Omaha Interview: College World Series Media Tasting, Alec Woockman

OmahaNebraska.com interviewed Alec Woockman,Executive Chef at Levy Restaurants.

What are the inspirations for this year’s offerings for the College World Series?

I try to stay updated on the trends as much as I can.

Also, these are flavors I personally like, and I think they fit well in the ballpark.

I take inspiration from a lot of things and Chris Myer. Everything from a sandwich with a lot of pickles on it to a vegetarian fried cauliflower curry aioli and sriracha. I think there is a broad spectrum of things that I like that I think also work well in a ballpark.

What are some of the items that you are most excited about?

Right, so some of the things I am most excited about are first the fried chicken sandwich.

I really wanted to overwhelm it with pickle ingredients.

I think you either love pickles or love pickles and I am the latter so . . . I took bread and butter pickles, aioli, a sweet and creamy aioli. Then we have fried pickles. We also have these really nice long crinkle-cut dill pickles that just hang over the bun.

I think one of the most fun items that we have is a shared item called The Slugger, an Italian beef sandwich.

So, it’s pretty classic Italian beef. We braise it in house with beef stock, Italian seasonings, and pepperoncini.

We braise that, shred it, and save that braising liquid to make an au jus which we serve along with the sandwich.

A 14-inch, full loaf of bread that we cut open ourselves, put a pound of Italian beef in, and top with cheese and we toast it in our pizza oven.

Then we top that with giardiniera and grated Parmesan cheese and add a cup of au jus.

We cut the sandwich in three pieces. It comes in a nice box with a handle on it that you can carry.

I say it easily feeds three really hungry people, but I think probably you can feed four.

What is your inspiration for the shrimp po’ boy? I’ve never seen that at a ballpark.

So, a shrimp po’ boy . . . it’s a very traditional shrimp po’ boy. We didn’t do anything too crazy. It’s fried shrimp on a hoagie with shredded lettuce and tomato and a remoulade.

It’s just a flavor that I think should be at a ballpark. I think it will appeal to the masses. I think it is missing from this environment. You don’t see shrimp po boys. Why not shrimp po’ boys?

Another very classic flavor this year is our Chicken Parm Sandwich . . . mozzarella, marina . . .I think it fills a slot that a lot of people will enjoy.

How did you become a chef?

I’ve loved cooking from a very young age. I’ve been cooking since I was 16 years old.

A few years went by and I went to culinary school and started cooking in restaurants.

I started with CHI, as well as the ballpark here. I’ve been here with this company for about seven years now.

And so, I have been just climbing the ladder.

This week I’ve been very excited. I’ve been wanting to be here for a long time.

I can’t imagine how hard this was, but amazing it is.

Yes. It’s absolutely amazing. Obviously, I love to cook, so getting to do this every day is dream come true.

I would say you are coming up with ideas and creating recipes.

I would say that it gets easier the more time you are doing it.

Starting at the beginning, it is a little harder to put this together, but I think we did a really good job this year in what we are offering. Yeah, it’s a blast!

Thank you.

Absolutely.

Omaha Media Event: College World Series Food Tasting 2022-Images and Description, 15 June

Here are some of our photographs and descriptions of the CWS food sampled at the College World Series Food Tasting 2022 at Charles Schwab Field Omaha:

So how can you have more than one favorite? Go the the College World Series this year and find out for yourself and sample these restaurant quality offerings.

Up next? More food and interviews! Please visit back later to view.

 

 

Omaha Interview: College World Series Pre-Game Press Conference, Omaha Mayor

OmahaNebraska.com interviewed Omaha mayor, Jean Stothert, after the College World Series Pre-Game Press Conference.

There have been many changes over the last many years from Rosenblatt to here. What are some of the more noticeable changes and what were your favorite changes?

Well, I mean we built a brand-new stadium, a brand-new state of the art stadium to keep the College World Series for 25 years. And so there’s been just a multitude of changes. But I think the most important thing is working with the CWS and the NCAA and MECA that we were able to create a state of the art stadium that will keep the College World Series here for years.

