Featured Kitchens


Food writer and cook Chris Perrin serves up equal portions of wit and wonderful recipes. Here, he warmly welcomes us into his kitchen for a peek at his style and a piece of his story — topped with big twist of freshly ground pepper. Enjoy!

“Where We Cook” interview with Chris Perrin

Your kitchen style?
Organized chaos.  It starts organized.  It ends in chaos.

Kitchen style inspiration?
Emeril Lagasse.  I don’t know that he ever said the words “mise en place” but after a few episodes of Emeril Live, I realized that he had all his ingredients in little bowls and because he did, everything cooked so quickly.  It was like a light came on and now I do most of my cooking by first prepping my mise en place and then turning on the stove.  The one time I can’t start with mise en place is when I have a screaming, starving child at which point things just start getting tossed in the skillet.  Technique be darned!

What do you enjoy most about your kitchen?
What it lets me do.  My kitchen is my creative workshop.  In it, I get to make beautiful things, food that makes people happy, and dishes that make me happy.  Even better, cooking transports me away from all of my problems, no matter how bad my day has been, and puts me square in a world where I can do anything as long as I have a sharp knife and the right ingredients.

Kitchen indulgence?
My collection of Asian sauces.  I love opening my Dim Sum cookbook or my crazy Sichuan cookbook and having the sauces I need.  On any given day, I’m pretty sure I don’t have prepared mustard, but I wouldn’t be caught without fermented black bean paste.  Pretty sure that qualifies me for counseling.

One thing you would change?
I need more counter space.  The people who owned my house before me took about 5 feet of kitchen space and made it into a bathroom.  I want that 5 feet back.  My wife won’t give up the bathroom, though.

Three most frequent kitchen aromas?
Garlic, onions, basil

How many cookbooks in the kitchen?
One…the one I am cooking from.  I am all about dirtying up a cookbook as I am using it.  After that, I put it away where it won’t get splashed, splattered, or burnt.  Nor chewed on by the mutts.  My bookshelf, though, has probably one hundred and my bedroom ten more.  None have my name on the cover unless I wrote it on the inside.  For now.

Most unusual thing in the kitchen?
My giant pepper mill.  It’s also Emeril inspired and I bring out when I want to be silly.  And possibly to threaten people who don’t like my food were such people to exist.  (They don’t.)

Warmest childhood memory involving a kitchen?
Wow, that kitchen in my memory looks huge.  I had to stand on a chair to even use the stove.  It had wooden counters and a big red oven.  On top of the stove was a small glass bowl with bacon grease and biscuits.  Grease to cook and biscuits for making croutons or bread crumbs.  Probably totally unsanitary, but my dad didn’t waste a lot. That kitchen also had my dad in it.  I have always enjoyed cooking with him.  He taught me how and for that I owe him.

Favorite kitchen to visit?
Jasper Mirabile’s.  Jasper is a fantastic chef and a better human being.  I can’t help but get excited when I walk into it.

Did you have a “play kitchen” as a child?

Never.  I secretly wanted to have an easy bake oven, but I figured the other boys would laugh at me.  So instead, my parents let me use their kitchen (supervised, of course) with varying success.

In the kitchen with you?
My son.  He loves to “cook.” Cooking for him usually means one of two things: standing over the skillet I am using and dumping things into it when I am not looking or standing over his own mixing bowl and dumping in his spices.  We buy him 99 cent spices from a local grocery store and just him dump them in, add a little soy sauce, and whisk to his heart’s content. The dogs also clean the floor for me.  I am less than enthused by this since I trip over them.  But it does speak to my greater laziness.

Kitchen play list?

I listen to O.A.R.’s Live in Madison Square Garden.  That’s it.

Julia Child’s kitchen is now in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
Where would you like your kitchen to be displayed one day, and why?

Mars.  I’m a big geek and if my kitchen was a “relic of Old Earth” some day, then my kitchen would be the ultimate combination of geek icon and culinary icon.  Again, therapy is probably in order.

Chris Perrin
Merriam, KS
Blog: www.blogwelldone.com
Twitter @blogwelldone
Contributor to SheKnows.com, TotallyHer.com, and BigBlendMagazine.com.

