Margaret (Peg) Kern has been fulfilling her clients’ travel dreams since 2004 when she joined The International Kitchen as a tour coordinator after leaving academia. She has been part owner of The International Kitchen since 2015, and assumed primary ownership in 2024. In her time as president of TIK, Peg has expanded the company to include more trips, new destinations, custom itineraries, and a robust food and travel blog.

Raised in a small town in Ohio, Peg always wanted to see the world. She started doing so by heading to New York City for college, where she graduated cum laude from Columbia University. One of the highlights of college for her was a junior year spent in Rome, Italy, studying Italian literature and art at the University of Rome la Sapienza. Her interest in travel blossomed into an intense and enduring love for Italy.

After returning to Rome for a year (and enjoying work in a couple of Roman
eateries), she headed to Chicago for graduate school. Peg received her M.A. and Ph.D. in Italian literature from the University of Chicago, graduating with honors, where she then taught for two years as part of the Master of Arts Program in the Humanities.

By 2004 Peg was ready to leave academia behind to pursue other interests, and when she saw an ad for a boutique tour company that specialized in food-themed tours, she jumped at the chance to the join the team. That company was The International Kitchen, one of the premier providers of culinary vacations and food-themed travel since 1994.

Having lived for several years in Italy during the preceding decade, Peg was particularly keen to introduce travelers to the authentic Italy she knew and loved, but she quickly expanded her areas of expertise to include the rest of Europe, most notably France and Spain. She stepped back from the company for a few years to start a family but came back full force in 2015 when she assumed co-ownership of the business. She has instilled the travel bug in her sons and enjoys traveling with the whole family to check out cooking classes and food tours in destinations around the world.

Peg’s experience in traveling and living in Europe has made her well suited to plan trips for her culinary travelers, and she couples that with years of experience in restaurants and the food service industry. Although her work in the food industry began inauspiciously in high school at the local McDonald’s, she has worked at restaurants and bars in the US and Rome, and worked as a private chef on Long Island.

A consummate foodie, Peg enjoys cooking for her family, entertaining friends at lavish dinner parties, and judging her sons’ home-cooking competitions. Some of her favorite food activities include perfecting her bone broth, making bread from her 30-year old Italian Mother yeast, and exploring the many ethnic cuisines so wonderfully available in Chicago.

Peg’s favorite destination remains Italy, including the regions of Lazio, Sardinia, Campania, Tuscany, Umbria, Sicily, Abruzzo, Lombardy, the Veneto, and Piedmont – to name a few.

Her philosophy when it comes to writing about food and travel is to share what she knows and to explore what she loves.


Posted

May 28, 2014

By Peg Kern

Venetian Cocktails: Spritz and Bellinis

Filed Under  Kitchen Tips, Recipes, Wines & Spirits

Try visiting Venice and you will run across one thing that is more abundant than the canals: the "spritz." Doesn't sound Italian to you? How about "Bellini," have you heard of that one? Both are wine-based cocktails that combine a sparkling prosecco wine and some type of mixer. Both are fabulously yummy staples of Venetian life. And the spritz has pretty much become the go-to drink of the staff of… Read
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Posted

May 26, 2014

By Peg Kern

Beaches in Italy

Filed Under  Destination Features, Travel Tips

Beaches and cooking lessons might not seem a match made in heaven, but a number of our most popular cooking vacations are in seaside locations such as the Amalfi Coast, Puglia, Sicily, the Italian Riviera, and the Cinque Terre. What could be better than a morning cooking lesson, lunch to follow, and then an afternoon relaxing on the beach? Or a trip to see the local fishermen as they bring… Read
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Posted

May 23, 2014

By Peg Kern

Norcia's Chianina Beef

Filed Under  Destination Features, Food History, Travel Tips

Umbria is the setting for our best-selling cooking vacation "Food Lover's Paradise in Norcia," and is the famed home of numerous gastronomic specialities. None is perhaps so revered as Chianina cattle, which produces the sumptuous beef prized the world over. Chianina (pronounced key-a-KNEE-na) is the basis for some of Italy's signature dishes, such as bistecca alla fiorentina and carpaccio. Although originally used as draught animals, agricultural changes after the second… Read
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Posted

