MET Professor Elias Quoted in Article on Holiday “Hotdishes”

Where did the Midwestern holiday staple “hotdish” come from? And what makes it different than a casserole? In an article featured on North Dakota’s Valley News Live, Dr. Megan Elias, associate professor of the practice and director of MET’s MLA program in Gastronomy, offered some perspective, discussing the rise in popularity of the casserole. Read […]

Competition Organized by Arts Administration Students Leads to Promising Pitch

A pair of MET students organized a BU chapter of a national innovation competition, and now the chapter victors will try and take their winning idea to the next step at regionals. Considered “the Nobel prize for students,” the Hult Prize is an annual competition that sees students generate start-up style solutions to social issues. […]

Chef Pépin Dishes on Eventful Visit with Obamas

As a world-renowned chef, Jacques Pépin has spent time in many high-stakes kitchens and gardens. But in a recent interview with DC Eater, the cofounder of MET’s Certificate Program in the Culinary Arts and MLA in Gastronomy shared a particularly eventful story about how a White House visit made during the Obama years came to require a […]

Boston University Faculty, RINA Pioneers Attend Annual Workshop in Barcelona

BU MET’s Department of Computer Science visited Barcelona, Spain, earlier this year to join the 5th Annual RINA Workshop where they explored the latest in internet architecture and explained their work as principal investigators in a European Commission-funded effort to implement RINA, or Recursive InterNetwork Architecture. Dr. Lou Chitkushev, associate dean for academic affairs, associate […]

Culinary Arts Gala Deemed a Ball

The year-long festivities to honor three decades of Boston University’s Certificate Program in the Culinary Arts kicked off with a smash, with the Boston Globe calling last week’s Culinary Arts 30th Anniversary Gala “a sold-out success.” The celebration of Jacques Pépin, who co-founded the program with Julia Child and Rebecca Alssid, was able to raise […]

MET Alum, Accomplished Restauranteur Shares Turkey Recipe

For 18 years, Worcester’s Flying Rhino Café & Watering Hole has cooked up meals that are as unconventional as they are delicious. Its married co-owners met during their days as students at Boston University, where Paul Barber (MET’87) studied hospitality—even appearing on television with co-founder of the Master of Liberal Arts in Gastronomy and Certificate […]

Shedding Light on the Spooky Origins of Halloween

During an appearance on Vermont Public Radio’s But Why?, Dr. Regina Hansen, faculty coordinator of the Metropolitan College online Undergraduate Degree Completion Program (UDCP) and a master lecturer of rhetoric at BU’s College of General Studies, explained the history and traditions from which our current Halloween holiday traditions were born. Listen here.