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9 Cooking and Drink Courses to Sharpen Your Kitchen Skills in the DC Area

Master how to make the perfect paella, decorate a cake, or Italian dish.

Written by Ike Allen
and Josie Reich
| Published on March 31, 2025
Tweet Share
Skillette classes are designed to teach different techniques, depending on the season. Photograph by Birch Thomas for Skillette.

9 Cooking and Drink Courses to Sharpen Your Kitchen Skills in the DC Area

Master how to make the perfect paella, decorate a cake, or Italian dish.

Written by Ike Allen
and Josie Reich
| Published on March 31, 2025
Tweet Share
Contents
  1. Paella
  2. Cooking Skills
  3. International Cuisines
  4. Italian Cuisine
  5. Cheese
  6. Cake Decorating
  7. Wine
  8. Shuck an Oyster
  9. Scramble Eggs

Spanish Getaway

Paella

location_on Lo­cation shared after sign-up

language Website

Even if you know how to make paella, you may not have a two-foot-wide Valencian paella pan at home. But chef Gustavo Huapalla does, and he breaks it out to demonstrate the proper technique for the classic Spanish dish in his Shaw backyard. For larger class-es, Huapalla moves to the Latin food hall La Cosecha near Union Market. The paella class, “Flavors of Spain,” costs $115; hands-on courses in Peruvian, Chi­lean, and Argentine cuisines go up to $135 a person.

 

Disassembly Required
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Cooking Skills

location_on Edgewood

language Website

The spiffy industrial kitchen at Mess Hall in Edgewood is a culinary incubator where rising chefs can launch restaurants of their own. It’s also a place where aspiring chefs—and everyone else—can learn serious skills such as breaking down a whole 180-pound tuna into sashimi, preparing pufferfish sushi, and understanding vermouth and sake. One recent high­light: a lamb-­butchering class with Maydan chef Rose Previte. Most classes include dinner or a take-home component and cost $75 to $90.

 

World Capital
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International Cuisines

location_on Penn Quarter

language Website

The Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital offers an international slate of cooking classes. This spring, offerings include basic knife skills, a course centered on Korean barbecue, and classes from chefs such as Peter Chang and Erik Bruner-Yang. Students can also learn how to make dumplings, sausage, and moules frites. Classes cost $49 to $200.

 

Serious Eats
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Cooking Skills

location_on Union Market District

language Website

Take classes in kitchen skills at Skillette, a cooking program in La Cosecha market. The lineup of instructors includes chefs such as Rachel Bindel (of the restaurants Gravitas and Michele’s) and Emily Horn (pastry chef at Blair House, the President’s guest quarters), among others. Each month features four different lessons—though you can pick and choose which to attend—as well as seasonal recipes, such as chilled soups in summer and hearty braises in fall. Classes are $50 each, or you can sign up for a four-class series for $185.

 

That’s Amore
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Italian Cuisine

location_on Union Market District

language Website

Many of chef Daniele Catalani’s classes at Toscana Market in La Cosecha focus on regions or cities in Italy: Tuscany (tortelli and pici pasta with wildboar ragù), Sicily (branzino, spaghetti alle vongole, and cannoli), and Torino (taglierini with white truffles). Others are hands-on crash courses in a single artisanal item such as burrata, limoncello, or everyone’s favorite Roman dish, cacio e pepe. Classes are $120.

 

Gouda News
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Cheese

location_on Mount Pleasant

language Website

You don’t need any special knowledge to love cheese, but Each Peach, the gourmet corner store in Mount Pleasant, helps you appreciate its many regional forms as well as figure out the right wine pairings. Each Peach hosts the event about once a month at neighboring cookbook shop Bold Fork Books. The shop also offers customized private classes.

 

Back to School
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Cooking Skills

location_on Arlington

language Website

Classes at Cookology are more immersive than the typical lesson—and the next-best thing to culinary school. The Ballston kitchen offers hands-on classes for all ages, including half-day, all-day, and multi-day cooking camps for kids five to 17. (There are also occasional kid-friendly options such as pizza making and gingerbread decorating.) For grownups, there’s continuing education: a six-week boot camp ($900) in which you learn essentials such as knife skills and fine French recipes. A single class starts at $79.

 

Sweet Escape
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Cake Decorating

location_on Fairfax

language Website

Have you found your way onto CakeTok, scrolling through videos of pros decorating desserts? Go from spectator to student at Fran’s Cake and Candy Supplies in Fairfax, where lessons every weekend cover topics such as fondant and piping. “Introduction to Cake Decorating” is $120; specialty workshops, such as one on TikTok-worthy geode cakes, can run up to $185.

 

Grape Expectations
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Wine

location_on Friendship Heights

language Website

Gain the knowledge to navigate a restaurant wine list at Capital Wine School. Beginner classes, focusing on how to taste wine and pair different varieties with food, start at $95 and run two hours. For serious sommelier hopefuls, the school also offers levels 1 through 4 of the Wine & Spirit Education Trust certification course.

 

Learn How Now

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Shuck an Oyster

Begin by rinsing your chilled oyster to ensure that no dirt is caught inside. Wearing gloves, hold the oyster with a towel.

Insert a sturdy oyster knife that won’t break or bend through the back of the bivalve between the two shells. Turn it “like a doorknob,” Douglas says, until the top shell disconnects.

Once the two halves separate, slide the knife along the shell to sever the adductor muscle, the only part of the oyster connected to the shell.

 

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Scramble Eggs

Upgrade breakfast with these pointers from Haidar Karoum, chef and owner of the Navy Yard restaurant Chloe.

Use a thick-bottomed pan, or any kind that distributes heat evenly. The key, Karoum says, is that “you want to go gentle–you never want to have high heat.”

Add butter to the pan, approximately one tablespoon per three eggs. While the butter melts, beat your eggs in a separate dish, adding salt and pepper.

Pour eggs into the pan and stir in a folding motion using a rubber spatula. Karoum likes his eggs “slightly creamy,” which can be achieved by adding a tablespoon of crème fraîche as the eggs finish cooking.

Illustrations by Claire McCracken.
This article appears in the December 2024 issue of Washingtonian.

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Ike Allen
Ike Allen
Assistant Editor
Josie Reich
Josie Reich
Editorial Fellow

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