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Nova Scotia Seafood Cooking School
Costa Rica Creole Cooking School
Mediterranean Cooking School, Granada, Spain
Centers for Learning About Food & Ingredients
The Proprietors, Instructors, and Tour Leaders
The Founders of the Nova Scotia Seafood Cooking School, the Costa Rica Creole Cooking School, and the Mediterranean
Cooking School, Daniel G. Abel, Charles L. Leary, and Vaughn J. Perret have worked together as food-world entrepreneurs for
over sixteen years. They founded Chicory Farm in Louisiana's Washington Parish in 1990 to farm organic produce, specialty
mushrooms, and European-style cheeses. Soon, Chicory Farm had become purveyor to numerous fine restaurants and specialty food
stores throughout the United States. Their endeavors drew the attention of the New York Times, Martha Stewart Living,
Food & Wine, the New Orleans Times-Picayune, New York Observer, and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
among many others. In 1996, the trio started the Chicory Farm Cafe in New Orleans's Uptown district, a restaurant
that for three years helped re-define the culinary universe of the Crescent City, and earned accolades from Fodors,
the James Beard Foundation, the TV Food Network, and the Los Angeles Times Magazine. In 1998, they sold their Louisiana
enterprises and moved to Nova Scotia, where they opened Trout Point Lodge. In 2004, they opened the Inn at Coyote Mountain
and the Costa Rica Creole Cooking School, and in 2006 the Mediterranean Cooking School at Casa Azahar in Granada, Spain.
Abel, Leary, and Perret, along with guest chefs and local food experts, lead all Food Learning Vacations.
They are the authors of the Trout Point Lodge Cookbook: Creole Cuisine from New Orleans to Nova Scotia published by
Random House in New York and Toronto in 2004 as well as numerous articles on agriculture, food and travel as well as recipes.
Over the past five years, APL International Cooking Schools or its programs have received critical attention
or recommendations from:
Travel & Leisure
Food & Wine
The Miami Herald
brides.com
concierge.com
Harrowsmith Country Life
CTV
National Geographic Traveler
National Post
New Orleans Times-Picayune
Canadian Geographic
The Dallas Morning News
WCVB TV, Boston
The Oregonian
Chatelaine
Canadian House & Home
Halifax Chronicle-Herald
APL International Cooking Schools specializes in culinary and cultural travel experiences for small groups,
usually from four to twelve persons. The foodvacation web site also acts as a culinary travel guide, both for culinary vacation
programs and with original travel articles and advice.
APL International Cooking Schools stands out from the competition for offering travel experiences that combine
cultural learning with gourmet food & dining, always with the personal guidance and insight of Abel, Perret, or Leary.
DANIEL G. ABEL was born and raised in south Louisiana. He received his B.A. in history and M.A. summa cum
laude in English literature from the University of Southwestern Louisiana, studied for two years at the elite Gregorian University
in Rome, Italy, and earned a law degree from Loyola University. A prominent New Orleans attorney, Mr. Abel has worked on numerous
complex litigations throughout the country and the world. He teaches on the skills faculty of Loyola University Law School,
and is the co-author, with Peter Harry Brown, of a book on gun control issues published by Simon & Schuster.
Mr. Abel has also maintained a lifelong interest in food and cooking. At a young age he began working in Cajun
restaurant kitchens like Thelma's of Breaux Bridge, Louisiana. He then moved to New Orleans, where he managed jazz musician
Al Hirt's Cafe St. Cecile, and later served as Proprietor and Executive Chef of the Chicory Farm Cafe. Mr. Abel has traveled
extensively in Europe, Asia, and Latin America, also having lived in Puerto Rico for many years. Under his management the
Chicory Farm Cafe received recommendations from Fodor's, the Los Angles Times Magazine, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
the New Orleans Times-Picayune, and Zagat's, and received an invitation to the James Beard House in New York. He currently
directs the Nova Scotia Seafood Cooking School and is a Managing Director of Trout Point Lodge.
VAUGHN J. PERRET, a New Orleans native, earned a BA in history from Loyola University and an MA in cultural
anthropology from Tulane University before receiving his JD from Cornell. He grew up on Creole cooking and Louisiana seafood,
and later lived in Paris.
At Chicory Farm, Mr. Perret established a mushroom cultivation laboratory and growing operation, and oversaw
an extensive market garden certified organic by the Louisiana Department of Agriculture. An expert in wild edible foods, Mr.
Perret is past Vice President of the Gulf States Mycological Society, and participated in the historic wild mushroom research
expedition in Morocco with noted mycologists Rolph Singer and Gary Lincoff in 1993. He has consulted with the French agricultural
research station at Bordeaux on specialty mushroom cultivation. Mr. Perret also directed cheese development and affinage at
the Chicory Farm Creamery. In 1994, he received a Small Business Innovative Research grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture
for work on alternative crop cultivation technologies. This grant and another one on dairy sheep production in 1995 directed
by Dr. Leary resulted in Chicory Farm receiving the first annual Tibbetts Award from the U.S. Small Business Administration,
a national honor.
