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Cooking Challenge has Chefs Cooking From Charity Food Pantry

Every day ingredients from the non-profit's pantry get transformed into Michelin-quality dishes at Chefs of Compassion: Cooking for a Cause.

Chef Brad Kraten wasn’t ashamed to admit he was disappointed the food pantry at West Valley Community Services didn’t have any SPAM in it.

“I love it,” says Kraten, executive chef of in Cupertino. "I like SPAM for some reason. SPAM is underrated."

He was really looking forward to doing a riff on SPAM Musubi—a Hawaiian dish made with teriyaki sauce, rice and SPAM wrapped in nori dried seaweed—for his dish at the second annual Chefs of Compassion: Cooking for a Cause, the event that challenges local chefs to shop WVCS’s pantry—the same pantry from which the agency’s clients select free food—and turn the ingredients into tasty dishes.

What he settled on was chicken, olive paste, mushrooms, corn bread stuffing and cottage cheese that will be turned into olive stuffed chicken with mushroom bread pudding and pan jus.

Kraten says he was surprised to find fresh meats, produce, eggs and cheeses in WVCS's pantry, which provides food to more than 2,000 people and other services to more than 6,000 people in the cities of Cupertino, Saratoga, Los Gatos, Monte Sereno and West San Jose.

Kraten's dish is one of a four-course meal that ticket holders will enjoy at Lexus of Stevens Creek Friday night.

Proceeds from Chefs of Compassion benefit WVCS’s hunger and homeless programs and services. Tickets—$100 per person and $1,000 for a table of 10—are still available and can be purchased online at www.ChefsOfCompassion.org.

Though dishes will be judged by a panel of local foodie dignitaries, chef Joey Elenterio of Mountain View’s Chez TJ says he’s less concerned about the competition element of the event and doesn’t care if they “come in last.”

“It’s all really just more about the charity and the reason behind it,” Elenterio says.

Besides, he says, he and his team aren’t the ones who will be doing the cooking that night. A caterer will cook all the chefs’ menus.

“It’s kind of scary,” he says of being judged on something he won’t have complete control over.

He’s up for challenges though and says he deliberately selected items from the pantry for his dish that he thought other cooks might be afraid to work with.

He picked rice milk, blackberries, jalapeno, turkey bacon and spinach.

“I tried to pick obscure ingredients to try to show people (for instance) that jalapeno is not always spicy, in fact it can be pretty fruity. And rice milk is something that is kind of scary to most people,” he says.

The dish he developed from that unique combination is Blackberry Jalapeno Savory Rice Milk Panna Cotta with Crispy Turkey Bacon and Blanched Spinach.

The other competing executive chefs are Ross Hanson of Restaurant James Randall in Los Gatos, and David Wiesner of Siena Bistro in Willow Glen.

Dishes will be judged on a five point scale for taste, presentation, and creativity, and event attendees will determine by vote a second award.

The evening’s judges include Carolyn Jung, editor and writer of food blog www.FoodGal.com; Tracy Lee, founder and CEO of Dishcrawl, Sheila Himmel, former food critic of the San Jose Mercury News, Linda Zavoral, travel editor of San Jose Mercury News and Abby Schwartz of Yelp.com.

Registration begins at 5 p.m. with dinner and program starting at 6 p.m. More information can be found www.ChefsOfCompassion.org or www.wvcommunityservices.org.

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A Chinese-American couple will dress just like their mainstream American counterparts at the wedding.
Crystal Tai May 1, 2011 at 06:28 pm
Thank you very much for you kind words, Priyanka! The answer to your question is in another articleRead More I wrote for Cupertino Patch, "Five Wedding Reception Venues in Cupertino." Thanks again!
Priyanka Sharma-Sindhar April 27, 2011 at 08:21 pm
This is definitely very useful for the those of us who aren't Chinese, but do have Chinese friends..Read More Thank you, Crystal. What are the popular spots in Cupertino for Chinese weddings?
Anne Ernst (Editor) April 3, 2013 at 12:59 pm
It's difficult to know what's going on in a kid's mind unless they feel confident enough to open upRead More and talk. And this program helps us adults to learn to listen differently.
Debbie Reiley April 3, 2013 at 03:50 am
I too was at this Challenge Day. It was my 6th. I first volunteered because I watched the programRead More on MTV "If You Really Knew Me" when my son was being severely bullied in middle school and saw the program was offered when he was a freshman in high school. My company strongly supports me volunteering for this and allows me to take the day off work to attend. I am continually humbled by what these teens share and saddened at what some of them have experienced in their short lives. This program is so valuable. I think every school should offer it and every parent should attend. It helps us to realize that we need to think twice before we judge or assume things about others when we know nothing about them. It is the volunteering opportunity that I look forward to participating in every year.
Anne Ernst (Editor) March 30, 2013 at 06:30 am
Carrie, Thanks for allowing me to be a part of it again.
Janice Chua March 28, 2013 at 06:45 pm
It was fun hosting you all at Bitter+Sweet, Anne!
Loy Oppus-Moe March 28, 2013 at 02:40 pm
A big "Thank You" to Anne, Pete, and 53 other professionals who opened up their companiesRead More and organizations to give our students hands-on experience of what life might look like for them post-high school. Job Shadowing brings relevance to education!