User:Ɱ/CIA material

on 8.5 acres between Yale's divinity and forestry school "With some reluctance she agreed to open a 10‐week course to help improve the town's cooking. The curriculum then consisted of things like beef stew and apple pie." " 10 years ago this week, there were 11 European and American chefs and an enrollment of 200 students—including two women." 1971 there were 1000 students, 35 chefs, 20 kitchens/bake shops to reopen September 1972 for $1 million --- cia opened American Bounty August 1982."American cuisine. As the final segment of the institute's compulsory 21-month curriculum, students are required to spend two weeks working in the kitchen and dining room of the restaurant. designed by Trish Wilson & Associates of Dallas. Its kitchens each occupy 2,000 square feet in a wing that formerly housed offices in the main building, Roth Hall. An arched brick portico overlooking a garden courtyard was enclosed with oak-framed glass doors to create one of the stately, elegant dining rooms. Another row of brick arches separates it from the second dining room, which offers a glimpse of the kitchen from a glassed-in cooking area surrounded by a lavish marketplace display of fresh produce in baskets."tim ryan one of the opening chef-instructors. "lighter dishes that call for less red meat and fat. There is a trend toward somewhat smaller portions. Regional and ethnic flavors that have become part of the complex American table are used extensively. Mr. Heywood and Mr. Ryan spent considerable time in New Orleans, conferring with Paul Prudhomme, owner of K-Paul's Kitchen, which specializes in Cajun cooking. Several of his recipes have been adapted for the restaurant and he was among the guests at the dedication." --- bounty to open in Roth, "coffee shop on the campus that is operated by students to teach management, supervision and short-order cooking" "The new restaurant will feature regional fish, shellfish, game, meats, fruits and vegetables, all at peak season. The 1,600 students will work a two-week stint, cooking and serving in the new restaurant, in addition to the two weeks in the Escoffier Room that have long been part of the 21-month training program. Continental food and classic service are emphasized in the Escoffier Room, and the students spend one week cooking and another serving. As planned now, the American Bounty dining room will be divided into four sections - north, south, east and west - and the food of each region will be served in the appropriate area. A service bar, an open grill and a salad and oyster bar are also planned, as is renovation of a courtyard to be used for outdoor dining. There will also be a small room for private banquets and receptions. The estimated cost of the new facility, which will seat 100 people, is $500,000, and Mr. Metz said that the bulk of that sum will go into equipment and food rather than expensive decor. The restaurant name was the result of a competition involving students, alumni and employees of the school. The winner, Patricia Perrotta, is a public relations secretary at the insti" ---

-- Renovations to the restaurant's lounge for drop-in casual dining,focusing on innovative local food and drinks including those made at the brewery at The Egg, one of the school's dining halls.

"The university receives applications mainly through UCAS and the Common Application with the latest figures showing that there are generally 12 applications per undergraduate place available with some schools - 'International Relations' and 'Economics and Finance' - seeing 30 applicants per place." --- Housing Pros & Cons of Housing: 2 Students' Opinions, Brown, Alexis, and Sprong, Alison|page=12|volume=37|number=13|url=https://issuu.com/lapapillote/docs/2016_10_21_final|date=October 21, 2016|accessdate=May 24, 2017}} Average housing cost $3,676

free laundry, adjustable thermostats, shared bathrooms between roommates, common area, kitchen, every common area cleaned daily except townhouses, left to the students; student commons and Roth less than 10m walk --- Gender-neutral restrooms on campus, mostly in Roth Hall; allowed to choose to live with someone of any gender. -- financials: http://viewer.zmags.com/publication/d13cd279#/d13cd279/8 - Innovation on a Stick p1, 3 La Papillote 38-7 Tim Slavin The Innovation Station, Intrapreneurship bachelor's program-students create competing concepts, scaling recipes, designing logos, etc. One wins and used at Egg. Maintain a balanced budget w food and labor costs, marketing, etc. 15 weeks recipe testing and research. Pincho is the newest theme, worldwide food all on skewers, with sides and housemade chips. -- Life Around the Kill Michael Feist p1, 4 La Papillote 38-7 Bellefield at Historic Hyde Park creating structures including two hotels, houses, apartments, restaurants, and spas. Also a working farm, similar to the land's original use. CIA plans to expand past the kill, they had Noelker and Hull create the Egg, townhouses, lodges, Marriott Pavilion, and Anton Plaza. For the master plan they are planning a road cutting north to the liquor store and west-east from Route 9 to a riverfront hotel. Unclear if the plans are approved. -- Bachelor's Trip p6-7 Cuisines and Cultures trips-around 2 weeks, a 3-credit class involving work to inform students on the cultures. several cities around Paris, France, five cities in Northern Italy, Peru, Andalusia, Spain. - Copia-p12 Papillote "Announcing the Culinary Institute of America at Copia" Tim Ryan November 6, 2015, 36-14 on nov 6, 2015 completed acquisition of Copia.to reestablish as a public destination for food and wine. they were on of Mondavi's original partners. need to expand further. greystone stretched beyond capacity. copia not a new campus but a new facility for their official "California campus", of Greystone and Copia. Maintained maintenance staff during vacancy. Over 80k sqft, just smaller than Greystone. to be the permanent home to the Food Business School. Next to Oxbow. -- march 4, 2016 37-3 'Experience' No-Longer Required Kevin Markey p1 Faculty voted 71-2 to revise the six months' work experience requirement into a recommendation, focusing on widening the pool of applicants and being more selective regarding students' determination based on classwork and activities. --- march 24, 2016 AFS Takes to the Garden p7 -- Raymond Bickson Elizabeth Blau Carla Cooper Timothy Curci Lori Daniel Lorna Donatone Alice Elliot Philip H. Jones Richard Mazer John C. Metz, Jr. Theodore W. Rich Steven Romaniello Harold O. Rosser II Mark J. Sarrazin Joel M. Spiro Joseph H. Wendler -- Alison Sprong|You Spoke, Dining Services Listened|37-11|page=8|September 9, 2016 Implemented a new dining plan in late 2016, with four plans, including a base plan of 20 meal points per weekday, and the other three plans which add gold points and weekend options. The types of points granted to a student vary depending on their year of study. For example, freshmen only receive blue points, where they will taste a variety of different cuisines from the school's cuisine classes to further their education. Green points are substituted in for more senior students, which allows for more food options. --- Jeff Levine|CIA Honored for Art in Public Space|37-12|page=3|September 30, 2016 "Old Diamondsides", a 12-foot sculpture of an Atlantic sturgeon made from 1,700 pieces of cutlery, Gastrotypographicalassemblage, the 35-foot-long mural, The Egg, an 11-foot-tall chrome-plated sculpture of an egg located outside the Student Commons' Egg cafeteria. The library also has an exhibition room with historical food-related art on display, curated by bachelor's students in the Food History class. -- Elizabeth Seitz|Casual Friday Possible Solution to Dress Code Blues|37-04|page=4|March 24, 2016 A school of professionalism, so one of few colleges with a student dress code, expected in the foodservice and hospitality industry. Students expressed need for change, including support for a casual Friday option ---