If you don’t already, get to know Jaden.  Subscribe to her “hilarious-meets-delicious” blog. Follow her clever tweets on Twitter. Go out and buy her first cookbook  in October.

But first … join us now as we step into the “SteamyKitchen” of the sweet, sassy, and always entertaining Jaden Hair.

Enjoy!

*     *     *

Where We Cook interview with Jaden Hair

Kitchen style?jaden-kitchen-165-1

Chaotically organized.

Kitchen inspiration?

I’m a spontaneous cook and shopper…I’ve got ingredients and gadgets from all over the world…but not enough space to store them in! It drives my husband crazy.

Best thing about your kitchen?

I love that my kitchen spills into the family room – so I’m right there in the same room as everyone else when I’m cooking.

Kitchen indulgence?

Well, technically it’s not IN my kitchen, it’s in the lanai – but the Big Green Egg. Love the thing. It does magic to meats.

Would love to have…

A sunroof! I need more natural light into the kitchen!

Top three aromas that permeate your kitchen?

Garlic, ginger, suntitledteak.

Cookbooks?

Probably close to 300 cookbooks, which is nothing compared to my Mom’s 2000! My own book doesn’t come out until October.

You have what in your kitchen?

I have over 45 different sea salts. I’m obsessed with sea salts! Smoked, black, flake, Australian, Bali, Hawaiian, French…I think I have the world represented in salt.

Childhood kitchen memories?

I remember going fishing on the weekends and coming home with a cooler full of perch and bass. Fishing was always so much fun for our family – we had a secret spot were we camped out and some days dragging close
to 100 small fish home which made all of us so happy. We caught our own food! Then our whole family would help unload and Mom would be busy scaling the fish in the kitchen sink.

Favorite kitchen to visit today?

Diane and Todd’s of Whiteonricecouple.com!! Because they’re always cookin’ something yummy!

Play kitchen?

No I really didn’t! I didn’t cook much as a little kid – anytime I was in the kitchen while Mom was cooking, I got stuck with the crap jobs like washing dishes!

jaden-kitchen-5

In the kitchen with you?

My boys, 4 and 6. Always moving the stool close to where I’m at to see
if they can help.

Kitchen playlist?

Big Night soundtrack

Julia Child’s kitchen is now in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Where would you like your kitchen to be displayed one day, and why?

Hmm…I don’t think I would! A kitchen is so personal and warm…having it live outside of a home just doesn’t seem right.

jaden_covershot_web_small_1x1_normal

Jaden Hair
Tampa, Fla.
Food writer and television personality
Website: www.steamykitchen.com
Twitter: @steamykitchen

Anne Coleman: Food writer, recipe developer, mother of seven (seven!) children, genetically predisposed cookbook-collector, Short Order Mom for DisneyFamily.com … and kind enough to make time to share her kitchen and kitchen stories with Where We Cook. (Thanks, Anne!)

*   *   *

Where We Cook Interview with Anne Coleman:

Kitchen style?kitchenColeman
Hectic, varied and classic all at the same time.

Inspiration?
Seven children, a picky husband and a culinary diploma.

Best thing?

That it’s mine. I shared a kitchen for years with my mother-in-law and although I loved aspects of it, the fact that it was never truly my own space was difficult. Now I’m free to create as I please – and I do.

Your indulgence?
The KitchenAid stand mixer. It was given to me, but I still find that it’s not completely necessary. I spent so many years kneading my own bread and whipping my own egg whites and cream that I sometimes forget that it’s there.

What would you change?
More counter space! That seems to be the boon of every cook I know. We all need more room. Most common aromas? Garlic, olive oil and yeast.

Cookbooks?
I have a collection of nearly 200 cookbooks and I’m not sure how many booklets and magazines. My mother had a collection of over 1,500 at one time; it’s got to be genetic.

Most unusual item?
Not unusual, but very individual is the lamp over our table. It’s a stained glass version that my father-in-law made. We cherish it much as he is no longer with us. It’s like having him at the dinner table each night.

Childhood kitchen memories?
In my family, our togetherness and love was so connected to food that it’s hard to choose just one memory. Up there with the best is my maternal grandmother’s kitchen. Nothing special to look at, she even had the washer and dryer in the corner of the room, but the love there was incomparable. We spent our summers in her kitchen and on warm summer evenings with the smells of corn fields floating in through the open windows and sounds of crickets and katydids chirping, the red-ripe and juicy tomatoes from her garden tasted all the better because of where we were.