May 16, 2014

By Peg Kern

Italian Recipe for Sagnette Pasta with Chickpeas and Shrimp

Filed Under  Destination Features, Food History, Recipes

Part of every cooking vacation in Italy is dedicated to pasta, a staple throughout the country. But each region has its own particular shapes of pasta, as well as its own sauces to accompany it. For this today's blog, we feature a recipe from our cooking vacation Sapori d'Abruzzo for a traditional dish that uses both legumes and seafood, thereby combining the traditions of farming and fishing that are so… Read
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Posted

May 12, 2014

By Peg Kern

Taroz with Valtellina Casera DOP-Cheese

Filed Under  Destination Features, Food History, Recipes

Many typical dishes that hail from the Valtellina Valley — situated in northern Italy among the Alps — feature vegetables grown in the lush area. Taroz, pronounced tarozch, is one such dish. While not as well-known as the Valtellina's prized pizzoccheri, a buckwheat flour noodle for which the region is famous, this antipasto dish highlights everything wonderful about the area, from the potatoes grown in the mountain village of Sacco to… Read
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Posted

May 12, 2014

By Peg Kern

"Il Crudo Barese," or The Tradition of Raw Fish in Bari

Filed Under  Destination Features, Food History, Travel Tips

Sushi is not only found in Japanese cuisine. In Bari, the capital of Puglia (Apulia), there is a tradition of eating raw fish that goes back many centuries. Whether octopus, sea urchins, or indigenous types of fish, you'll find locals eating the fresh catches in the freshest way possible. As our partner Augusto of "A Culinary Adventure in Puglia" explains, "eating raw fish is not only a secular tradition, but… Read
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Posted

May 7, 2014

By Peg Kern

A Guide to Tequila and Mexican Spirits

Filed Under  Kitchen Tips, Wines & Spirits

Everyone has heard of it, and our clients sure enjoy it on our culinary vacations to Mexico, but what exactly goes into making a tequila? What is the difference between tequila and mezcal? And are there other ways to drink it besides tequila shots or margaritas? Browse our culinary tours in Mexico. Tequila is a region-specific name, sort of like Champagne, meaning that it's a particular type of spirit hailing… Read
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Posted

May 5, 2014

By Peg Kern

Cooking a la Mexicana

Filed Under  Destination Features, Special Occasions

Happy Día de la Batalla de Puebla! Contrary to popular misconception here in the United States, May 5th is not Mexican Independence Day (that would be on September 16th). Rather, Cinco de Mayo commemorates the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862 when, outnumbered two-to-one, the Mexican army defeated 8,000 invading French soldiers near the city of Puebla. Over the years the holiday has come to be a general celebration… Read
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Posted

April 30, 2014

By Peg Kern

Wine Lover's Italy - A Guide to Tuscany's Vin Santo

Filed Under  Destination Features, Travel Tips, Wines & Spirits

Italians have developed the knack for making wonderful alcoholic drinks to accompany their desserts, and the result is the many digestivi and dessert wines you will find to end your meal in Italy. One of the most famous examples of this is the delicious Vin Santo, which illustrates how Italians pair a sweet wine with a dry dessert (in the case of Vin Santo with the well-known almond biscotti, or… Read
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Posted

April 25, 2014

By Peg Kern

An Italian Recipe: Bucatini con Sarde

Filed Under  Destination Features, Recipes

We're heading into another weekend, and at The International Kitchen we love to use our Friday blog to give our readers new recipes to try. This weekend, why not go Sicilian and make Chef Vincenzo's pasta dish, Bucatini con sarde (Bucatini with sardines)? Sicilians love mixing flavors (sweet, sour, salty), and you get a bit of everything in this classic dish. Browse all our cooking vacations in Sicily. Bucatini con… Read
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