Your NPR news source

2011 Food & Wine Classic at Aspen recap

SHARE 2011 Food & Wine Classic at Aspen recap
2011 Food & Wine Classic at Aspen recap

Cracklin’ waffle, spicy loin, pig ear bacon, duck egg bottarga from Farmstead in Boston.

WBEZ/Steve Dolinsky

Aspen, CO - For the 29th year, Food & Wine Magazine held its summer camp for the food elite in the Rocky Mountains this past weekend. The event brings together tastemakers, chefs and a ton of wine and spirits producers, but it also serves as a launching pad for the July issue, which features 11 of what the magazine deems the “best new chefs” in the country. This year, Chicago’s Stephanie Izard (Girl & The Goat) was one of them, and I spoke to her about the event while she prepared to serve 1,000 VIP guests at the luxe Aspen Meadows complex here. She’s in supremely good company. Past Chicago winners have included Takashi Yagihashi, Grant Achatz, Paul Kahan and Bruce Sherman. The event also features a lot of seminars for consumers, mostly on wine pairing and cooking demos, but another aspect of the weekend includes the American Express Restaurant Trade Program, for which I serve as a moderator on a number of panels, featuring the industry leaders in front of, and behind the stove.

On Sunday, after a lot of the consumers had gone home, the Cochon 555 event held its national finals competition here at the Hotel Jerome. Again, I got to serve as one of the judges, which meant trying out 10 different chefs’ interpretations of 10 different heritage breed pigs; each chef offered us three different tastes. It was a magnificent pork-a-palooza to wrap-up a star-studded, food-and-wine-filled weekend.

The Latest
Liesl Olson started as director at The Jane Addams Hull-House Museum earlier this month. She joins WBEZ to talk about her future plans for this landmark of Chicago history. Host: Melba Lara; Reporter: Lauren Frost
The city faces criticism for issuing red light camera tickets at intersections where yellow lights fall slightly short of the city’s 3-second policy. And many traffic engineers say the lights should be even longer.
There was a time Chicago gave New York a run for its money. How did we end up the Second City?
Union Gen. Gordon Granger set up his headquarters in Galveston, Texas, and famously signed an order June 19, 1865, “All slaves are free.” President Biden made Juneteenth a federal holiday last year.
As the U.S. celebrates the second federal holiday honoring Juneteenth, several myths persist about the origins and history about what happened when enslaved people were emancipated in Texas.