Taking the heat for a charitable cause

This overweight columnist is going to fix up a feast

Advertisement

Advertise with us

I don’t wish to brag, but I am once again putting my legendary culinary skills on the line in a sincere and humanitarian effort to make the world a better and more delicious place for everyone.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 22/09/2018 (2856 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

I don’t wish to brag, but I am once again putting my legendary culinary skills on the line in a sincere and humanitarian effort to make the world a better and more delicious place for everyone.

What I am trying to say is that on Monday evening, from 6 to 8 p.m., I will be perspiring like a Thanksgiving turkey in a professional kitchen, helping an award-winning executive chef whip up kid-friendly food for 60 economically disadvantaged children and their parents or guardians.

This special night out, organized by Variety, the Children’s Charity of Manitoba, is being held at Chef Wayne Martin’s newest eatery, Capital Broadway, the sister restaurant to Capital Grill & Bar, which he opened in May 2015.

SUPPLIED
Philanthropist Louis Trepel (from left), Capital Broadway chef Wayne Martin and Variety, the Children’s Charity of Manitoba CEO Jeff Liba at Capital Broadway have organized a dinner for 60 disadvantaged children and their guardians.
SUPPLIED Philanthropist Louis Trepel (from left), Capital Broadway chef Wayne Martin and Variety, the Children’s Charity of Manitoba CEO Jeff Liba at Capital Broadway have organized a dinner for 60 disadvantaged children and their guardians.

I will be there wielding sharp knives and slaving over a steaming grill for one simple reason: my philanthropist buddy Louis Trepel, a founding member of Variety who works tirelessly behind the scenes to organize events such as this, thought it would be hilarious to see a 300-pound humour columnist pretending to be a chef.

When Louis asks me to do something, I have learned to just say “yes,” because he is both persistent and persuasive.

Last year, for instance, he talked me into (a) dragging my overstuffed stuff on stage for a performance by Thunder from Down Under, an Australian all-male exotic dance review; and (b) portraying Shermy the hapless shepherd in a special performance of Manitoba Theatre for Young People’s holiday production of A Charlie Brown Double Bill.

When Louis learned his buddy Wayne was going to open a new downtown restaurant, he instantly pitched the idea of holding a special dinner for Variety kids.

“When we heard Wayne was opening a new restaurant, I said I’ve got a great idea for you — pack the place with Variety kids and their families,” Louis told me Thursday as we sat in the dining room at Capital Broadway, which doesn’t officially open until early October.

“Then we thought, ‘Why not get the kids to help make the food.’ You can be Wayne’s sous chef, Doug. You can start off in the kitchen preparing food and you’ll supervise some of the kids, showing them how to make some things. I know with your leadership skills, it’s going to be great. You’ll have a lot of fun.”

The point is, Wayne agreed to donate his restaurant, staff and all the food and on Monday night I will be there trying not to sever a medically important limb as we whip up a menu of sliders, mini pizzas and rigatoni, along with assorted fruits, veggies and dips.

Prepare to be extremely jealous, because they are going to give me an official apron and a chef-style hat to wear.

“I think you can roll out the dough and make the pizzas with the kids,” Wayne explained as movers dropped off chairs at the new eatery.

“You can flip some burgers, too. I don’t want the kids near the knives or the stove, but they can help mix the dips for the fruits and veggies.”

For his part, this longtime chef, who has won awards throughout the world, insisted he is not breaking a sweat about having an untrained humour columnist wandering around his shiny new kitchen.

Which is when Louis chirped: “I’m worried. I know you love cooking, but I’ve never seen you in action and this is going to be busy. I just want to make sure you can deliver under pressure.”

Wayne sought to reassure me by pointing out I would have to come about an hour before the dinner starts for a brief training session.

“No offence,” he added, “but I will have at least one real cook there to help out.”

Feeling somewhat put upon, I scowled and said: “You know, I’m a pretty good cook, if I do say so myself.”

Which is when Louis (sadly, this really happened) laughed so hard he spewed coffee on the front of my shirt. “If you get overwhelmed with what’s going on in the kitchen, they can always put you on dishes,” he said, sighing.

Also with us Thursday morning at the restaurant was Jeff Liba, chief executive officer of Variety, which provides specialized equipment, programs and services for kids with special needs in Manitoba.

“Louis pitched me the idea and I loved it,” Liba said, beaming. “We love to do special things for the families we help. This is a huge night out for them. The cost of raising a child with special needs is huge, so they don’t have the money to be able to go out and enjoy themselves like other people do.

“It’s tough. If you’re the family of a child with special needs, going out is a challenge. They can also worry about everyone around them paying attention to their child’s disability. So to have 60 people that are all in this together, families of kids with disabilities, it’s a comfortable environment and they can relax and enjoy it.”

