Pitchin' In
3 Seasons
After a 24-year career as a five-star, high profile chef, Lynn Crawford left her post as Executive Chef at the Four Seasons Hotel Manhattan for the ultimate gastronomic adventure. She craved a more intimate relationship with the ingredients and the people who harvest them. Now she’s heading on the road to meet the people who produce the finest ingredients at the source. Fun and rollicking Pitchin’ In is a celebration of food’s power to connect us all.
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22:07Episode 1
Pitchin' In: Cream
Episode 1
Chef Lynn loves to quote Julia Child, who used to say: “If you don’t want to use butter, use cream.” As far as Lynn is concerned, life would be empty without dairy fat, so she’s found an organic farmer in Minnesota who produces some of America’s finest-His pride and joy is his 43% cream. Dairy is...
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22:07Episode 2
Pitchin' In: Chicken
Episode 2
Chef Lynn loves a roast chicken—now she’s found heritage French birds that taste the way chicken used to taste. But raising them is hard and dirty work, and even requires Chef Lynn to sleep overnight with 5000 baby chicks.
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22:07Episode 3
Pitchin' In: Mussels
Episode 3
The clear and clean waters around Prince Edward Island are home to some of the best shellfish in the world, especially mussels. They are great just steamed in their own juices or with white wine. But Chef Lynn can’t wait to get her hands to show the locals how much she can do with them.
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22:07Episode 4
Pitchin' In: Crab
Episode 4
Chef Lynn will admit that she prefers Crab to any other seafood—including Lobster. So she’s thrilled to go out on the open waters off Vancouver Island to haul in trap after trap of the finest Dungeness Crab in the world. Tipping her toque to her Asian mentors, she prepares a Cantonese inspired cr...
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22:07Episode 5
Pitchin' In: Bison
Episode 5
Bison was once almost extinct. But a small group of ranchers have worked to bring them back and now bison is becoming a popular more healthy alternative to beef. But these majestic creatures are raised almost wild, and Chef Lynn has to come face to face with her fears when she has to handle them.
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22:07Episode 6
Pitchin' In: Avocado
Episode 6
Avocado is almost always served as an appetizer or used to enhance a dish. But Chef Lynn decides she wants to make it the star of a meal. Turns out the farmer she meets is a retired army officer and puts her through a serious avocado boot camp.
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22:07Episode 7
Pitchin' In: Berries
Episode 7
Cloudberries or Bake Apples, as they are called in Newfoundland, can fetch up to $60 a gallon, because they are so rare and so tasty. But Chef Lynn has to battle her fear of heights to gather enough of them for a meal that celebrates the local tradition of living off the land.
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22:07Episode 8
Pitchin' In: Potatoes
Episode 8
According to Chef Lynn, “ a day without a potato is like a day without sunshine”. So she’s keen to get down and dirty to dig up a variety of heirloom potatoes in Alberta. Trouble is, it’s all about operating heavy and dangerous machinery, and that freaks her out.
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22:07Episode 9
Pitchin' In: Wild Boar
Episode 9
Perth County in Southwestern Ontario is famous for some of the best pork in Canada. But it’s also home to one of only a handful of farmer’s who are raising wild boar. Inspired by the possibilities, Lynn has a local butcher prepare wild boar bacon for her.
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22:07Episode 10
Pitchin' In: Squid
Episode 10
Squid fishing is highly competitive and the people who do it are hard core. But that doesn’t stop the intrepid Chef Lynn. Battling the cold and the darkness, Lynn goes out for an all-night adventure.
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22:07Episode 11
Pitchin' In: Catfish
Episode 11
Farmed fish is the way of the future, so Chef Lynn decides to check out the classic fish in Southern cuisine.
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22:07Episode 12
Pitchin' In: Pecans
Episode 12
The plumpest and richest pecans in the world can be found in north central Texas, and it’s there that Chef Lynn finds a family farm that’s producing the tastiest nuts she’s ever had.
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22:07Episode 13
Pitchin' In: Limes
Episode 13
Chef Lynn calls limes the underdog of the citrus family because they are relegated to very few dishes in North American cuisine. In the orchards she visits, many varieties of lime are grown, some she’s never tasted, and her imagination goes wild for all the great dishes she can prepare with them.