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Chefs' Holidays®, Yosemite, CA, January 10-February 5, 2009

Posted on November 11, 2009 by brelleva

Yosemite’s Chefs' Holidays® at The Ahwahnee®, held each year in January and February, feature some of the world's most innovative and acclaimed chefs. These culinary adventures provide a showcase for the range of styles, personalities and trends that characterize the American cuisine scene.

Featured in each session:

  • a "Meet the Chefs" reception
  • Cooking classes and demonstrations
  • Behind-the-scenes kitchen tours
  • Five-course Chefs' Holidays Gala Dinner, that includes 4 paired wines.

Traci Des Jardins, Guest Chef for Session VIII, 2008, wrote this glowing report of her experiences at Chefs' Holidays.  You can also listen to a piece from the California Report on 2008's Session 6 – The Whole Hog.

2010 Chefs' Holidays Sessions
This year, our 25th Annual Chefs' Holidays at The Ahwahnee features a long list of top-name Chefs. Join us for fine dining in a spectacular location.

 

Cal Stamenov---Bernardus Lodge, Carmel Valley, CA
Matt Bolton---Pacific's Edge, Carmel, CA
David Kinch---Manresa, Los Gatos, CA

Bruce Sherman---North Pond, Chicago, IL
Peg Smith & Sue Conley---Cowgirl Creamery-Pt Reyes, CA
Elizabeth Falkner---Citizen Cake & Orson, San Francisco

Christopher Lee---Aureole, New York, NY
Hoss Zare---Zare at Flytrap, San Francisco
Douglas Keane---Cyrus, Healdsburg, CA

Brad Farmerie---PUBLIC, New York, NY
Chris Cosentino---Incanto & Boccalone, San Francisco
Paul Virant---Vie, Western Springs, IL

Suzanne Goin---Lucques, Los Angeles
Duskie Estes & John Stewart---Zazu & Bovolo, Sonoma County
Jody Adams---Rialto, Boston, MA
Session 6—Wednesday, Thursday January 27 -  28
Bravo TV's Top Chef Competitors
Ryan Scott---Ryan Scott 2 Go, San Francisco
Ariane Duarte---Culinariane, Montclair, NJ
Carla Hall, Alchemy Caterers, Wheaton, MD

Ken Frank---La Toque, Napa Valley
Michelle Mah---Midi, San Francisco
Loretta Keller---Coco500, San Francisco

moderated by Pam Wischkeamper, Culinary Consultant

Bernard Guillas & Ron Oliver---La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club
Jesse Cool---Flea street Cafe, Menlo Park
Annie Somerville---Greens, San Francisco, CA

 





Emeril Lagasse's Burger Ambitions

Posted on November 11, 2009 by brelleva

From Paul Frumkin of Nation's Restaurant News: Emeril Lagasse has named his upcoming burger restaurant Burgers And More, or BAM, after his signature expression, and said he doesn't want the brand to be a premium burger "gimmick."

The restaurant, set to open Nov. 22 in the Sands Casino Resort in Bethlehem, Pa., will specialize in hamburgers made from a blend of prime and grass-fed beef, Lagasse said at a New York City press conference Monday. 

Lagasse said he will not go the bargain-burger route with "a dollar menu" at Burgers And More, but that he also does not want to push the average check too high, either.

"I don't want to serve a Kobe beef burger with foie gras for $22," he said. "I don't want it to be a gimmick."

The check average for Emeril's concept is expected to be about $20 per person.

Lagasse joins several well-known chefs who have taken a break from fine-dining to open burger-centric restaurants, including Bobby Flay, Hubert Keller and, more recently, Daniel Boulud. The menu at Boulud's new DBGB Kitchen & Bar in New York offers three kinds of gourmet burgers, and his more upscale DB Bistro Moderne features a burger stuffed with shorts ribs and foie gras for $32.

Lagasse's 90-seat Burgers And More will also offer nonbeef burgers prepared from turkey, crab, salmon and mushrooms, along with hand-cut French fries, condiments made from scratch, appetizers, malts and shakes, and local draft beers.

