Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A Symphony of Flavors melds music, culinary arts

- CARY JENKINS

The Arkansas Symphony Guild has created a new culinary experience for patrons to savor. The four-part virtual series, a fundraiser for the guild, is called A Symphony of Flavors.

Each Thursday in April, the guild will feature an online program of an Arkansas chef preparing an entree and music by members of the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra.

“We asked four local chefs to develop menus and to prepare the entrees for us in their kitchens and allow us to video that,” says Tandy Cobb, chairman of the new event.

For each Thursday presentati­on, ticket buyers will receive a gift basket. “In the basket, they’ll have a bottle of wine, the menu and the recipe for the entree. And they’ll have some of the ingredient­s that may be hard to find. So, each basket will be customized to the menu and the chef.”

The wine in the basket, she says, will be recommende­d by the chef to go with the entree.

Each program will have a theme as viewers watch chefs prepare an entree from their repertoire step-by-step. Participan­ts can watch or follow along in their own kitchens. A list of ingredient­s and the recipe will be sent to viewers the day before the program airs. Programs will be available for viewing for two weeks after the event so the home chef can make the dish later.

On April 8, the presentati­on is Variations on a Mexican Theme. Capi Peck, executive chef and an owner of Trio’s Restaurant, will prepare a Mexican stew called Legumbres En Pipian from her home kitchen. The music will be from a recorded Arkansas Symphony performanc­e.

Asian Suite is the program on April 15, with chef Ricardo Rincón of Kemuri Restaurant demonstrat­ing the preparatio­n of his Miso Cod entree. Music will be by the Quapaw Quartet.

An Ode to Italy will be presented on April 22. Eric Isaac, executive chef and owner of Ristorante Capeo, will make Chicken Piccata over homemade noodles at the restaurant and will give viewers a

tour of the wine cellar. The Rockefelle­r Quartet will provide the music.

The April 29 installmen­t will be Springtime Sonata featuring Clark Trim and Henrik Thostrup, owners of Colonial Wines and Spirits. Thostrup, who is also a chef, will prepare Roast Rack of Lamb Provence. Trim, a hospitalit­y expert, will show viewers how to prepare for a dinner party. Music will be by Kiril Laskarov and Dora Paley Ronnel.

Cobb, who is working with a committee of 14 guild members, says the idea for the event evolved as they realized they would have to do a virtual fundraiser. “It’s been a lot of fun and I think it’s going to be a great success,” she says.

She says the tickets went on sale March 1 on their website. “We are already in good shape, moving toward our goal, so we feel like we’re going to do well with it.”

The money raised by the ASO Guild’s epicurean event will help support the activities of the Symphony, including youth orchestras, the annual children’s concert held at Robinson Center Performanc­e Hall and the Stella Boyle Smith Young Artists Competitio­n. Due to the pandemic the music education programs with schools have been put on hold, but the Young Artist Competitio­n will be held virtually this spring.

The Guild was started in 1962 and has contribute­d more than $2 million to the orchestra, Cobb says.

Tickets for a single demonstrat­ion are $75; $100 for all four. Ticket buyers will be emailed a link to join the demonstrat­ions, which begin at 7 p.m.

There isn’t a limit on the amount of tickets that will be sold, says Cobb, but they do have a disclaimer: The guild would like to have tickets bought at least a week before.

“For those who want their baskets before the day of the program, we need to have their reservatio­n a week before the actual airing of the video.”

She explains that if tickets are bought later, that doesn’t mean the buyer won’t get a gift basket, but “we just can’t guarantee that they will have it by that Thursday night.”

She says the people putting all the gift baskets together and determinin­g how to deliver them are currently the busiest on the committee.

Symphony of Flavor tickets and more informatio­n may be found on the ASO’s website arkansassy­mphony.org.

The Guild was started in 1962 and has contribute­d more than $2 million to the orchestra, Cobb says.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins) ?? Tandy Cobb is chairing A Symphony of Flavors, a new fundraiser by the Arkansas Symphony Guild in which attendees will receive a basket filled with the ingredient­s of an entree and will watch from home as a chef prepares the dish.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins) Tandy Cobb is chairing A Symphony of Flavors, a new fundraiser by the Arkansas Symphony Guild in which attendees will receive a basket filled with the ingredient­s of an entree and will watch from home as a chef prepares the dish.
 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins) ?? Tandy Cobb, chairwoman of the Arkansas Symphony Guild’s A Taste of Flavors event, visits Kemuri Restaurant, where chef Ricardo Rincón will demonstrat­e preparing a cod entree.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Cary Jenkins) Tandy Cobb, chairwoman of the Arkansas Symphony Guild’s A Taste of Flavors event, visits Kemuri Restaurant, where chef Ricardo Rincón will demonstrat­e preparing a cod entree.

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