Showing posts with label cooking party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking party. Show all posts

10/27/2011

Coffee Table Book for Chef Night Cooking Party

I received a groupon from a company called Mixbook. They are an online publishing company that will help anyone create and print a picture book for a reasonable price. The groupon deal made it even more affordable. I have taken many photographs during our Chef Night Cooking Parties, so I compiled my favorites and created a coffee table book that is viewable online. I hope you enjoy it and I hope it inspires you to catalogue your own memories in a wonderful do-it-yourself hard-cover book.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

7/26/2011

Grilling Kebabs

Grilling out is fun and can be a little more interesting when it is taken beyond hamburgers and hot dogs. We grilled some kebabs that were very tasty. We started with a nice piece of steak and followed that with huge mushrooms, onion petals, tomatoes and pineapple, plus green and red peppers. We double foiled them to prevent premature charring and sticking to the grill. After a few minutes we enjoyed fresh fruit and vegetables with a nice hunk of meat. It was delicious. Bed and Breakfast aren't the only things we do well at the Munro House!



Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

7/12/2011

Girls Night Out Part 3-Cooking Party


Sylvia and her girlfriends had a murder mystery dinner and a spa day to begin their women's weekend getaway in Southern Michigan. Now it was time for the original Chef Night Cooking Party--a regular event we have been hosting for years. This is not a class, it is a party where teams of 2 work together to do their part in creating a feast. On this day, we created 11 dishes for all participants to enjoy--3 appetizers, 1 soup, 1 salad, 2 entrees with 2 side dishes, and 2 desserts.

Modern and classic music were played in the prep areas while a tight kitchen added to the fun. Everything but the salad needed to be cooked, but with just a standard 4 burner stove to cook all this food, some negotiating was in order. With everyone being an experienced cook, instructions were kept to a minimum while the hosts were on-hand to locate particular utensils and equipment. Because not all stoves or microwaves are created equal, there was a fair amount of help required to cook in the convection oven or to program the microwave.

The first appetizer came out in the first hour, while additional appetizers followed. The actual meal was served 3 hours after the start of the event. We ate like royalty from an uncommon menu. Bruschetta, seafood nachos, and cheddar bay biscuits are favorite starters that were well-received. Cream of asparagus soup and Greek salad comprised the next 2 courses. Chicken Lombardy and Shrimp Parmesan were flanked by lentil/rice pilaf and carrots Marsala. We finished the evening with fresh raspberry cobbler and Lori's Secret Recipe Crepes.

We went 11 for 11 with successful menu choices and chef expertise. Everything was great--but the bruschetta, chicken, and crepes were outstanding.

Many people do not cook from scratch anymore. Prepared foods are very common, very good, and very quick to prepare. Going "old school" with nothing prepackaged was a nice change. Cooking with a partner was another great experience that is becoming a forgotten art. We encourage camaraderie, patience, and new experiences at the Munro House. Interaction of diverse personalities while completing a common task is a fun way to have a hands-on, fun-time experience in our kitchen.

Our complete menu is titled "General Sylvia 11" and is online at food.com.


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast


1/06/2011

New Years Eve/New Years Day

There's always something to do in Jonesville.  Any bed and breakfast can give you a nice place to stay, but the Munro House in Jonesville takes it a step further and gets people to interact. Breakfast is always a fun time with people sharing stories and making new acquaintances.  New Years Eve went a step further by getting a dozen strangers to interact while participating in a Murder Mystery Dinner.

Hosts, Mike and Lori Venturini, are a two man crew who plan, host, and serve the murder mystery dinner. A five course meal was prepared and consumed while the guests tried to figure out who-done-it. The game at the Munro House is played without actors. Everyone involved in the dinner is a suspect and potential killer. The way their game is played, even the killer doesn't know they did it until the end of the game when all of the clues are enumerated for suspects to be found innocent and one found guilty. The sleuths celebrated with a champagne toast at midnight while watching Dick Clark on the big screen.

Then came New Years Day where college football isn't the only thing to do. 12 people entered the kitchen and 12 chefs walked out using their new found skills to prepare their share of a portion of an 8 course meal including 4 appetizers, plus soup, salad, entree, and dessert.  A 6 hour cooking and consuming event known as Chef Night, was littered with conversation and camaraderie between friends who were strangers just hours before.

