Advanced Culinary

Courses

ADVC-301: Advanced Cooking

This course is designed to integrate students' culinary training, academic studies, and field experience using fundamental cooking techniques, topics of contemporary significance, food science, aesthetics, and sensory perception as frameworks. Advanced Cooking is an examination of taste, cooking techniques, ingredients, and flavoring techniques. Building on previous cooking courses, students will research and prepare representative regional menu items as well as complete an intensive analysis of the principles of cuisine. Short papers, a detailed project, menu development, and service reflective of a specific cuisine will be part of this course.

ADVC-301A: Advanced Cooking: Asian

This course is designed to integrate students' culinary training, academic studies, and field experience using fundamental cooking techniques, topics of contemporary significance, food science, aesthetics, and sensory perception as frameworks. Advanced Cooking is an examination of taste, cooking techniques, ingredients, and flavoring techniques. Building on previous cooking courses, students will research and prepare representative regional menu items as well as complete an intensive analysis of the principles of cuisine. Short papers, a detailed project, menu development, and service reflective of a specific cuisine will be part of this course.

ADVC-301AD: Advanced Cooking: Afro-Caribbean

This course is designed to integrate students’ culinary training, academic studies and field experience using fundamental cooking techniques, topics of diverse cultural heritage of the African diaspora in the Caribbean and Latin America. Through historical, social and cultural perspectives, students will examine the impact of African heritage on these regions, focusing on identity formation, cultural practices and cuisine. Advanced cooking in and examination of taste, cooking techniques, ingredients and flavoring techniques. Building on previous courses, students will research and prepare representative regional menu items as well as complete and intensive analysis of the principles of African diaspora in the Caribbean and Latin America. Short papers, detailed project, menu development, ordering standards all reflective of specific regions will be part of this course. We will apply these basics to a variety of situations and products.

ADVC-301AN: Advanced Cooking: Africa the Matrix

The course will give students a comprehensive introduction to the cuisines of the African world. Grounded in history, geography, and culture, the course will present an overview of this world and then a more in-depth presentation of several of these cultures that were integral to the African diaspora. The selected cultures will be discussed with reference to their eating cultures, agricultural practices, culinary technologies, and commensal behaviors. Along with the cultural, geographic, and historic component of the course, hands-on in-kitchen experiences, guided tastings, and reflective discussions will introduce students to a repertoire of key dishes from the continent, including their historical and cultural background, culinary techniques, major ingredients, and flavor profiles. Students will spend a portion of their time reviewing, refining, and understanding fundamental principles of basic culinary techniques; while applying new ones.

ADVC-301F: Advanced Cooking: Farm to Table

This course is designed to integrate students' culinary training, academic studies, and field experience using fundamental cooking techniques, topics of contemporary significance, food science, aesthetics, and sensory perception as frameworks. Advanced Cooking is an examination of taste, cooking techniques, ingredients, and flavoring techniques. Building on previous cooking courses, students will research and prepare representative regional menu items as well as complete an intensive analysis of the principles of cuisine. Short papers, a detailed project, menu development, and service reflective of a specific cuisine will be part of this course.

ADVC-301L: Advanced Cooking: Latin

This course is designed to integrate students' culinary training, academic studies, and field experience using fundamental cooking techniques, topics of contemporary significance, food science, aesthetics, and sensory perception as frameworks. Advanced Cooking is an examination of taste, cooking techniques, ingredients, and flavoring techniques. Building on previous cooking courses, students will research and prepare representative regional menu items as well as complete an intensive analysis of the principles of cuisine. Short papers, a detailed project, menu development, and service reflective of a specific cuisine will be part of this course.

ADVC-301M: Advanced Cooking: Cuisine of the Northern Mediterranean

This course focuses on the regional cuisines of the Northern Mediterranean area. It will explore indigenous ingredients and cooking techniques unique to this region and its relationship to human health. This class will focus on the food, culture, and identity of the Northern Mediterranean region, with a special focus on the cultural history. Prepare, taste, serve, and evaluate traditional, regional dishes from France, Italy, Greece, and the Levant. Emphasis will be placed on ingredients, flavor profiles, and techniques representative of the different regions of the North Mediterranean diet.

ADVC-305: Advanced Japanese Cuisine (Kaiseki)

In this course, students will learn advanced techniques of preparing Japanese cuisine. They will study the variety of cooking techniques for Japanese cuisine and advanced principles of seasonality, colors, tableware, kitchenware, and seasonings, as well as basic serving principles of Kaiseki. Weekly lessons will include advanced skills related to Kaiseki Ryori, highlighting geographical factors, historical background, and origins. Students will also focus on the structure of a full-course Kaiseki meal and how to plan such a meal, synthesizing with expressions of seasonality.

BPSE-430: The African American World of the United States: Survival and Creativity

The course is a comprehensive introduction to the cuisines of the African American world in its United States context; grounded in history, geography, and culture. The selected regions will be discussed in detail with references to their eating rituals, agricultural practices, historical content, geography and culinary technologies. The course is a hands-on in-kitchen experience and will introduce students to a repertoire of key regional dishes; while exploring flavor profiles within the African American community.

BPSE-431: The African American World of Latin America and the Caribbean: Survival and Creativity

The course will give students a comprehensive introduction to the cuisines of the African American world in its Latin American and Caribbean context. Grounded in history, geography, and culture, the course will present an overview of the African history of Latin America and the Caribbean and then a more in-depth presentation of several key regions such as the Greater Antilles and Brazil. The selected regions will be discussed with reference to their eating cultures, agricultural practices, culinary technologies, and commensal behaviors. Along with the cultural, geographic, and historic component of the course, hands-on in-kitchen experience will introduce students to a repertoire of key dishes from each region, including their historical and cultural background, culinary techniques, major ingredients, and flavor profiles.

BPSE-450AN: Concentration Capstone: African Cuisine

This course is designed to give students the ability to critically think, conduct basic research, and present their findings. The final project will be directed by the student's individual interests. Throughout this course, the student will apply deeper thinking of a subject and create a topic/question that will then be researched. The research will be conducted by examination of books, scholarly journals, online resources, field work, and regional travel. The process will follow a sequential set of metrics starting with formulating the proposal, examining resources, developing an outline, presenting an abstract and chapter outline, and culminating with a final paper and/or presentation.