Brad Smoliak


1
Mar 10

Food on the Alberta Train to Whistler

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Alberta Train Menu
As we approach the end of the Olympics, I wanted to write about my priceless experience on the Alberta Train to Whistler this week. The train is operated by Rocky Mountaineer Vacations and has been the ONLY transit alternative to motor coach buses to Whistler during the Olympics. The train’s purpose is to encourage business networking and promote tourism in Alberta and by far it was a success with all the media coverage I’ve read about and my own experience.
Passenger Seat
In this post, I’ll focus on the food on the Alberta Train on this post since this might turn out to be 10 pages long if I don’t. If you are interested in my Whistler Activities that day, stay tuned for another post. The short version of the day is: had amazing Photos Opportunities along the coast, attended the Biathlon Relay event, ate and soaked in the sights in the Whistler Village, received free iPod Touch with images and videos from Alberta, made awesome new friends, and met Maelle Ricker.

Breakfast

Bright and early (5:15am pickup, 6am departure from North Vancouver), we were equipped with cowboy hats and fresh juice. We also received the menu of our Breakfast and Dinner. The dining quarters fill up the first floor of the 6 car train while the passenger seats are up on the second floor.

Since there was two of us from YouCook, we could sample two dishes from breakfast: the All Aboard Omelette (mild Italian omelette with Gouda cheese and roasted potatoes)
Omelette
and the Mountain Pass Pancakes (hot pancakes made with aprikat beer with wild boar bacon and maple syrup.
Omelette
Breakfast set the tone for an amazing day aboard the Alberta Train. Wild boar bacon has this lean and sweet taste to it unlike regular bacon. I’m going to miss it (or go on a hunt for it in the city).

Afternoon Snacks

At 4:30pm, we made our way to the Golf Club where buses were waiting to take us back to the train, there were more food and drinks! Chips, Toffee and Popcorn awaited us.
Rice Snacks
Back on the train, the Men’s Hockey Canada – Germany game was being streamed from a laptop to a few TVs! We were able to watch the entire game with a few delicious Whiskeys from the open bar and Japanese rice snacks.

Dinner

Alberta Dinner
Most passengers retired to their seats to enjoy the train ride home and dinner. A group of us took over the entire dining room closest to the Kitchen to get first dibs on food (and left overs as the servers returned to the kitchen!)

Menu

  • Prairie ChowderMy favourite dish at the Alberta House
  • Braised Elk on a Ciabatta Bun – Slow braised elk on a Portuguese bun with horseradish chives creme fraiche
  • Skewered Beef – AAA Alberta beef striploin satay lightly marinated in aprikat beer and finished with old fashioned mustard
  • Grilled Goat Cheese Sandwich – Mini grilled goat cheese sandwiches with onion compote on a crispy golden focaccia
  • Cured Pork Loin on Polenta with Onion Jam – Roasted pork tenderloin with Gouda cheese, Polenta Crouton and Onion Compote
  • Mini Lamb Burgers with Mint Aioli – Lamb burger, Portuguese bun, mint puree mixed in garlic mayonnaise.
  • Rocky Mountain Mousse Cup – Preserved Saskatoon berries accented with Alberta Rye served over a dark chocolate mousse.

Platter
The selection was a hearty representation of Alberta with a good selection of different meats in Alberta. The soup was just as delicious as I had it the day before so that wasn’t a surprise. The surprise for me was Grilled Cheese sandwiches using Goat Cheese. It was delicious and will be part of my snacking repertoire. My only complaint was that each dish came with some kind of bread/carbs which was more filling than tasty on an already full stomach.

The kitchen was very accommodating to dietary concerns when a passenger listed out all her allergies: gluten, corn, wheat, lactose – and the list goes on. She had a delicious protein filled meal:
Protein
I was also quite impressed with the Rocky Mountain Mousse dessert.
Dessert
I assumed that the desserts were premade and just served on the train, but I was wrong. Everything, including the desserts are made on the train’s fully stocked 6 kitchens.

Rocky Mountaineer Kitchen

Kitchen
Ah, the kitchen. I asked Steve Buzak, Executive Chef and Christos Chaldeos, Sous Chef of the Rocky Moutaineer for a tour after dinner service when the kitchen was all clean and polished! Each kitchen can handle the full food service of 70 guests. I have not visited a moving kitchen that pushes out gourmet food and was delighted to take a tour!

The kitchen is very spacious, with plenty of room for prep, cooking, cleaning and storage. To be honest, it looks bigger and better than some restaurant kitchens we’ve visited. The stoves are not gas but still heat up quickly. There is also a Hobart Combi Oven inside the kitchen.
Hobart
They cook with pots half full to prevent splashing and spilling. Every door to every piece of equipment or storage has a latch on it. Actually there are no windows in the kitchen, so when the train turns corners, it often comes as a surprise so they have to be careful.