Favorite kitchen to visit today?
My mother-in-law’s. My own mom has stopped cooking because of health issues, so my husband’s mom has been the only kitchen we visit – and happily so; she is a wonderful cook who loves to try new things and succeeds well at it.

Childhood play kitchen?
We played in the real kitchen – making things that we shouldn’t and most likely wasting food my mom needed. She never scolded us, though – just let us create and learn. The first thing I ever ‘made’ was a glass of sugarless iced tea when I was all of 3 years old.

In the kitchen with you?
My oldest daughter will stand and watch me cook and chat with me while I get my work done. The smaller children run in and out asking for food and generally getting underfoot.

Kitchen playlist?
I don’t listen to music when I cook simply because I don’t have any radio etc. there. I sang when I was younger and I still do it while I cook – lots of show tunes.

Julia Child’s kitchen is now in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Where would you like your kitchen to be displayed one day?
Maybe in a local museum because by then I’d become a local icon. I doubt it will happen, but you never know.

*   *   *

About Anne:
anne 008

Anne Coleman
Lehigh Valley, PA, USA

Website: http://cookingwithanne.com
Blog: http://www.athousandsoups.blogspot.com
On Disney’s Family.com: http://family.go.com/food/pkg-cheap-eats
Twitter: http://twitter.com/anniepooh

Why is there an obituary posted on WhereWeCook.com?

Folks want to read the Mr. Upton obituary Christy Jordan has hanging in her kitchen. (Read the story in Christy Jordon’s Kitchen post.)

Mr Upton obit

Southern Plate author Christy Jordan has an Alabama kitchen every bit as sunny and sweet as she is. Enjoy Christy’s interview answers and photos here on WhereWeCook.com — then pour yourself a big glass of iced tea and visit www.SouthernPlate.com!

*       *       *

Christy Jordan kitchenKitchen style?
Sit a spell, stay a while, it’s comfortable here.

Inspiration?
My kitchen style is inspired by memories of my mother and grandmothers. I have a lot of things which belonged to them or remind me of special memories involving them throughout my life. Inspired by my heritage and designed to help pass that heritage on to my children.

Favorite things?
The décor, all of the vintage objects and ads and such that remind me of special times and people.

Your indulgence?
All of my antique Pyrex mixing bowls. I have a ton of them and more just keep showing up! The other day there was a package on the porch when my husband got home. I knew full well what it was but I played innocent, even looking confused when he handed it to me and saying “Hmm, I wonder what this could be? How odd…” When I opened it, I acted so surprised, Oohing and ahhing over who could have sent it and how they could have known I love Pyrex mixing bowls. I said “There isn’t even a card! How sweet, can you believe it?” He said, “Yeah, but that ebay invoice in the bottom kinda gave you away.”

What you would change?
I’d make it bigger. The kitchen I cooked in for the past seven years was so small that I called it a walk-in closet with appliances. Now that I have a taste for what a larger kitchen is like, I want it even bigger! More windows, too. I’d like to be able to easily fit a hundred people in my kitchen at once and be able to walk around and serve ‘em all!

Most common aromas?
Fresh ground and brewed coffee, something sweet baking in the oven (usually with a waft of cinnamon attached to it), and stewed chicken.

Cookbooks?
I’ve been a lifetime lover of cookbooks. I used to take one to bed and stay up late reading it cover to cover. Since starting Southern Plate, I’ve quit looking at others though. It’s important for me to be able to share as many of my family’s recipes as possible. My passion is keeping the old recipes alive, especially for folks who no longer have their grandmothers or mothers around to pass them down. These recipes go hand in hand with our family histories and our heritage, their importance outweighs all of the newfangled TV star concoctions by far. I no longer read food magazines, watch food shows, or readMr. Upton's Obit other cookbooks. So it’s pretty much my Southern Plate cookbook for now. I do have a much larger cookbook as well which I spent a year putting together as a surprise for family members. It was the Mama of the Southern Plate cookbook, I had to condense it a lot to make the cookbook affordable. It has over 500 recipes and the one readers buy from my site has 302.