What my parts are my favorite? I would say I love this out here [motions to the entire stadium] that it gives people a lot more room to walk around. I love the big screen. I love how the seating is.  It’s just a beautiful stadium so it all works together.

Do you have any favorite baseball memories? I am sure that it’s hard to pick just one or two.

I can’t say that I have one favorite memory. I enjoyed coming in College World Series when it was at Rosenblatt.

I was here for the first game in the new stadium. I think from Omahan perspective, I think one of my favorite memories would have to be sitting in this stadium for the first time.

That’s wonderful. I know that it contributes quite a bit to the economic development of Omaha.

It’s estimated that the College World Series brings in between 75 and 80 million dollars.

And so you know, those years that we didn’t have it because of the pandemic . . . the trickle down was enormous because the hotels weren’t filled, the restaurants weren’t filled, bars weren’t filled. It made a big impact. I thought last year showed that because the first year was back in person we had record breaking crowds, and everybody just wanted to get out and be outside and enjoy some activity. And so, it really just encouraged people to be out again, and the College World Series is something that I think Omahans love and can’t wait for every year.

 It’s been wonderful to watch all these things grow and develop and now Gene Leahy Mall is getting its refresh. Can you tell us a little about what is coming up please?

Sure, there’s 90 acres of city owned property. It’s the Gene Leahy Mall. Go east Heartland of America Park and then you go north to Lewis and Clark Park Landing. That whole area. We are working in cooperation with the private sector. And when it’s all done, it’s going to be about a $400 million project and the city put in $50 million and the rest is private.  And so that just really shows that the good public private partnerships that we have in Omaha and the investment that is going on in Omaha right now.

The Gene Leahy Mall will open the first of July, and it’s fantastic. We’ve raised it up to the street level so it’s usable. It’s usable for events. The old mall was pretty, but you couldn’t use it for anything. I think when people get in it, they are going to love it.

I toured it the other day and it’s gorgeous. It has something for everybody. And then it will go on down to Heartland of America Park which will connect us right to the river. That’s our most important geographic feature we have. We live on the river, so that park will go all the way down to the river and then north to Lewis and Clark Landing where a beautiful new STEM museum will be down there that Kiewit is the major funder. That portion of it, Heartland and Lewis and Clark Landing, should be open by August of next year. So everything is moving along. They are right on schedule. They’re keeping it within budget. And it will be done. And it’s going to just spur development downtown and it already has. With Mutual of Omaha coming downtown now and there’s a new hotel in the Landmark. There’s a lot of other investors looking at downtown because of what we are building downtown. We are pretty much building a new downtown.

 It looks so different, but then a lot of the favorite features are still there.

Yes.

 Everyone is so happy that you kept the arch and the slides.

Oh, yeah. Yeah, we wanted to incorporate everything in there and it will remain the Gene Leahy Mall.

Thank you.

Omaha Interview: Kathryn Morrissey, Executive Director, College World Series of Omaha, Inc.-Part One

OmahaNebraska.com with Kathyrn Morrissey here at the College World Series of Omaha, Inc. and we are discussing the upcoming College World Series and all the new changes and go back in time with some reflections.

So you’ve been here the whole time since this particular office opened and then involved with the College World Series before.

We opened our office here across from the ballpark. It’s been five years. So yes, been here during that time. Before that, I actually started on the College World Series 35 years ago. It was with Mutual of Omaha and College World Series. Managing the general admission ticket function was one of my community relations project, so that that was my introduction 35 years ago.

And then my husband actually pitched to Jack Diesing Sr. and Jack Diesing Jr. that perhaps he could provide outsourced management assistance. He said he would do the first College World Series event for free, because Jack Sr. said, “Oh, we don’t have any money in the budget for somebody like that”. And Dan said, “If you see value in what I do, then we’ll talk after the series.” And we’ve been involved ever since.

And in fact, when the NCAA and College World Series of Omaha signed the agreement to keep the College World Series in Omaha through 2036. At that point, the NCAA said we love Omaha, we love your organization, but you’re an all-volunteer organization and board. So you might want to give some thought to full time employees because we see the event just getting bigger and bigger. And so in May of 2010 College World Series became our employer and I was the first executive director.

