As they drop in for meals or pass through on tours, visitors to the North Campus Residential Expansion's (NCRE) sprawling 1,000-seat dining hall might pause to observe white-coated students or staff testing recipes inside a glass-enclosed kitchen.
Working at the dozen sleek cooking elements providing up to 24 stations might be a meeting of Food for Contemporary Living, a popular class required for future dietitians, or university chefs honing their skills or fine-tuning a fresh pasta dish alongside nutrition researchers.
Welcome to the Discovery Kitchen, a state-of the-art teaching kitchen now under construction through a partnership between Cornell Dining and the Division of Nutritional Sciences (DNS). The partners expect their shared lab to enhance menus, dietary education and food literacy across campus, and hope the kitchen classroom’s prominent placement in the university’s newest residential community highlights the connections between food and research, living and learning.
“We all need to understand the role of nutrition in human health and well-being, and it’s exciting for undergraduates to be introduced to this topic,” said Patricia Cassano, the Alan D. Mathios Professor and director of DNS. “But to be able to do it in the context of the cutting-edge Discovery Kitchen will open up new possibilities that we’ve never had before.”
Dustin Cutler, executive director of Cornell Dining in Student and Campus Life, called the facility a game-changer for his 1,000-person organization.
“This collaboration will help grow awareness of Dining’s commitment around culinary innovation, nutrition and sustainability,” he said, “and allow us to enhance and build upon those efforts.”
For DNS, the kitchen modernizes and replaces a capability displaced by renovations to Martha Van Rensselaer Hall, which could no longer accommodate a food lab. Dining and the NCRE emerged as ideal partners for a new facility, said Kristine Mahoney, director of facilities and operations for the College of Human Ecology, which houses DNS jointly with the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.