Asked if he planned to replicate the burger concept elsewhere, Lagasse said he didn't know yet, adding, "We'll have to see how it goes."

The burger restaurant will mark Lagasse's second eatery in the eastern Pennsylvania casino-resort, where he debuted Emeril's Chophouse earlier this year.

In addition to partnering with the Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem, Lagasse also operates restaurants in two Las Vegas Sands properties Ñ Delmonico Steakhouse, Table 10 and the recently opened Lagasse's Stadium.

Read more: http://www.nrn.com/breakingNews.aspx?id=375276  



James Beard Foundation Benefit features 'Top Chef' Trio, Washington, D.C. November 11, 2009

Posted on November 3, 2009 by brelleva

Celebrity Chef Tour Brings Bravo's Top Chef  Season Five Trio to Cook at the Renaissance Mayflower Hotel

Who:  Celebrity Chef Tour benefitting the James Beard Foundation

What: Multi-course dinner featuring Bravo's Top Chef Contestants Carla Hall, Fabio Viviani and CJ Jacobson

When: Wednesday, November 11, 2009 at 7pm

Where: Renaissance Mayflower Hotel, 1127 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C., 20036

Cost: $170; to RSVP call  720-201-1853 or email jeff@celebritycheftour.com

Details: The Celebrity Chef Tour comes to D.C. for what promises to be a great night of food and drink. Join popular Top Chef contestants Carla Hall, Fabio Viviani and CJ
Jacobson as they collaborate and prepare their favorite seasonal dishes. Chefs will be available for a post dinner "talk back" to answer questions about the meal and about their current projects.

About the Celebrity Chef Tour benefiting the James Beard Foundation:

Since its inception in 2004, the Celebrity Chef Tour benefiting the James Beard Foundation has become a favorite event for both the chefs to participate in and guests to attend. The Celebrity Chef Tour brings James Beard Foundation Award winners and other celebrity chefs to private clubs, resorts, and other exclusive venues around the country for spectacular dining events. The tour was created to benefit the James Beard Foundation and to promote the culinary arts across America.

About the James Beard House and the James Beard Foundation:

James Beard is widely recognized as the father of American culinary arts. Throughout his life, he pursued and advocated the highest standards, and served as a mentor to emerging talents. The James Beard House is where Beard lived, taught, and welcomed friends and colleagues who shared his love for food. Shortly after he passed away, a group of friends sparked a drive to save his home and create a living memorial and a center for the culinary community. It has become what Founding President Peter Kump envisioned it could be, “a culinary place to see and taste the work of this country’s most talented chef’s, wine makers, cookbook authors, and teachers.” The James Beard House’s sister non-profit organization, the James Beard Foundation, whose mission is to “celebrate, preserve and nurture America’s culinary heritage and diversity in order to elevate the appreciation of our culinary excellence,” furthers Mr. Kump’s vision by providing scholarships and volunteer opportunities for aspiring culinary professionals, educating today’s youth on the importance of good food and essential nutrition.
 
For more information: http://www.jamesbeard.org
 



Thomas Keller New Cookbook Caters to "Regular Folks"

Posted on November 3, 2009 by brelleva

From Wall Street Journal's Katy McLaughlin: Thomas Keller is widely regarded not only as the top chef in the country but as the food world's reigning perfectionist. His restaurants, The French Laundry and Per Se, are among the country's most expensive and exclusive temples of haute cuisine.

Now the chef has written a cookbook for regular folks, with recipes for "everyday staples" such as hamburgers, chicken-and-dumpling soup, and creamed corn. The book, "Ad Hoc at Home," is Mr. Keller's "most accessible," says publisher Ann Bramson of Artisan Books, with the words "family-style recipes" emblazoned on the cover.

The concept is tantalizing: four-star flavor in the comfort of home and with less expense (the prix fixe dinner at Manhattan's Per Se is $275 per person without wine). There's just one problem: After one spends the time and money to buy the ingredients and equipment and then cook through the multiple steps in some of the recipes, dinner at Per Se starts looking like the cheap and easy route.

