstone Post #4

My main inquiry question had many factors in creating the question. It took a long time to complete, but answering  it was a whole new thing and it involved lots of research. I had to research so much that my fingers started to hurt just to complete answering my question. I needed a lot of help with answering this question, and some of the people that helped me were Ms. Boyer and Mr. Casal. There were many other people that helped me with this question. My sources were:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bento

 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_production_in_Japan

 

 

 

http://www.discoveritalianfood.com/italian-food-culture.html

 

 

http://www.livescience.com/44376-italian-culture.html

 

 

https://jovinacooksitalian.com/2014/11/14/geographical-influences-on-italian-cuisine/

 

 

http://www.foodbycountry.com/Germany-to-Japan/

 

 

http://food.ndtv.com/food-drinks/the-geography-of-taste-how-our-food-preferences-are-formed-693898

 

site visit and interview Capstone blog #3

Interview- For my interview I interviewed a man named Robb. Robb is a chef in New York City and runs a catering company. For my interview he mostly talked to me about him and his journey to becoming a successful chef. Here is his story, He told me that his cousin asked him to cook in replace for a chef at a restaurant and he did not know how to saute but when he was in action cooking he was loving it he told me it was love at first site. He left college after three years of it and then decided to go to culinary school to pursue his passion.

Site Visit- They site visit was really fun. Robb showed me around the entire building that he works at. Through all of the little rooms that are for eating and food testing then he showed me through the kitchen the most exiting part the kitchen was huge it had so much to it from little closets with spices to an eighteen foot pasta maker. The kitchen had a whole area just for deserts and pastry and also a even bigger are just for dishes just with protein. The site visit was awesome and the interview was just as awesome.

Capstone Choosing Main Inquiry Question and Choosing Sub Questions Blog post #2

Choosing my main question and my sub questions were one of the hardest things in capstone so far. It was hard because I had no idea what aspect of cooking I was going to study. But then I finally came to a aspect of cooking which I was Incredibly interested in.

The aspect of cooking that I decided to work on was how the geographical and cultural aspect of a country impacts it’s cuisine. So my main question is, How does geography impact on different countries cuisines? Then I realized I can build of that by using the question and just adding some words and changing some words to make three really awesome sub questions.

Capstone choosing a topic blog post #1

When I was choosing a topic it was not so hard because I already new what I was going to do for capstone. The reason that I new so easily what I was doing for capstone was because a couple days before we started the project I had just finished another project called a passion project, a passion project is a project that my teacher assigned for homework. It is where you choose a topic that you are passionate about and study it for a month instead of regular homework, I chose cooking for my passion project. Now let’s get to my capstone. For my capstone I choose cooking, the reason I choose cooking was that I wanted to carry on my passion project into my capstone because I was enjoying studying cooking so much for my passion project that I wanted extend it.

When I was thinking of continuing my passion project into my capstone I knew that I needed to study a different aspect of cooking because I wanted to learn not just about “cooking” but about how the geographical and cultural aspect of different countries effects how the cuisine is in different countries because just learning about the cuisine would not only just get a little boring but not so interesting anymore so that is one of the reasons that I want to do more than the cuisine.