No cooking event is complete at the Munro House until the writing is on the wall--literally!  Cooks are encouraged to put some words of wisdom on the walls of our kitchen.  Thanks Kurt & Christie +1 for joining us on your 1st anniversary and the celebration of your 1st pregnancy! They wrote "May you know great love & share it with others. Love is life's most precious gift. Thank you for a wonderful time!"


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

12/04/2010

Something to Do on New Years Day in Michigan



New Years Day 2010 will be a better getaway holiday this year because it falls on a weekend.  Most everyone does something special for New Years Eve, but they just stay home on New Years Day to watch college football bowl games.  With New Years Day occurring on a Saturday, for a change, it is an ideal day for a winter getaway and do something different, interesting, and fun with your friend or lover.

Chef Night is an interactive cooking party being held on New Years Day at the Munro House in Jonesville, Michigan.  The kitchen will be open at 3:30, so all guests must arrive by 3:00.  Reservations are required. The event lasts about 6 hours and nobody has to drive home because everyone is spending the night.

In our busy lives, there is seldom time to prepare a 3 course meal for our own families. On Chef Night, regular people help to prepare a 7 course feast for themselves and other guests (up to 14!) with helpful instructions available from the hostess.  This year's theme is "international". Food from across the country and around the world will be prepared by 2 person teams of amateur chefs. Favorite and familiar dishes will be served along with tempting and exotic selections that are just not available on many menus in any restaurant. Past favorites and new selections from several continents will be produced on the first day of the year.

Many guests have chose to dress-up in a theme from the country of their choice. We've seen togas, lederhosen, leis, and more.  With Austin Powers being the International Man of Mystery, and this being an international food menu, 60's fashion is the suggested dress-up theme.  Some guests find it more festive to create a "look" for the day, and some people create a new look just by putting on an apron.

The 6 hour interactive cooking and eating food party costs $299 per couple and includes bed and breakfast.  It's a one night package with limited availability. Mention this blog post and give us the secret word "YEAH BABY, YEAH" to get a voucher for 10% off of this one night package only. 7 days notice required.



Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

11/06/2010

New Years Eve Ideas in Michigan

New Years Day
New Years Day becomes a getaway night when it falls on a weekend.  In 2010, New Years Eve falls on a Friday, so New Years Day is a Saturday, making it a great weekend for 2 nights of winter festivities. 
At the Munro House Bed and Breakfast in Jonesville, we are celebrating with our 12th annual Murder Mystery Dinner on New Years Eve and the original Chef Night Cooking Party on New Years Day. 
murder mystery dinner
We have hosted hundreds of Murder Mysteries since the 90's. We have thrown away the boxed games and have found a variety of scripted games for various sized groups. After taking the games for a test run, we only play the ones that are fun. There must be interesting characters, amusing dialogue, and solvable puzzles to be a murder mystery worthy of playing at our house. Our murder mystery dinner party lasts about 3 hours. 
Chef Night is a cooking party that we have developed that incorporates interesting recipes, a mixture of flavors, a bit of instruction, and serious interaction between amateur chefs.  Several two person teams prepare portions of an atypical meal of diverse flavors using recipes from around the world which are consumed by all participants in a fun and cooperative atmosphere. There is about 6 hours of preparation and consumption in this interactive cooking party.
This two night New Years Eve package is a great way to say "goodbye" to 2010 and "hello" to 2011.
new years eve party


Mike Venturini
Jonesville Michigan Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"
Munro House Bed and Breakfast

9/14/2009

Amateur Chef Night Cooking Party

Ten amateur cooks got together at the Munro House Bed and Breakfast in Jonesville Michigan to enjoy a half day of cooking, conversation, and consumption. The event began about 4:30 on Saturday afternoon with a description of how the event would proceed. Volunteers chose recipes of varying degrees of difficulty from our menu and were assigned a partner to make 5 teams of chefs.
Appetizers were served immediately after being prepared. Three hours of prep work built an appetite among our guest chefs. Three appetizers were served as they were prepared to calm our hunger pangs.
The table was set, wine was poured, and each chef served the dish they had prepared until all five courses were devoured. As the guest chefs walked the neighborhood to work off some of the feast, the hosts cleaned up the dining room and kitchen.
It was fun to mingle with the other cooks while doing our share of the preparation. Meeting new people and giving them the opportunity to follow a recipe they may have never attempted before in a relaxed atmosphere is what we enjoy doing.
A successful event requires fresh ingredients, good recipes, and folks who can follow directions. We succeeded in all categories. I am proud to say that everything from the asparagus to the noodles and the meats to the frosting were all successfully prepared and enjoyed by all.

