Albany Times Union

Wine & Dine cooks up event

Chef Aaron Mccargo to host virtual class

- By Steve Barnes

After canceling its popular weekend of events in January because of pandemic restrictio­ns, the Wine & Dine for the Arts festival will host its first event of the year next month, a virtual cooking class with a celebrity chef who won “The Next Food Network Star” competitio­n series in 2008.

Set for 5 p.m. April 17, the Wine & Dine event will feature chef Aaron Mccargo Jr., appearing virtually from his New Jersey home, leading a kitchen session that will also include popular Capital Region chef Ric Orlando, cooking with Capital Repertory Theatre’s producing artistic director, Maggie Mancinelli-cahill. The pair will be live from the cooking school at the Different Drummer’s Kitchen store in Guilderlan­d.

Audiences who buy web access to the fundraiser will be able to view the event, and follow along at home if they wish from a provided recipe, as Mccargo, Orlando and Mancinelli-cahill cook. Mccargo, who starred on “Big Daddy’s House” on Food Network from 2008 to 2011 and last fall joined the shopping channel QVC as a food host, will be making his AMJ’S Bold & Spicy

Chicken & Sausage Gumbo recipe. A cocktail recipe will also be provided.

Tickets, on sale now via the Wine & Dine for the Arts website, albanywine­fest.com, start at $39 for recipe cards and viewing link. Three higher tiers of support for the fundraiser, priced at $69, $99 and $119, include additional amenities such as recipe and cocktail ingredient­s, a gift bag and discounts and promotions from event sponsors.

The event is the first of what is projected to be a four-show series called Wine & Dine and COOK!, said Marcus Q. Pryor, board president of Albany Chefs’ Food & Wine Festival: Wine & Dine for the Arts.

“As they say, ‘The show must go on,’ especially this year,” Pryor said. “Now, more than ever, we need to come together to celebrate food, wine and the arts organizati­ons that make our region so special.”

The 2020 festival was held about two months before the pandemic shutdown began in mid-march of last year. With restrictio­ns on gathering size still in place as 2021 began, Pryor and Wine & Dine’s board solicited public opinion about how the festival could offer alternativ­e programmin­g and expand beyond its traditiona­l scope of one weekend’s worth of events.

If the Mccargo event is a success, Wine & Dine will use it as a model for future virtual

cooking events as long as social distancing and crowd limitation­s remain in place, and the nonprofit will continue to explore ways to grow itself into a year-round operation, Pryor said. He will be part of the April 17 show from Different Drummer’s Kitchen.

First held in 2010, Wine & Dine for the Arts was founded by a group of restaurate­urs and other hospitalit­y profession­als to offer financial help to area arts organizati­ons affected by the cancellati­on of the long-running Albany City Arts Grants program. To date, Wine & Dine has given away about $1.2 million, raised during weekends of events in January that in past years attracted about 3,000 people annually and included tastings with food from dozens of local chefs and hundreds of global alcoholic beverages, gala dinners, competitio­ns and more.

 ?? PR Newswire / Share Our Strength ?? Food Network Star Aaron Mccargo Jr. will host a virtual event for Wine & Dine for the Arts.
PR Newswire / Share Our Strength Food Network Star Aaron Mccargo Jr. will host a virtual event for Wine & Dine for the Arts.

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