Community Corner

Fundraiser Cook-Off to Benefit Pantry

Chefs to create delicious meals with West Valley Community Services food pantry items in a cooking challenge on Nov. 19.

To four local professional chefs, the number-one rule in the Chefs of Compassion: Cooking for a Cause challenge states "All items in the recipe must be found in the food pantry."

But that pantry isn't in their professional kitchens. Instead, the fixings come from the pantry at West Valley Community Services—the same pantry that feeds more than 2,000 low-income clients each year.

"We were given 10 minutes to shop for ingredients in the pantry. We had to shop just as the clients would, meaning we were limited on the number of items we could gather," said Chef Nanci Wokas, chef and proprietor of Cooking with Class, who teaches cooking at , Sur La Table, and at private and corporate events.

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Four courses will be served during the fundraiser cook-off, each chef charged with conceptualizing one dish prepared only with ingredients from WVCS's pantry. A film crew documented the shopping and prepping of the courses in a video which will be shown at the event.

The chefs participating include Wokas; Carlos Sanchez, executive pastry chef at Parcel 104 in Santa Clara; Chris Schloss, executive chef at Cin-Cin Wine Bar in Los Gatos; and Jay Essadki, executive chef at Morocco's Restaurant in San Jose and Mountain View.

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For her shopping basket Wokas snagged a loaf of French bread, some milk, eggs, vegetables and a can of sweet potato puree.

"I really was not sure what I would be putting together, but when I got in to my kitchen I decided to create a smoke ratatouille with a savory sweet potato bread pudding," she said.

Sanchez had ground turkey in his basket, which may seem a bit of a challenge for the pastry chef, but he was undaunted.

"I always believed that a (savory) chef needs to know pastries, and the pastry chef needs to know savory dishes. They must know both sides," he said.

The Colombia-born chef says diners will find a bit of his homeland in his dish.

"I put it together with something in my roots; a dish where I'm coming from," he said.

Sanchez has some familiarity with this type of challenge, he said, experience that came when he competed for a spot in Bravo TVs Top Chef cooking show four years ago. Sanchez wasn't a finalist, but he did well and learned from the game.

Wokas said the challenge made her "reach into my culinary strengths to complete this task."

The challenge culminates on Nov. 19 at Addison-Penzak JCC of Silicon Valley in Los Gatos where the dishes conceptualized by the chefs will be prepared by the chefs and the WVCS catering team.

Two awards will be given; one a Judge's Choice, given by a panel of judges on a five-point scale for taste, appearance, and creativity; and the second category is the Popular Choice awarded to the chef who garners the most votes from attendees at the event.

The judges include Carolyn Jung, editor of FoodGal.com; Tracey Lee, CEO of Dishcrawl, Sheila Himmel, former food critic for the San Jose Mercury News, Abby Schwarz, South Bay manager of Yelp, and Linda Zavoral, travel editor for the San Jose Mercury News.

WVCS provides food and clothing to are low-income clients from Cupertino, Los Gatos, Monte Sereno, Saratoga and West San Jose. It also offers referral services for such things as transitional or affordable housing, or emergency financial assistance.

Tickets to the event are $100 per person, or $1,000 for a table of 10. The event begins with registration and cocktails at 5 p.m., and dinner and program at 6 p.m. Tickets can be purchased by clicking here.


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