Chef Mario Ramsay presents the menu
Carrot soup with goat cheese
Chicken confit and chicken breast with vegetables
Dessert time
Crème brûlée with maple syrup
Our people - Algonquin!
Communications professionals
Natalie Lavigne - Ecoverde, and Emma Bedlington - Stratos
Sandra Markus, Communications Director at Algonquin, President of Ottawa Chapter International Association of Business Communicators
This post, first for the three weeks after Algonquin, marking that I’m finally back to life, is about Algonquin – our green Alma Mater. It is about an event I attended more than a month ago, during Earth Day celebration, so…
April 22, Thursday, 5:30 PM. Restaurant International at Algonquin College. I didn’t even acknowledge its existence while being a student: all the time running, deadlines for the assignments in mind… I have to admit that Algonquin campus is a place that didn’t stop to surprise me, revealing its simple miracles all along the way: the comfort of its facilities, the taste of the food in its cafeterias (best salad-bar I’ve ever had!), green cleaning program (so that you can tirelessly work for many hours – and no headache!), a thoughtful selection of goods in its stores (so that you don’t have to worry if you forget some supply for your presentation, or are having any other emergency of the kind); its new LEED-certified building growing beside, as we were growing through our program… Restaurant International became one more miracle I discovered being at the last week of my studies.
Restaurant International, Algonquin College School of Hospitality's teaching restaurant is a fine dining establishment run by Algonquin students. Culinary students create the menus and cook, and students of hospitality program deliver the service. That night Restaurant International put local on the table: we were having a 100-Mile Diet Dinner. All courses cooked with homegrown ingredients, including local seasonal produce.
Who said: “Eating local is boring”? Just listen:
Enrée: carrot soup with goat cheese (carrots – St Andre D’Avelin, goat cheese – Lindsay);
Main course: chicken confit and chicken brest (Spencerville) accompanied by a selection of vegetables – pureed rutabaga, beets, green onions (all from Navan), potatoes (St Andre D’Avelin), wild garlic (Cornwall), and fiddlehead (Alexandria).
Dessert: crème brûlée with maple syrup (maple syrup and sugar – Proulx Farms, Casselman, eggs – Navan, cream and butter – Markham).
All together - a mmm-yummy attack on uninspiring clichés about cooking and eating local: all was creative, memorable (a month later it is still worth saying), and absolutely DELICIOUS! And also, as seen at Algonquin many times before and under different circumstances: all done with high-level professionalism and passion. Work is love made visible: this is Algonquin style.
I hope the event organizers – the Ottawa Chapter of the International Association of Business Communications and Ecoverde, coaching and communication in sustainable development – will forgive me for starting with the dinner, served in support of the event itself: “Communicating about, with and for Sustainability”, an opportunity for networking and professional development. Conferences and other events hosted by Algonquin are worth a separate post. This time again, an inspiring speaker – Natalie Lavigne, a certified presenter for The Climate Project Canada, shared her experience in communicating sustainability with those who are taking active roles in addressing environmental and social issues: federal government employees, sustainability consultants, Ottawa U professors and students, and communications professionals.
It is actually quite exciting to graduate from an institution providing you with a pioneering certificate, fresh knowledge, eventful memories, bonds of friendship, a great address for eating out, and a year-round calendar of exciting events!
Bye Algonquin! Life continues. Looking forward to meeting again!
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