How many people did you have when you started?

Virtually the same staff size we have now which is four full time and one part time, but I always say we’re like an accordion. As we get closer to the event we expand with the help of wonderful interns. It’s a very much in demand internship. We draw students from all over the country. And then after the College World Series ends, we kind of contract and become our 4.5 staff that we have year round.

When does the prep for the series start?

The prep for next year’s series will begin probably before we end this current year’s series. The reason being we take advantage of the NCAA being in town, their staff being here, to do some early planning for next year. And we literally will get together every year before October 31. That’s a requirement of our contract to talk about what happened in the previous College World Series, what we think are areas of improvement and start the planning process in earnest at that point. But budgeting starts even in September.

So you do the debriefing and any future pivoting planned out almost immediately.

While it’s all fresh in our heads knowing that things will change along the way. But that’s the beauty of a multi-year event. We get to fine tune it. Make it better every year because none of us want to take it for granted. We always want it to be better. So, that’s been our standard practice for as long as I’ve been involved.

I’ve enjoyed it each and every year I’ve been coming and it’s wonderful and I see the fans so happy. There is so much more to the experience, as you know, than just baseball.

It is the one time of year, I should say one of the times a year, that Omaha is a destination. And it’s so much fun for everybody. Whether you’re working in a hotel or a restaurant or you’re just a citizen of the metro area. All those folks do such a great job of making our visitors feel welcome, and making sure that baseball players, the student athletes, feel like rockstars when they’re here. They really love that.

There have been, I’m sure, during the 35 years, huge changes not just Rosenblatt to here. So can you tell us about a few of the big changes? And then maybe one of your favorite changes?

Sure. One of the big changes is just the number of people that put on the event. When I first started working on this, the NCAA said two people, Denis Pope and Jim Wright, and Jim Wright used to spread out credentials, primarily for the media on his hotel room bed. And between the two of them and the city of Omaha staff who managed Rosenblatt and a core group that worked with College World Series of Omaha. That was it. We were kind of a small, but mighty group.
And obviously that has changed over the years. The NCAA sends a lot more people now. A lot more people are involved year round. And I think that’s been a really good development.

Now in terms of things that have happened. Gosh.

I know you can’t tell them all.

I know. Actually just building the North Downtown stadium, that obviously a lot of people had some misgivings about whether or not that would be a good thing because Rosenblatt was such an amazing home from 1950 to 2010. That’s a lot of history. And that was a beautiful place to make memories. But it was not unlike a family home that just got too small for the family. So we needed a bigger space. And the wonderful thing about the stadium helped with the North Downtown development. It’s not been the sole catalyst for that there were early pioneers who were here before us, but I think we’ve done something to help area people become more familiar with the area and certainly the people from out of town.

I love watching economic development. You know-how does a particular business or industry help an area? When is its time maybe up on other factors. People move in with certain jobs and children with leave the areas different jobs. It’s really fascinating. So we’ve [OmahaNebraska.com] been concentrating different neighborhoods like that. I think you’re technically North Downtown?

Yes. North Downtown, we are kind of in the midst of what they call the Makerhood. And you know, it’s just a real creative area, whether it’s some of the lost arts like upholstery and furniture making and such or if it’s the super almost the techie side opposite you know startups and such that are very technology driven. We’re surrounded by all of that in addition to music, and food and beverages and and, it’s really an exciting place to be.

Hot Shops [Hot Shops Art Center, https://www.hotshopsartcenter.org] was also very important to the economics of this area too.

They were one of the early pioneers I mentioned. I mean, they have done amazing things there. And what I’m really excited to see is that the fans have gotten more comfortable venturing out from the stadium and I think they go over to Hot Shops and they visit. And now we hope that they extend their reach maybe a little bit further into Millworks Commons and you know they go a little bit north, a little bit west.

And certainly they haven’t forgotten some of their favorite haunts in the Old Market. They’ve watched as the Capital District grew up and found some great places there that are intriguing to them. So we’re hoping to spread that economic impact over a wider area because all parts of the metro get that even if there aren’t they aren’t adjacent or near to the stadium.