Each train car only has 2 chefs executing the menu with the Sous Chef and Executive Chef moving from car to car. Each chef of the car takes ownership of all the food coming out of the kitchen. Sometimes because of bumps and turns, dishes do get destroyed when they hit the floor. However, they do their best and try to recover as quick as possible.

Rocky Mountaineer does an apprenticeship program with VCC so I met some chefs there in training. The atmosphere of the kitchen, as well as the entire train is relaxed and full of camaraderie, after a long but successful day. Yes, the day started at 6am and ended at 9pm. They do a rotating 1 day on, 1 day off during the Olympics. During other Rocky Mountaineer trips to Alberta, they are working for 4 days. I found it interesting that although the Rocky Mountaineer is fully stocked with all amenities imaginable, there are no sleeping quarters on the this train. They always stop over at hotels overnight.



Cowbow
Long story short, this was an amazing culinary and Olympics experience that Alberta put on for locals and visitors alike to appreciate how beautiful Whistler is. I love Alberta and the Rocky Mountaineer hospitality and will be sure to sport my new cowboy hat at the Calgary Stampede this summer!

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25
Feb 10

Alberta House with Executive Chef Brad Smoliak

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Alberta
I’m rather impressed with how beautifully renovated Alberta turned Atlantic Trap and Gill at the corner of Robson and Beatty Street into their home for two weeks.

YouCook was invited to a media event at Alberta House to taste the creations of Brad Smoliak.
Brad Smoliak
Brad does Food Product Development all over Canada and came up with a very well executed menu to serve 20,000 people at the Alberta house (plus more on the Alberta Train but more on that later). We had four special tastings which were dishes created by Brad incorporating ingredients from all regions of Alberta.

Ministry

Along with Brad we met Cindy Ady, the Alberta Minister of Tourism and Jack Hayden, Minister of Agriculture.

Wild Boar Bacon Vodka Caesar

We started the tasting at 10:30am, yes just in time for a Caesar. I didn’t realize this but the Caesar was invented in Calgary, Alberta in 1969 – 41 years ago at Calgary’s Westin Hotel.
Caesar
As a twist on this classic drink, Brad infused vodka with bacon. Instead of celery, he included a thin strip of Wild Boar Bacon. Wild Boar Bacon has an amazing sweet taste (and if you can believe it, it tasted lighter than regular bacon). The combination of the sweet fatty boar with the caesar was sooooo good. Words don’t do this justice, you’ve got to try this or make it at home.

Prairie Chowder

Happily intoxicated, we moved on to the Prairie Chowder.
Prairie Chowder
All my life, I’ve associate chowder with seafood. To my surprise, this dish was completely vegetarian. Brad is truly an amazing chef and food product developer. He combined ingredients from all the growing regions in Alberta: honey from the North (Peace country), potatoes from the South, three types of mushrooms from the Northeast, prarie barley from the Northwest, cream from the Central, and beans and potatoes from Southern Alberta. It was a delicious blend of flavours making this one of the best vegetarian soups I’ve ever had. I’ve asked for this recipe so stay tuned after YouCook learns how to cook this. I will never make clam chowder again after I get this recipe!



By this point, I could’ve gone home happy to blog about the food experience at the Alberta House. However, two more courses to go!

Cowboy Trail Chili

Cowboy Chili
Brad created this dish to represent the hard working people that work on the ranches along the The Cowboy Trail is a 700km route along Highway 22 between the Rocky Mountains and the Canadian prairies. The first cattle was brought into the province in 1876 and now Alberta is the largest cattle producing province in Canada. Alberta Beef is quite famous and tasty because of it’s high quality feed grain. The chili had both ground beef plus chunks of Alberta beef along with beans, carrots and other vegetables. I’m not sure which herbs and spices were in this chili but the combination was flavourful and a little spicy. The beef chunks were tender and delicious. This definitely wasn’t just a regular chili and again showed me how creative and skilled Brad and his team is.

Homestead Gingerbread Cake

Gingerbread Cake
Finally to finish it off, we had a Gingerbread cake with hot caramel sauce and Saskatoon berries. The ingredients for this dish represents the historical Indian House Trade Store in Fort Edmonton where Aboriginals would barter for European goods, which included molasses and spices such as ginger, nutmeg and cinnamon. Alberta has the last sugar beet refinery in Canada which is what molasses is made of. At first instinct, I thought this was a carrot cake. However, it was the cinnamon, nutmeg and molasses that threw me off into that thought. Nope, no carrot in this cake. Again, the combination of flavours, sauce and berries really bring out this dish.


Alberta House was one of the final hospitality houses on my Olympic food coverage and I think I did save the best for last. During the tasting, I was informed that there are a few media seats on the much sought after Alberta Train to Whistler the next morning departing at 6am-9pm. The Rocky Mountaineer train is a luxurious train with 6 full size kitchens. Best of all, Brad Smoliak created the menu for the train as well ! It was sincerely my dream come true and you’ll hear more about it in the next post.

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