Kitchen Confidential with Chef Bruno Terroso at The Vanilla Pod

<h3>As seen in</h3><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->[downloads ids="6952" columns="1" columns="1" excerpt="no"]<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->[downloads category="current-issue" columns="1" ]

Okanagan-best-restaurant-vanilla-pod-paella

Bruno Terroso sees great food as a fusion of tradition and innovation

People think Chef Bruno Terroso is Italian because of his name, but he’s really Portuguese. Growing up in Prince George he did a lot of cooking with his mom, all western European foods. Since his family comes from Laurinha just north of Lisbon, salt cod or bacalhau was a staple. Now he incorporates a lot of Spanish and Portuguese dishes into his menu at The Vanilla Pod. Bruno prefers preparing fish over big red meats and heavy proteins, but he also knows his customers so his menu is a balance of seafood, fowl and meats.

Awards: Best Chef, Best Restaurant 2013

After your mom introduced you to the kitchen, where did you study?

BT (Bruno Terroso): I took the one-year culinary arts program at the College of New Caledonia in Prince George. After that I started my apprenticeship in Calgary eventually moving to the Okanagan to work at Summerhill and the Bonfire Bistro. Before coming to The Vanilla Pod I spent three years as the sous chef at the Naramata Heritage Inn.

 

Okanagan-best-restaurant-vanilla-pod-chef-bruno-terrosoWhat’s the biggest difference between what you were doing at the Naramata Inn and here?

BT: I’ve got a lot more responsibility and creativity here. As a sous chef anywhere, you have to cook the recipes that are handed to you by the executive chef. Here I get to develop my own recipes and use my past experiences to develop entirely new menus. A lot of the food we’re preparing here is based on what I grew up with. The big difference is that we prepare it in a way that is conducive to a commercial restaurant kitchen rather than a home kitchen and without sacrificing quality.

How is the Mediterranean influence  translated to your menu at The Vanilla Pod?

BT: Flavours are key in Mediterranean cooking. I try not to sink too many flavours into one dish and we prepare a lot of tapas-style dishes. The smaller plates allow our guests to have more variety and flavour. One of the dinner-sized plates we offer is paella, but not the traditional paella. Mine is a hybrid version with additional seafood like sautéed scallops.

vanilla-pod-chef-bruno-terroso-cheftipsDo you try to stick to the 100-mile buying guide?

BT: I try to buy as close to home as possible. Things like fish and shellfish of course aren’t grown here, but most of the produce is grown right here in the Valley. I used to go to the farmers’ markets, but over the years I’ve developed good relationships with the growers and now go directly to the farms. My wife and I also grow about 65 per cent of the tomatoes we use in the restaurant at our home in Summerland. We use a lot of different varieties of tomatoes and they’re mainly heirloom breeds. For some of the special stuff I have really good local suppliers like What The Fungus Urban Mushroom Farm in Penticton for both my domestic and wild mushrooms.


In the kitchen do you use any specialized equipment?

BT: No we don’t use anything you’d consider fancy or a gadget. Most of our meals are prepared in pots and pans. The thing I would recommend is using good sharp knives. I use a combination of Victorinox and Miyabi knives. 

Read more of the original stories celebrated in our 30th-anniversary issue.

House of Learning building achieves LEED gold

House of Learning building achieves LEED gold

It has been four years in the making, but good things come to those who wait as the Brown Family House of Learning at Thompson Rivers University (TRU) in Kamloops officially obtained LEED Gold Certification from the Canada Green Building Council last month. While the...

read more
Team BC posts big results at Winter Games

Team BC posts big results at Winter Games

Emily Dickson of Prince George earned her third medal of the 2015 Canada Winter Games on Wednesday in the biathlon 10km pursuit, adding a gold to her silver and bronze finishes from earlier this week. Team BC’s long track speed skaters were also golden – Jacob Graham...

read more
Golden day for B.C. long track speed skaters

Golden day for B.C. long track speed skaters

Team BC’s long track speed skaters got off to an impressive start at the 2015 Canada Winter Games on Wednesday earning gold in the men’s and women’s 500m events and a silver in the women’s team pursuit. Jacob Graham of Dawson Creek and Sara Spence of Kamloops...

read more
UBC Okanagan expands animal therapy program

UBC Okanagan expands animal therapy program

Students Charlie Drummond and Christy Hui have organized BARK2GO and will station volunteers and therapy dogs in three different locations across UBC’s Okanagan campus every Wednesday. Building Academic Retention through K9s expands across campus Students are lining...

read more
Okanagan getaways: Winter staycation

Okanagan getaways: Winter staycation

Forget the headaches of foreign travel; relax and get away from it all right here in the Okanagan When family commitments sidelined all hope of a warm southern getaway, I didn’t despair — though that great honkin’ snowstorm prompted a tiny twinge of jealousy for all...

read more
Wall Street’s rigged, so Main Street suffers

Wall Street’s rigged, so Main Street suffers

The year 2015 looks promising for Okanagan business owners. Certain sectors should be excited about a low dollar and even lower gas prices. While an 80-cent dollar might hurt imports, it helps exporters and it should keep more Canadians vacationing within our borders....

read more

0 Comments

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.