There’s several things in Nebraska that bring a huge amount of revenue How much does the CWS bring in to the state?

We had Dr. Ernie Goss do an economic impact survey using 2019 figures because we didn’t foresee COVID But we did think that 10 years into “the great experiment” and that’s in air quotes. That was the downtown stadium that maybe people would want to know. Did that experiment turnout was that a good move? 88.3 million was the very conservative economic impact estimate he came up with at that time. Last year, we had attendance records. So I think we at least reached that milestone.

And I really think that we that the reach extends beyond there because I know our friends at Bozell estimated the media impact, 464 million. Now that includes social media too, of course now. So that’s why the figure is partially bigger than what people may expect. But when you think about what the Chamber of Commerce and the Convention and Visitor’s Bureau would have to pay for the kind of exposure, really positive exposure, we get for almost two weeks ,it’s pretty amazing.

What have you seen for the fan experience these many years?

Well, you know what’s great about this year is that we’ve got a new format. So we have two full weekends to offer. That’s especially important, I think to out-of-town visitors. Always before when we answer questions on the phone or live chat on the internet, people would say “w\Well, you know, I’m still working or my kids have activities, and so the only time we can get away is a weekend” and now we have two full weekends to offer. The opening ceremonies will be on Thursday. First day of games will be on Friday. And then we end the events either on a Sunday or a Monday. So that we think is going to be really good for the event.

We also have a lot of things that after kind of that semi-normal year last. We’ve got the Stadium Circulator [https://www.ncaa.com/championships/baseball/d1/transportation] coming back, which is wonderful. It kind of runs a grid pattern from the North Downtown stadium to the Old Market and it passes several City of Omaha parking garages, where you can make advance reservations for parking and it only costs a quarter to jump on.

Wow.

It’s ADA accessible. It’s air conditioned and should stop at about every 15 minutes at the various locations that are on the map. And the map is on our website https://cwsomaha.com under parking and transportations. [https://cwsomaha.com/parking-and-transportation-information]

I’m trying to think other things that are different new about this year. Well actually not even. It was the case last year. The outfield is our lowest price reserve status, no longer general admission. We had really thought we would be coming to GA this year because, of course, during COVID nobody was excited about standing shoulder to shoulder for several hours with people they didn’t make perfect sense to have that transition last year.

We, meaning the NCAA, surveyed fans after every game last year, throughout the stadium, but with the feedback that we got from the general admission, now the lowest price reserved area was “We love this. Do not go back to GA. We think it’s great that we know for sure we’ll be able if we have a ticket for a specific game that will get into that game. And if we want to come early, it’s wonderful that we can spend the time in the fan fest or frequenting restaurants or other establishments in the area. So don’t go back”. So that’s where we’re at today. That’s our lowest price reserved seat. And there’s still tickets available our single game tickets went on sale in mid-April. And there are still weekday afternoon games that are still available. Those are $10 plus Ticketmaster fees, and so very affordable.

But even if the other game tickets have sold out, which they did really quickly, like the first weekend and the finals, especially those are available on sale, through the NCAA website and https://www.ncaa.com or you can get there through our website, https://cwsomaha.com.

It’s interesting that over time the resale market being verified and legitimized has occurred. Seems natural now that we have it, but it hadn’t been.

Exactly. Well, Ticketmaster is the NCAA’s corporate ticketing partner. So if people buy through that outlet, then if they have any concerns when they get to the ballpark any issues at all, which we don’t anticipate that they do, but if they do, they can go to the ticket office and get customer service there. If they use another outlet to get their tickets, and I’m sure some fans do, unfortunately, we can’t help them in the same way.

The tickets now are electronic.

They are. They’re all mobile, digital, electronic… I’ve heard a lot of different ways to describe them. But yes, and our concessions are also credit card related. There are some reverse ATMs in the ballpark. So if you don’t have a credit card or you don’t want to send the kids with your credit card, you can send them with some cash. They can use the machines inside the stadium and access the concessions that way.

Where the reverse ATMs are located? Are there maps available?

There should be a map available, and I believe that one is certainly on the ballpark website which is this is a long one: http://www.charlesschwabfieldomaha.com.

[End of Part One]