You have what in your kitchen?
Mr. Upton’s Obituary. It is an old obituary I found in an antique shop once. The photo of the man just spoke to me and I took the time to read it. It touched me immensely. We should all live lives that end in such a wonderful obituary being written about us. I had it matted and framed and it hangs in my kitchen as a reminder of the kind of person I want to be.

Childhood kitchen memories?
Sitting at our kitchen table sprinkling the topping on a dish of peaches to make peach crisp while Mama made supper and we talked. She always let me make the peach crisp; it was my special dish. And she’d brag about what a good job I did every time we ate it. I was five when she first started letting me do that. Our kitchen was decorated in mushrooms, harvest gold, and avocado green. Gotta love the seventies!

Favorite kitchen to visit today?
Mamas! Even if she isn’t cooking, she always has great leftovers. There is nothing is like your mama’s cooking!

Kitchen play?
I got an Easy Bake oven when I was seven. I made so many things in that oven! Once, I made a devil’s food cake. You used these little mixes to do it and that was my last mix. I had it planned as a special surprise for my dad. After I iced it, I accidentally dropped it on the floor and was in tears over it. Mama picked it up, cleaned up the floor, and pieced it back together on a plate for me. She assured me that it would be fine and I finally calmed down and felt better. That night as my dad took his first bite, I leaned in and asked him “It doesn’t taste like it was dropped on the floor, does it daddy?” When I was thirty, my mom surprised me that Christmas with another Easy Bake Oven! She gave my brother (three years older than me) a set of Lincoln Logs! I opened it up and felt like I was seven again. That present really choked me up; my brother had quite a few lumps in his throat as well. It made for a very special Christmas.

Heart of Home

In your kitchen with you?
Kids. Practically attached to me. If I turn around too fast, I bump into them. Now I understand why Mama had me at the table making peach crisp, she just wanted to be able to breathe while she cooked!

Kitchen playlist?
I listen to all sorts of things. The kids and I like to sing really loud in the kitchen because it has such great acoustics! We have a great waffle song we sing and I like to belt out old show tunes. Ethel Merman hasn’t got anything on me! My daughter has a thing for Taylor Swift songs right now and my son likes to sing old They Might Be Giants songs with me. We’re a very musical family. That is kind of a word of caution to our guests ☺

Julia Child’s kitchen is now in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Where would you like your kitchen to be displayed one day?
(This is the only question I had a hard time answering!) I suppose if my kitchen were to ever be displayed anywhere, the main thing I’d want is for there to be a window in it looking out over a cotton field. And no ropes, I want folks to walk in and sit right down. Do museums serve iced tea?

Thanks, Christy!

Christy Jordan

About Christy:

Christy Jordan

North Alabama, USA
B.S. Home Economics
Publisher of SouthernPlate.com
Food columnist for Southern Beauty magazine,
the FOOD magazine
, and others

Website: www.SouthernPlate.com
Twitter: www.twitter.com/southernplate
Facebook: www.facebook.com/southernplate

Julia Child’s kitchen, now displayed in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.

Smithsonian photo

Photo and facts from Smithsonian National Museum of American History.The kitchen measures 14x 20. The blue and green color scheme was chosen by Paul Child in 1961. Poles mounted on the ceiling held TV lights during the taping of cooking shows in the 1990s. A plastic-covered Marimekko print tablecloth protects the wood of the kitchen table. The maple countertops were built two inches higher than in most kitchens to suit Julia’s six-foot, two-inch height. Two 25-pound turkeys fit inside this oven. No fancy curtains, just simple blinds opened to a view of Irving Street treetops. The icemaker in the corner kept Julia and her guest chefs supplied with all the ice they needed to keep food fresh during taping sessions. Julia liked cats in her kitchen… on the fridge, in fields of asparagus, and next to pots. Julia’s kitchen junk drawer held lots of surprises. Julia’s to-do list was on the kitchen counter next to the telephone. Sixteen baking sheets were stored vertically in slots next to the dishwasher. Julia stored spices, tea, instant coffee, and syrups in this cabinet. Oils and vinegars were kept close to the stove. This door led to the pastry pantry where Julia stored baking equipment and supplies. Julia’s lorgnette was always within reach for reading fine print. Julia stored odds and ends of equipment, including her blow torches, in a pantry beside this wall.