Our next scheduled Chef Night cooking party will be held on Friday, January 1, 2010--New Years Day. Call us at 1-800-320-3792 to join the crew or to select an event on a different night.

Mike Venturini - Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"


4/11/2009

Jonesville MI Bed and Breakfast Cooking Party

Couples visit us at the Munro House B&B in Jonesville, Michigan, to getaway from the big city, the stressful job, and many other reasons. Most come here for romance, but some come here for an interesting experience. We have been hosting murder mystery dinners for about 8 years--we have done hundreds of them. We got deep into spa services several years ago and have done thousands of them. We are always looking for something new and interesting and fun for people to do. We like to have fun, too, so we developed an interactive activity where we can do more than just serve. We call it "Chef Night".

We discovered that most people have a repertoire of 10-15 dishes that they make over and over again at home. They are familiar and consistently good, so why try anything new that may not be quite as successful? That's why we take your adventurous spirit and get people to try things that may be outside of their comfort zone. That is why we developed a little piece of pop culture that we call the original "Chef Night."

On Chef Night, 8-14 people get together and prepare a feast. Everybody gets a recipe and a partner. Each pair needs to cooperate in preparing 2 recipes for foods they have probably never attempted to prepare in their own kitchen.

We usually have a theme. We have gone across America with Tex-Mex, Southern, Interstate, and Americana recipes. We have gone through Europe with Beefeater, Spanish, German, French, Italian, and Greek. We have gone global with a mixture of recipes from 6 continents. And, we have chosen our favorite recipes for variety.

Many times, we combine dress-up with our dinner theme. We wore berets on French night, togas on Greek night, and home-made lederhosen on German night. One of our most memorable themes was the time in January when we hosted a Hawaiian chef night. On Hawaiian night, some of the girls wore grass skirts and had flowers in their hair. Everybody wore shorts and sandals, had flower shirts, and were presented with a bright colored lea upon arrival. The middle of winter is the best time to hold a tropical theme party.

Our Hawaiian chef night cooking party recipes consisted of coconut balls and Hawaiian meatballs for appetizers. Egg drop soup was followed by a tropical romaine salad with pineapple vinaigrette. The entrees were curry shrimp with coconut milk and snap peas plus chicken kabobs. Hawaiian baked beans and Hawaiian cole slaw were the side dished served with mango bread. We made a pineapple cake for dessert.

None of our guests had ever attempted to make any of these dishes. Well, I'm sure somebody has made a pineapple upside down cake, but our cake recipe was different and it was served right side up. Close doesn't count.

We prepared all of these dishes in a very small galley style kitchen. Actually, most of the prep work was done in the dining room, and we lobbied for stove time based on urgency. It appears to be organized chaos, not a stuffy classroom. Because of this, everyone has opportunites to interact with more than just their cooking partner. All the while, we play upbeat popular music from the 80's, 90's, and 00's while drinking blue Hawaiians. The appetizers were served as soon as they were prepared and we ate them while we continued to cook. When all of the food was prepped and most of it was finished cooking, we set the table and sat down to enjoy a feast by candle light. The entire process took about 6 hours--and it flew by.

Every recipe turned out to be delicious, despite the fact that no one had prior experience preparing their portion of the meal.

This goes to prove that anyone can prepare a wonderful meal when they step outside of their comfort zone, if they have the right motivation. Our peeps had a little bit of pressure to perform in front of family, friends, and strangers.

My wife, Lori, is a very good cook. Even though she, too, had never prepared any of these recipes, she works the kitchen with confidence and the ability to understand the final product so she is able to follow, adjust, or improvise on recipes to make them successful. She is the "go to" person when there are any questions about a particular technique or ingredient.

Chef Night is by far the most fun thing that we do in the house. We practice with our friends--a lot. We have a great house for entertaining. Our limited size kitchen makes the process a lot more interesting. Chef Night was featured in Michigan Travel Ideas magazine and has recently appeared in Midwest Living magazine. We have regular Chef Night cooking events scheduled throughout the year and will open a new date upon request for groups.

Mike Venturini - Innkeeper
"Life is good in Jonesville"