The Variety organizers were just a little misty-eyed over the fact Wayne was willing to throw open his doors to help a bunch of kids in need — and give an overweight newspaper columnist a chance to practise his culinary skills.

“We’re excited,” Liba said. “We’re thankful to Wayne for his generosity.”

“It takes a very special person and a company with heart to be so generous,” Louis added.

Chef Wayne shrugged and said he’s just happy to give back to the community.

Monday’s special dinner will be a great dry run for his new place.

“This will be the first time firing everything up at the new restaurant,” he said, smiling.

“It’s a chance to test everything and make sure we don’t burn anything.”

Which is when Liba quipped: “What kid doesn’t love burnt pizza?”

Unfortunately, with this columnist in the kitchen, there’s a good chance we’ll find out.

doug.speirs@freepress.mb.ca

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Fringe reviews #1: Choose your fighter, then your venue

Free Press review team 9 minute read Preview

Fringe reviews #1: Choose your fighter, then your venue

Free Press review team 9 minute read Yesterday at 4:20 PM CDT

Absolutely not a cult, Afeni, #Black Eye, Chekov Shorts, Fakespeare, The Ghost of a Flea, A Sexy Pigeon Show, The Shelter, Things That Go Bump, Viento.

Read
Yesterday at 4:20 PM CDT

Home residents turn to agency after operator lays off 70 staff who unionized

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Home residents turn to agency after operator lays off 70 staff who unionized

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Residents of a Winnipeg retirement home have taken matters into their own hands after the majority of the facility’s home-care aides were laid off following their unionization.

A committee of residents have banded together to work with a private agency to staff Shaftesbury Park Retirement Residence after many of its existing aides complete their final shift on Monday.

“It is heartbreaking because there are a lot of vulnerable people here who are not capable of advocating for themselves,” said Joelle Robinson, who has lived at the home since 2023 after she suffered a brain aneurysm. “We’re trying very hard to make it so that our residents aren’t completely up the creek.”

Robinson, a retired lawyer, joined Terry Hopkinson and several other residents of the South Tuxedo home to create a committee and send out a request for proposal to eight companies that specialized in seniors care.

Read
Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Popular low-price grocery program celebrates first year

Malak Abas 5 minute read Preview

Popular low-price grocery program celebrates first year

Malak Abas 5 minute read 5:26 PM CDT

When Audrey Foley runs out of food for her four cats, or struggles to pay for groceries for her and her mother, she turns to a community-managed store in her neighbourhood.

Her list contains the staples: bread, pasta, juice — all sold through the the Jason Schreyer Memorial Grocery Affordable Access Program, at prices far below what you’d find at a supermarket.

Foley said the program has made a substantial difference in her family’s ability to get by as the cost of living continues to rise.

“I would do without things if I had to,” Foley, 52, said Friday. “It’s very beneficial, overall, because the prices are very reasonable.”

Read
5:26 PM CDT

‘Weather whiplash’ leaves Winnipeg businesses sore

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read Preview

‘Weather whiplash’ leaves Winnipeg businesses sore

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read 7:29 PM CDT

A spring and summer of intense weather has wreaked havoc on southern Manitoba, slamming it with torrential rain, tornadoes, intense heat and, now, wildfire smoke.

The Beer Can, a popular summer patio located next to the Granite Curling Club, had to close early Thursday due to a thunderstorm. Prior to that, customers had to deal with a blanket of smoke that rolled into town from wildfires raging in Ontario.

“We’re just keeping (staff) on standby and adapting to the weather as the days come,” said supervisor Kisis Angeconeb.

Winnipeg has seen its share of “weather whiplash” — the phenomenon of violent swings between extreme conditions in a short period of time.

Read
7:29 PM CDT

Legion celebrates 100 years with surge in memberships

Tiago Resko 3 minute read Preview

Legion celebrates 100 years with surge in memberships

Tiago Resko 3 minute read 5:35 PM CDT

The Royal Canadian Legion has experienced a surge in membership just in time for its centennial.

“It’s quite a feat — not many organizations last for 100 years, and the Legion seems to have still managed to hang in there for 100 years,” said John Edwards at Legion 119 on McDermot Avenue.

The Legion formed in Winnipeg in 1925 when a group of veterans met at the Marlborough Hotel to unify their advocacy organizations.

On July 17, 1926, the Free Press reported the group had been incorporated through an act of Parliament as the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League, giving legal effect to the work the veterans had started.

Read
5:35 PM CDT

Winnipeg Fringe Festival: 2026 show reviews

Winnipeg Free Press 1 minute read Preview

Winnipeg Fringe Festival: 2026 show reviews

Winnipeg Free Press 1 minute read Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2026

Not sure what to see at this year's Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival? All of the Free Press’s reviews will be published here.  Find a show and click to read its review.

Read
Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2026