Bagna Calda: New Year's Cooking Workshop + Dinner Party

with Zach Martinucci

Bagna Calda is like a varsity-level fondue party. Gather around a sizzling, garlic-butter bath that we’ll use to dip vegetables, cook meat, and dunk bread.

Since we can’t gather in person this year, we’re bringing this annual tradition to a free, virtual workshop for you to enjoy at home. Join Zach in enjoying his Italian grandmother’s annual New Year’s Day event. He’ll share the story of Nonna Gloria, and show you how to prepare your own Bagna Calda to make this New Year’s tradition your own.

Note: Unfortunately Bagna Calda is NOT vegetarian-friendly (unless you don’t count anchovies).

IMG_0351.jpeg

Sunday, January 3 | 3 - 4:30pm MST

This is a free event. Please click into the workshop link at 3pm MST.


What to Expect

Prepare bagna calda and fixin’s from start to finish in a live, interactive Zoom workshop

Enjoy a meal with your household and/or new foodie friends in our virtual event

Your home and clothing will smell like garlic for three days :)


What You’ll Need

For the Bagna Calda, per person

1 head of garlic

100g // 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil

50g // 1/2 stick butter

1 tin anchovies

30mL // 2 Tbsp red wine

(ex. for 4 people, you would need 4 heads of garlic, 400g olive oil, 2 sticks butter, etc.)

Fix-in’s:

Pick your favorites... as many as you'd like:

Bell peppers, sliced

Button mushrooms, quartered

Broccoli and/or cauliflower, florets

Artichoke hearts, quartered

Endives, leaves separates

Bread, in cubes or slices

Sirloin, tri-tip or similar steak, cut into stir fry-sized pieces

(I’ll show you how to prepare the vegetables in the workshop, but you’re welcome to cut them in advance).

Equipment

Cutting board, knife, etc. to prepare fix-in’s

Bowl for each fix-in

Food processor, blender, or knife and patience

Medium skillet for the bagna calda (can be made / served on the stove, or use an electric skillet to bring the pot to the dining room table)

Fondue skewers, one per guest


 

Meet Your Instructor

Zach loves telling stories about food, over food, and even through food.

He studied Culinary Anthropology at UCLA, and Professional Bread and Viennoiserie at the San Francisco Baking Institute. As a founder and baker at Rebel Bread, he now brings his passions for culture and cuisine together to craft story-worthy experiences over food.

Zach believes that food can (and should) tell the story of who we are. He is dedicated to challenging our relationship with food—one community, conversation, and loaf of bread at a time.

@zachmartinucci // @rebelbreaddenver

RBteamWeb-51.jpg