From 1995 until 1998, Mr. Perret oversaw concept and menu development for the Chicory Farm Cafe, and along
with his two partners worked as founding vendor at the New Orleans and Baton Rouge farmer's markets. In addition, he has acted
as an advisor on wild edible mushroom collection and cookery to a number of New Orleans chefs. Like his partners, he is among
only a handful of Americans inducted into the prestigious French Guilde des fromagers, based in Dijon. Mr. Perret specializes
in seafood cookery and wild foods, and has lectured on cooking at venues such as Longue Vue Gardens and the New Orleans Jazz
& Heritage Festival.
CHARLES L. LEARY holds an AB degree, magna cum laude, with high honors and distinction in history, from Kenyon
College, and MA and PhD degrees in modern Chinese history from Cornell University. He has taught on the adjunct faculty at
Tulane University and was a research fellow at the Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, Taiwan and at Newcomb College’s
Center for Research on Women.
He has lived in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan and has a special love of and expertise in Chinese cuisine. Born
in Oregon, he has also lived in various parts of the U.S. From 1990 until 1998 he served as co-proprietor of Chicory Farm,
where he produced European-style, raw-milk cheeses and marketed them to chefs around the United States, while also assisting
in mushroom & organic produce cultivation. Under Dr. Leary’s guidance, Chicory Farm acted as a purveyor to New Orleans'
prominent restaurants including Commander's Palace, Emeril's, the Grill Room, Bella Luna, Brigsten's, Andrea’s, Peristyle,
and NOLA, and also to restaurants across the country like Everest (Chicago), An American Place, Picholine, Le Bernardin, and
Gramercy Tavern (New York), and the Dining Room at the Ritz-Carlton (San Francisco). With his direction, Chicory Farm cheeses
received accolades and recommendations from the New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, & the TV Food Network, and were
served at the Mobil 5-Diamond Chef's Awards in Atlanta in 1997 and at the Food & Wine Magazine Classic in Aspen, Colorado.
Chicory Farm's soft-bodied, washed-rind Catahoula cheese, developed by Dr. Leary and Vaughn Perret, received praised as the
best American cheese in a New York Times interview with Maitre fromager Max McCallman, co-author of The Cheese Course.
He has researched cheese production in France's Loire Valley under the auspices of ITOVIC, and also at the
Washington State University Creamery. In addition to East Asia, Dr. Leary has traveled extensively in Mexico, Central and
South America, and Western Europe. Dr. Leary oversaw cheesemaking at La Ferme d'Acadie, and along with Vaughn Perret directs
the kitchen at Trout Point Lodge. He has written on numerous occasions for the New Orleans Times-Picayune, and also for Fine
Cooking, American Way, Republican China, and recipes for Louisiana Cookin’ and Food & Wine.
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Institute of Gastronomy: Gastronomy, Food Culture, and Wine Studies

Do you have any questions or comments? Please send us an e-mail at:
info@foodvacation.com







Praise for APL International Cooking Schools
For the Nova Scotia Seafood Cooking School:
"extraordinary" Food & Wine magazine
"Nova Scotia nirvana" the New Orleans Times-Picayune
"lip-smacking trips to satisfy your culinary cravings" Canadian Geographic magazine
"Gourmet Getaway" "Canada's Top Cooking Schools" Chatelaine magazine
For the Costa Rica Creole Cooking School:
"There may be dozens of eco-lodges in Costa Rica, but there is only one vacation
cooking school. The Inn at Coyote Mountain is almost too good to be true: a 5-star luxury hotel, gourmet cooking school, and
idyllic nature retreat all rolled into one. Guests learn about sustainable and organic agriculture, explore the culinary history
of the Americas, and participate in the very best that responsible travel has to offer. "
David Lukas, Lonely Planet
"Gourmet tropical-creole culinary vacations and a spacious teaching kitchen draw
guests to this remote inn."
Fodors Costa Rica 2006
"On a remote hilltop, Charles Leary and Vaughn Perret, the chef-owners of Trout
Point Lodge in Nova Scotia, have created an intimate retreat where aspiring chefs can join one- to three-day classes on 'Caribbean-Creole'
cooking."
Heidi Mitchell, Travel & Leisure
Praise for the Proprietor-Chef-Instructors' Cuisine
At the Inn at Coyote Mountain:
"Luxury and great food . . . In the mountains overlooking the Pacific, the Inn at Coyote
Mountain offers a Creole-Latin menu and hands-on instruction at its Creole cooking school." Food & Wine
"Traditionally, Costa Rica hasn’t been a place known for fine cuisine. With the
. . . opening of the Inn at Coyote Mountain . . . the country’s reputation as a food purgatory was transformed."
