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Calvin News

Learning to cook with Marie Catrib

Fri, Oct 24, 2008
Allison Graff

Among the many things that Calvin students learned at a cooking demonstration with local restauranteur Marie Catrib is that there is no such thing as too much garlic.聽

Calvin鈥檚 upperclassmen, most of whom don鈥檛 have meal plans and assume responsibility for their own food, were invited to the Koinonia House, an intentional living Project Neighborhood community, at the corner of Lake Drive and Auburn. Those that moved quickly enough to reserve a spot at "Beyond Mac and Cheese: Cooking with Marie Catrib鈥 added some new recipes to their repertoire鈥攁nd a few new ingredients.

"What鈥檚 a kalermati?鈥 asked one student as Marie chopped something slippery and dark red on her cutting board.

"Ah! A kalamata!鈥 she answered, laughing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an olive. It鈥檚 so good鈥攂ut be careful鈥攖hey鈥檙e very salty.鈥

The students crammed into rows of chairs and the few couches in Koinonia鈥檚 living room laughed heartily at the mispronunciation and Marie鈥檚 reply.

"What exactly is orzo?鈥 asked another student about one of the ingredients joining the kalamata olives in a salad Marie was making. 鈥淚s it rice?鈥

"No, it鈥檚 not rice鈥攊t just looks like rice. It鈥檚 tiny pasta,鈥 explained Marie as she scraped the olives into the huge salad bowl.

No one asked about the pile of off-white bulbs Marie deftly minced while talking about her experience as a chef and restaurant owner. It was Marie鈥檚 favorite ingredient: 鈥淲e use so much of this stuff in that place over there鈥︹ she said pointing her head towards her restaurant just down the street from Koinonia house. 鈥溾ur middle name should be 鈥楪arlic鈥. Ha!鈥

Culinary boldness

Marie, whose eponymous restaurant features many one-of-a-kind culinary creations, urged the students to be bold when it comes to cooking: 鈥淒on鈥檛 be too shy in the kitchen!鈥 she told them over and over again. She added to this by telling them about her own progress in the kitchen. 鈥淢y cooking was horrible! I didn鈥檛 even want to eat it myself,鈥 she said of the meals she made after immigrating to Michigan from Lebanon.

Her cooking was so bad, Marie said, that she had to ask relatives in Lebanon to send her cooking instructions. With their help from afar, her cooking improved. It improved so much, in fact, that she opened her own restaurant in Houghton, Michigan. Several years later, she sold her business in Houghton, entered culinary art school in New York鈥攖raining as a pastry chef at the Biltmore Estate in Ashville, North Carolina鈥攁nd finally ended up in Grand Rapids, near her son. She opened Marie Catrib鈥檚 at the corner of Diamond and Lake the day after Thanksgiving in 2004.

Students asked Marie about recipe ingredients, using local fruits, vegetables and meat in her cooking, and building a LEED-certified restaurant, but soon enough it was time to stop talking and start making food of their own. Some gathered around the demonstration table to make their version of Marie鈥檚 orzo pasta salad while others left for the kitchen to work on dessert鈥攃hocolate chip cookies. It wasn鈥檛 long before a complete meal was ready and one task remained: to eat! Folding tables were set up and the large group sat down to enjoy the meal they鈥檇 made with Marie鈥檚 help.

It wasn鈥檛 the first time a large group gathered to eat a meal at the Koinonia House. The students and mentors there share several meals each week, with a team of two planning, shopping and cooking for the other members of the house. Friday night is community dinner night when students invite friends, family, professors and neighbors over for a meal in which up to 30 people gather around Koinonia鈥檚 massive dining room table and satellite tables set up nearby.

Food is important to the students who live at the Koinonia house, said Project Neighborhood mentor Jeff Schra, not only for the sake of the food itself, but because of what it does for them.

"The idea of gathering for a meal is fundamental to who we are 鈥 and really to what the church is. It鈥檚 the Acts 2 idea of the early Christians sharing what they had together, with 鈥榚very meal a celebration,鈥欌 he said.

It was in this spirit that the Koinonia house asked Marie to hold a cooking demonstration in their living room and invited Calvin students from the community to join them for the evening of food and fun.

"To have Marie come and invite other students from the community to learn outside the classroom and also see what a local entrepreneur is doing鈥its what we鈥檙e doing as a house,鈥 said Schra. 鈥淚t was important for me to see the students getting their hands dirty, so to speak.鈥

Not to worry鈥攂efore students got their hands dirty, following Marie鈥檚 instructions to 鈥渏ust use your hands to mix it!鈥, they lined up by Koinonia鈥檚 downstairs bathroom to wash them.