Hector is a high energy professional chef who has worked in top-end restaurants in many parts of the world including San Francisco, Australia, Indonesia, and Columbia.
He returned to his native Peru to be Creative Chef at a restaurant on a list of the “World’s 50 Best,” before realizing he could make more money and be his own boss by offering cooking classes to a variety of tourist, corporate, and chef clients.
We’re glad he did.
Shortly after 10:30 AM Sunday, we met up with Hector and a charming young Czech couple who were the only other members of our class. We entered a house literally across the street from the Huaca Pucllana Pyramid, and up we went to the open-air rooftop kitchen on a perfect day.
What followed was an intensive exploration of traditional Peruvian cuisine that included the preparation of two kinds of ceviche, raw and smoked, two kinds of causa, fish smoked in the pan on banana leaf, and two varieties of pisco sour, one including coca leaves.
He tasted at every step and demanded we do the same. He kept his two lady assistants busy washing dishes and fetching food and cooking utensils.
Chef Hector kept us all entertained while demonstrating some awesome knife technique and mixing us the first pisco sour of the day (we mixed the second with his guidance).
Eventually we sat down to a huge and delicious meal that we couldn’t possibly finish.
Causa? Yowsa! (Yes, it rhymes.)
A beautiful setting, congenial young “classmates,” an outstanding teacher, and a magnificent meal… it doesn’t get any better.
Thank you, Chef Hector, for a great day.
4 comments:
It was so nice meeting you, Kathy & Brian! A cooking class we won’t forget 🙌🏼😊 cheers from Caroline & Jacob
The pleasure was ours, Caroline and Jacob.dDo let us know if you’re ever in our part of the world.
It sounds like so much fun… I have a bottle of pisco if you can make the drinks when you return?
We learned that Peru and Chile debate who makes the best pisco. They are among the few brandies made from grapes, along with grappa, cognac and armagnac. With a 30-50% alcohol content, a standard drink with three ounces of pisco packs a wallop. We’ve never yet tried them in the Northern Hemisphere.
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