Travel & Leisure
"this gorgeous hilltop Spanish hacienda-style inn an hour and a half west of San José
boasts one of the best kitchens in the land."
concierge.com
'where to get some of the country’s best food—innovative Latin-Creole dishes
by chef-owners from Nova Scotia who also run a cooking school here.'
brides.com
At Trout Point Lodge of Nova Scotia:
"In the eighteenth century, the British expelled the French-speaking Catholics from Nova
Scotia, then known as Acadia, or l'Acadie in French. Many of them ended up in Louisiana and became known as Cajuns (from "Acadians").
A close emotional connection persists between the two communities. The menu at Trout Point Lodge reflects this bond. Louisiana
dishes like smoked fish jambalaya get as much emphasis as Nova Scotia specialties, such as Rappie Pie, a traditional Acadian
dish of scallops and clams baked between layers of grated potatoes.
But more than anything, the owners are inspired by the fresh ingredients around them."
Marq DeVilliers, Food & Wine
". . . health-conscious, fresh-and-local, gourmet dinners in the nattily-appointed, informal
but ever-so-patrician Trout Point Lodge."
Keith Marshall, emerils.com
"food is their forte"
Darlene King, Harrowsmith Country Life
"We ate five-course dinners family style, at a long table covered with a cloth and lighted
by candles. On either end of the heavily beamed country kitchen style dining room, snapping fires burned in twin granite fireplaces.
Edith Piaf sang. Gregorian chants. Rousing symphonies."
Millie Ball, New Orleans Times-Picayune
At the Chicory Farm Cafe, New Orleans:
Reviews of the Management's Previous New Orleans Restaurant:
In 1990, three professionals looking for a new direction in life bought a 100-acre farm
in Washington Parish and turned to raising specialty produce to supply upscale New Orleans restaurants. Lawyer Vaughn Perret,
a native of New Orleans, was returning to Louisiana after a year with a New York law firm. Daniel Abel, a Lafayette native
and also a lawyer, hooked up with Perret through the legal community. Charles Leary grew up in Oregon and met Perret in graduate
school at Cornell University; he had come to Louisiana to finish his doctorate degree in modern Chinese history and teach
at Tulane.
The three started by growing lettuce and mushrooms and expanded into handmade cheeses,
acquiring herds of dairy goats and sheep along the way. In February, they joined with Perret's mother, Laura, and opened a
combination gourmet store and cafe on Hillary Street in New Orleans, selling and serving Chicory Farm products and other vegetarian
fare. Since then, the cafe has pretty much taken over the space.
"Food: Excellent. . . . sophisticated fare that satisfies." "inspired meals of marvelous
complexity, brimming with vigor and verve, by turns earthy and elegant."
New Orleans Times-Picayune restaurant review, 1997.
"The café's owners also run Chicory Farm, which lies on 100 acres in the historic Florida
Parishes region of Louisiana due North of New Orleans. There they practice diverse, sustainable agriculture, cultivating certified
organic vegetables, fruits and mushrooms, in addition to producing cheeses from cow, goat and sheep milk. The café uses this
produce in creating recipes such as braised portobello mushrooms with caramelized onions and spinach laced with St. John cheese
and lemon-thyme aioli; panéed eggplant over macque choux (a corn, green pepper and tomato creation) served with braised bitter
greens; and black-eyed peas with sautéed mirliton, okra and smoked corn, complemented by a mushroom cornbread dressing. The
food at the café is excellent. Representatives of the prestigious James Beard Foundation in New York were recently in town
sampling the food here and extended a coveted invitation to Chicory Farm to host a dinner at the James Beard House next year.
In case you want to sample some of the Chicory Farm cheeses, they are also available on cheese plates at such renowned New
Orleans restaurants as Bella Luna, Commander's Palace, Emeril's, the Grill Room, Vino Vino and the Palace Café."
Gambit Weekly restaurant review, 1997.
"The ingredients, recipes, and presentations all compete with the best being offered anywhere
else." "All of this produce makes its way onto the inspired menu at the cafe. Mushrooms--the vegetarian's favorite meat substitute--are
found throughout the menu, and are the most fascinating of the offerings. They're used in three drastically different forms
in the appetizer selection. Shiitakes, meaty and mellow, form the core of a Rockefeller-style mini-casserole. A variety of
oven-roasted mushrooms, enriched with sherry and herbs, is wrapped in pastry and baked. Finally, there's a forkable pate of
wild mushrooms. All are without flaw." Tom Fitzmorris, New Orleans City Business restaurant review, 1998.
"Chicory Farm Cafe is the only restaurant we know that serves complex, French-inspired
Creole cuisine using no meat or meat substitutes. . . . The elegant restaurant, set in a turn-of-the-century neoclassical
house in the Uptown area of New Orleans, has become a favorite among local "foodies," also earning raves from culinary critics
around the country."
Vegetarian Times, July 1997
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