Sept. 25 - Fresh Thoughts at the National Aquarium

The <a class="taxInlineTagLink" id="PLTRA0000138" title="National Aquarium Baltimore" href="/topic/science-technology/science/national-aquarium-baltimore-PLTRA0000138.topic">National Aquarium</a> resumes its <a href="http://findlocal.baltimoresun.com/listings/fresh-thoughts-baltimore">Fresh Thoughts</A> series on Sept. 25 with Chris Becker, executive chef, and Omar Semidey, chef de cuisine, of the soon-to-be opened Fleet Street Kitchen. Fresh Thoughts: A Sustainable Seafood Series features educational cooking demonstrations by well-known local chefs, followed by seated dinners. Previous guest chefs have included <a class="taxInlineTagLink" id="PECLB00002602" title="Bryan Voltaggio" href="/topic/lifestyle-leisure/dining-drinking/bryan-voltaggio-PECLB00002602.topic">Bryan Voltaggio</a> (<a class="taxInlineTagLink" id="PLENT000119" title="Volt" href="/topic/lifestyle-leisure/dining-drinking/volt-PLENT000119.topic">Volt</a>), Jason Ambrose (Salt), Thomas Dunklin (B&O American Brasserie), and Chad Wells (Alewife). The evening will conclude with a stroll through the Aquarium. Tickets are $99.

( Photo courtesy National Aquarium / September 4, 2012 )

The National Aquarium resumes its Fresh Thoughts series on Sept. 25 with Chris Becker, executive chef, and Omar Semidey, chef de cuisine, of the soon-to-be opened Fleet Street Kitchen. Fresh Thoughts: A Sustainable Seafood Series features educational cooking demonstrations by well-known local chefs, followed by seated dinners. Previous guest chefs have included Bryan Voltaggio (Volt), Jason Ambrose (Salt), Thomas Dunklin (B&O American Brasserie), and Chad Wells (Alewife). The evening will conclude with a stroll through the Aquarium. Tickets are $99.

  • Email E-mail
  • add to Twitter Twitter
  • add to Facebook Facebook
  • Home Delivery Home Delivery

Post Your Comment Below

Around the web A taste of what local bloggers are serving
>> Submit a blog: Give your favorite voices exposure
ABOUT THE BLOGGER

Richard Gorelick was appointed The Baltimore Sun's restaurant critic in September 2010. Before joining the paper staff fulltime, he contributed freelance criticism and features articles about food to area and regional publications. Along the way, he dispatched for short-distance trucking companies, shilled for cultural non-profits, and assisted in cognitive neurology research — never the subject, always the control. He takes restaurants seriously but not himself, and his favorite restaurant is the one you love, too.
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Google Plus
  • RSS Feeds
  • Mobile Alerts and Apps

Food videos

SPECIAL COVERAGE