Posts by susie.

Privilege Alps Card

Join the Discount Revolution

Get your privilege alps card

Get your privilege alps card

What is it?
A handy credit card sized fold out card packed full of discounts for shops, bars, restaurants and outdoor activities for those living and working in the resort of Chamonix. 

How does it work?
Pick up your card from one of the on-the-ground distributors in Chamonix or online via their site http://www.privilegealps.com/ or pop into their office in Chamonix.   It costs just 10 Euros and has up to 100 Euros of available discounts.
1 Privilege Alps card = 1 discount per person per transaction.

Get your card HERE to take advantage of the great offers on every Privilege Alps card.

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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New Year Skiing

Roger on Glacier du Toule

Photo courtesy of Tom Greenall  www.idriskis.com

Since the start of the 2009/2010 ski season I have been out enjoying the snow.  So far we have had a pretty good amount of snow across the Alps inter-dispersed with some very cold weather before Christmas as well as some warmer days too.

In Chamonix we now have excellent snow after a big snowfall on Monday on 4th Jan, we got approximately 40cm of beautiful cold fresh powder and the skiing all this week was amazing.  I managed to sneak out of the office for a few hours on Wednesday to do my first run down the Vallee Blanche of the ski season.

I joined some friends and we headed up the Aiguille Midi cable car to the summit at 3842m, the sun was out, very little wind and great snow conditions.  We decided on the Envers du Plan route down the glacier, which is a spectacular route but this time we had to make the route down as it had yet to be skiing.

Negotiating the crevasses and overhanging seracs was interesting to say the least, its intimidating heading down a route such as this with no prior knowledge if your route will suddenly be barred by an un-crossable crevasses.  It certainly tests your navigation and terrain reading skills!

Fortunately my good friend Stuart MacDonald was with us, who is a IFMGA Mountain Guide, so is very capable at the route finding.  The snow was fantastic, at least half a meter of beautiful cold powder snow, lots of face shots and fresh tracks were had.

If you want to ski the Vallee Blanche then you need to be a good skier with some off piste experience and its essential you have a Mountain Guide with you.  To book one check out http://www.mountaintracks.co.uk/winter

Styling it!

Photo courtesy of Tom Greenall  www.idriskis.com

I have also enjoyed some great skiing on New Year’s day on the Glacier du Toule in Italy, some tree skiing at Le Tour and some steep skiing with my friend Roger Knox on the Brevent ski area in Chamonix.  We skied the ENSA couloirs last Sunday which is a 45-50 degree couloirs on the south face of Brevent, with the view of Mont Blanc in front of you and the town of Chamonix 2500m straight below you.  It’s an exciting ski for sure especially when you get in powder snow all the way down.

The weather forecast is good for next week, some sunshine but with the air temperature staying cold which will mean the snow will stay good.  I am sure Emma will update you with her skiing antics in Verbier since Christmas when she can.

Don't look down

Don't look down, ENSA Couloirs

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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Can’t Poach an Egg?

Well me neither. Actually I can but it did take me years of practise to get it right, even after watching colleagues demoing it at cookery courses. I do remember being taught a method at cookery collage involving a large pan of hot water a splash of vinegar and a whirlpool! Fortunately egg poaching day had no bearing on the pass or fail as mine turned in a soggy scrambled, stringy mess.

After many attempts of poach an egg I finally got it sussed out – the temperature of the water is the most essential point to get right – hot, steaming water but not boiling or even simmering, when you can see a few little bubbles just forming on the bottomof the pan, that’s the right temperature. Then have an egg at room temperature, not straight from the fridge, make a small whirlpool in the centre of your saucepan and crack the egg into it.

Hopefully the lightly swirling water will assist to keep the egg white together ish. Now you need to wait and keep an eye on the water temperature, if it starts to look like it might boil, take the pan off the heat and the water is more than hot enough to keep the egg cooking. Try to resist the temptation to poke or agitate the egg as you can so easily cause the yolk to break.

You know when it is cooked as all the white should go white and no longer be a clear/opaque colour. Using a slotted spoon or spatula, gently lift the egg off the bottom of the pan and remove it from the water onto a plate, dry it slightly with kitchen roll and its ready to serve.

To make your life even easier you can invest in a Poach Pod, this is a silicon pod that you crack your egg into, then place the pod into a pan of very lightly simmering water. Father Christmas gave me 2 this year and they are absolute genius and work a treat, especially if you are trying to do more than 1 egg at a time. The egg cooks perfectly in the pod and they are really easy to remove by running a spoon around the side and you can just pop it out.

Try them out, you can buy them in any good cook shop like http://www.lakeland.co.uk/and they cost around £4.99 each. Here’s what they look like:

A silicon egg cooking tool

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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Training Week in Resort

Winter has arrived in the Alps and there is good snow in all the resorts, lifts are open and people are out skiing and having fun. Most people starting their seasons will be arriving in their resort or on their training week, eagerly learning their way around the resort and their chalet, meeting their colleagues, going shopping, cooking and finding out the best bars in town.

So what does training week really involve? Well you usually begin your training with all your fellow staff who will be working in the same resort, you might do this in a different resort to the one you are actually working in. For example a big company like Crystal may take all its staff to Val d’Isere for training week, if you are working for a smaller company then your training will be done in the resort and chalet you are working in. You will be split into groups and under your chalet or resort manger, along with the area manager you will do resort orientation – finding the tourist office, ski hire shops, where to buy lift passes, the medical centre/doctor, the ski lifts, other chalets and much much more.

