IN Pine-Richland Fall 2017 | 页面 20

Chow Time! Izabella’s Gourmet Chow inspires young chefs to explore flavors of the world. A s a child growing up in Moscow, Russia, Sofya Stearns spent years in the kitchen, cooking alongside her grandmother, an experienced cook. Decades later, she would find herself in America, whipping up healthy home- cooked meals for others as a personal chef. Stearns, 48, is the owner of Izabella’s Gourmet Chow, a personal chef and catering service. Through her business, she also offers cooking classes as well as private cooking lessons and birthday parties. “Since I was 4 years of age, I always was in the kitchen with Granny,” says Stearns, who lives in Wexford. “I learned that food is essential for looking good and for your soul, mind and well-being.” Stearns, along with her mother, grandmother and twin sister, immigrated to Chicago in 1985. After she graduated from high school, the family moved to Monterey, Calif. She then graduated from George Washington University in D.C., majoring in international finance and marketing. After living in New York City and Chicago, she moved to Pittsburgh in 2009 for her husband’s work. “Food was always my passion. I loved cooking shows and watching chefs make magic in the kitchen, which inspired my passion for BY JENNIFER BROZAK 18 724.942.0940 TO ADVERTISE | Pine-Richland cooking,” she explains. “However, I felt the shows were missing aspects of culture. I wanted to know more: the origin that dishes came from, the culture and the nature of the ingredients used.” Stearns launched Izabella’s Gourmet Chow in February 2016, serving as a personal chef to families in the Wexford, Mars, Cranberry and Treesdale areas. The business is named after her 5-year-old daughter, who is named in honor of Sofya’s beloved grandmother. She held her first cooking class for children in October, and the response was immediate. “Quite honestly, the interest has been overwhelming. In addition to private events, and parents and grandparents wanting the kids to attend cooking classes and camps, kids love the idea of having a cooking/baking party,” she notes. “Parents are absolutely in love with the idea that the kids not only learn how to cook, but learn so much more—making a dish from scratch in addition to learning social studies and math lessons, where a particular dish originated from, where the country is on the globe, which continent, the capital and major cities of the country and, last but not least, learning about museums, significant painters and sculptors. Kids love educating their parents and siblings with the material they gained from the class. I always wanted to spread my knowledge onto the kids I teach.”