Spices can be scary! We de-mystify them and teach you all you need to know to feel as though you’re in Casablanca. We’ll make Chicken Tagine with Apricots, Couscous with Pistachios and Rose, Grilled Pepper Salad, Carrot Salad, and Crêpes for dessert.
Spices can be scary! We de-mystify them and teach you all you need to know to feel as though you’re in Casablanca. We’ll make Chicken Tagine with Apricots, Couscous with Pistachios and Rose, Grilled Pepper Salad, Carrot Salad, and Crêpes for dessert.
Abby Hitchcock grew up on Long Island’s rural East End, known for its fishing and farming (fresh bay scallops, stripers, flounder, bluefish, farm-stands, and pick-your-own strawberries/pumpkins/apples). From her mother she learned to love simple fresh local foods and from her father, an amateur chef who enjoys preparing American and ethnic feasts, a love of reading menus and preparing exotic fare.
But it wasn’t until she attended university in England, where she was placed in a “self-catering” flat (shop, cook and feed yourself) that Abby found that food was her passion: shopping for it, cooking it, eating it, researching it.
Abby began poking about in the greengrocer’s and butcher’s shops and preparing amazing repasts for her English flat mates—a New York brunch or an American Thanksgiving for 12— in her tiny kitchenette. After she earned her degree in Botany, she returned to the States and enrolled in Peter Kump’s New York Cooking School (now The Institute of Culinary Education).
With her Peter Kump diploma in hand, Abby went on to work at The Tea Box at Takashimaya in New York, Vong in London and at the BBC’s Vegetarian Good Food Magazine. She has been a private chef, worked at Martha Stewart Living television and run her own catering company.
She finally settled down as part owner, then sole owner, of Abigail’s Kitchen (formerly Camaje) in Greenwich Village. In 2022, having weathered the pandemic and 25 years on MacDougal Street, Abby moved her business to the Lower East Side. She also opened Betty, an American restaurant located in the same building on Henry Street.
In this class, you’ll learn to make a Chicken tagine – a traditional Moroccan dish of chicken braised with spices and preserved lemons, a company-worthy dish. We’ll round up the meal with a decadent African date ice cream.
Take a journey with Chef to the magical kingdom of Morocco, known for its exotic culture and cuisine. Moroccan cuisine is rich, both in terms of history and the richness of flavors, aromas, colors and breadth of exotic ingredients.
Join Hipcooks owner Monika Reti (daughter of MIT Alum Aldo Reti) and Let’s go to Morocco for a virtual dinner party! In this lively livestream class, we’ll make a beautiful Moroccan Tagine for dinner and Poached Apricots in Syrup for dessert.
The flavors of North Africa are hard to beat with their rich history in the spice trade and a combination of culinary influences from around the world. Join our own Chef Olive as he teaches you some of his family's secret recipes
Morocco Cooking class is offered by Harvard Cookin' Girl. We will teach you how to make great food out of simple ingredients with old world techniques.
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