As chalet hosts if you have set menus from the company you will spend 3 – 4 days cooking meals from these menus so you know what they look like, how they taste, how to present them and getting used to using different ingredients and finding your way around the kitchen. You may do a big shopping trip to the supermarket down the valley to stock up your chalet for the coming winter too. You will have sessions on cleaning and making up your chalet ready for each week of guests, you manager will take you through how you receive information on your guests your welcome speech on their arrival, how to deal with any problems and complaints; you are likely to receive a manual from your company that you keep for reference throughout the season.

Once all this has been done you will be moved to your resort and settle into your chalet and begin to get it set up for the arrival of your first guests. You maybe lucky to have a week or two of guests before Christmas, which will get you into the swing of things before the busiest and most tiring week of the season!

Hopefully in amongst all of this you will get to go skiing a little bit, don’t be surprised or upset if you are not given your lift pass until training is over. This is often the case as you have so much to focus on first that they don’t let you out onto the mountain until your chalet is clean, stocked and ready to rock.

Once you do get out skiing, take care you don’t want to hurt yourself and end your season straight away. You have 5 months of skiing ahead of you and plenty of time to have fun, improve, explore the area and learn how to do a 720!

We hope to have some updates on our students from this year’s cookery courses who will be letting us know how their season is going, no doubt with some great times and some bad times too. So check back to our blog regularly for updates from resorts.

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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The Chosen Ones

Kiku-0910-B

Not very relevant to cooking but I just want to show off my new skis, all we need now is some snow…

Even before I had set a foot into the vast exhibition hall of Olympia and the ski show, I had spent weeks thinking about and researching what new skis to buy for this season. Spending 5 days at the ski show on our stand there also gave me time to look around the other exhibitors and most importantly at the dazzling array of shiny new skis on offer for this winter.

So how do you decide on what skis to buy? Well for me the choice was relatively simple and as I live in Chamonix all year round they will get plenty of use all winter long, so the cost is justifiable. Skis get fatter and fatter every year and it has taken some time to win me over to the huge fat ski’s you now see. I’ve always thought, “well if you can ski less fat skis fine and have plenty of fun then who needs a massive pair?” Well I think this is still true to some extent but there is no question that the fat skis are more fun and technology has moved on so much that they can be skied across the whole mountain on and off piste with relative ease.

So a pair of FAT skis it is for me, by this I mean a width of more than 100mm under foot. So moving onto the make of ski, where you have so many to choose from. Everything from the main stream brands of Salomon, Dynastar, Rossignol to the new small relatively unknown ski makers like Black Crow’s, White Dot and Heidi Skis; where do you begin?

For me the choice was easy, Volkl. I already have a pair of Volkl skis which I love, they suit my style of skiing and felt great from the moment I first used them. They are made with a wood core which gives great feeling and a more uniform flex along the ski; they have a reputation for making excellent bombproof skis and they work with many top ski racers and freeskiers so their R&D is also excellent. And fortunately most of the skis they produce they make in a size that is right for me, 170cm or thereabouts.

Looking through their range of freeskis, some are just stupidly huge like the Kuro that comes in at a whopping 164-132-139 side cut, a snowboard some would say! I decide on the Kiku a women’s version of their much raved about Gotama ski. The Kiku has a side cut of 137-106-122, so big but not too silly! It has the new rocker system in it, which makes the ski look like its bent up the wrong way! According to Volkl’s website “Volkl’s ELP rocker design is a complete system that enhances the versatility of the ski, it allows easy turning and speed control without sacrificing is performance on firm snow”. The ski should combine amazing flotation in powder snow with all-mountain versatility.

All sounds good to me, they are now proudly sitting in my house waiting for some binding to be mounted onto them and more snow to fall so I can take them out to play. Now I just need to move the other 4 pairs of skis already in the garage, to one side, to make room for the new ones.

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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Need a new hat this Winter?

bonnet2

When Emma is not teaching our courses and coming up with new mouth watering recipes, she is busy crocheting her beanie hats. They come in the most amazing colours and she has some new styles out this winter, they are the must have fashion item to wear on the slopes this winter.

Check out Emma’s newly launched website – you can order from the site, just select the colour and style you want and give her a call.

www.choppersbonnets.com

Don’t let your head get cold this winter!

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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New Course Dates for 2010

We have announced our new course dates for 2010 these will be

4th – 10th July
26th September – 2nd October
3rd – 9th October

The price remains the same at £595 for 5 days tuition, all cooking ingredients, breakfast, lunch, tea and 3 course evening meal with wine, accommodation in our chalet for 6 nights, recipe folder, menu plans, wine and cheese tasting evening and complimentry toiletries.

Book now from the website to secure your place. Come and learn from the experts and get a head start with your jobs in the Alps for the 2010 season.

The Alpine Cookery Course is the leading chalet host training course for ski season workers.  We teach you everything you need to know to successfully run a ski chalet, cook delicious, nutritious meals with minimum hassle & maximise your time on the slopes.

www.thealpinecookerycourse.com  ‖ info@thealpinecookerycourse.com

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