It's a frustration food fans are likely to encounter as more cookbooks are published that celebrate the unfettered complexity that the world's top chefs bring to their cuisine. These chefs include New York's David Chang, whose book "Momofuku" was released earlier this week, and British star Heston Blumenthal, who this month is publishing a $50, 528-page version of a $250 cookbook released last year. While Julia Child made her career by breaking down classic French cuisine into steps the average cook could execute, these top chefs don't make concessions for home cooks. Instead, they write recipes that require the equipment, ingredients and techniques they use in their restaurants.

"It's my point of view that cooking is a process and something you should enjoy doing. You have to embrace and enjoy that process if you want to become a good cook," Mr. Keller says.

Recognizing that chefs often write recipes over the heads of average people, the Food Network says it no longer seeks out well-known restaurant chefs and has instead changed its business model to promoting home cooks with good personalities, says Michael Smith, Food Network's senior vice president of marketing. Cookbooks from Food Network stars are hugely popular: Of 38 cookbook best sellers last year, five were from Paula Deen, Giada de Laurentiis and Rachael Ray, all Food Network stars, says Simba Information, a media researcher in Stamford, Conn.

But there remains an audience that craves teaching from the industry's top masters. Mr. Keller's books are Artisan's biggest sellers, Ms. Bramson says. Nearly 400,000 copies of "The French Laundry Cookbook" have been printed; the company has ordered 100,000 copies of "Ad Hoc at Home" for its initial run. Overall, cookbook sales have been strong relative to the book market overall, and publishers released nearly 14% more cookbooks in 2008 than the year before. Wall Street Journal





Boston Rising Stars Revue, Boston, November 3, 2009

Posted on October 20, 2009 by brelleva

An event that recognizes up-and-coming chefs, pastry chefs, sommeliers, and mixologists from around the country is coming to Boston in early November. The StarChefs Rising Stars Revue, which was last held in Boston in 2009, will he held at The State Room at Sixty State Street in the Financial District on Tuesday, November 3. The event will include many familiar names from the Boston restaurant scene among its 2009 class of rising stars, including Jamie Bissonnette, Joanne Chang, Richard Garcia, Rachel Klein, Chris Parsons, Tom Schlesinger-Guidelli, and several others. The Starchefs Tasting Gala and Awards Ceremony, which will be held from 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM, will honor these winners and will also allow guests to sample a signature dish from each of the chefs.

Tickets to the event are $85 per person ($125 for VIP admission, which includes a private pre-event reception plus early entrance). Proceeds from the event will benefit the Greater Boston Food Bank.

For more information on the Boston Rising Stars Revue, including the Tasting Gala and Awards Ceremony, please go to the StarChefs link below.

http://www.starchefs.com/chefs/rising_stars/2009/boston/index.shtml





'Esquire' Announces Best New Restaurants 2009

Posted on October 12, 2009 by brelleva

From New York magazine's Grub Street: "On the heels of its Michelin star, SHO Shaun Hergatt now gets another accolade: It's one of four New York restaurants to make John Mariani's annual "Best New Restaurants" list in Esquire. The others - Corton, Marea, and Locanda Verde - aren't surprising. On the list of "Another 15 Places Not To Miss" are Vermilion, Apiary, Aureole, and Minetta Tavern. ...

The complete list, via the press release, is below.

    RESTAURANT OF THE YEAR:
    The Bazaar, Los Angeles

    CHEF OF THE YEAR:
    Barton Seaver of Blue Ridge, Washington, D.C.

    THE INAUGURAL ESQUIRE RESTAURANT HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES:
    Alfred Portale
    Danny Meyer

    THE BEST NEW RESTAURANTS OF 2009 (sorted geographically):
    Atlanta, GA
    Pacci Ristorante
    Paces 88

    Austin, TX
    Perla's Seafood and Oyster Bar

    Bedford, NY
    The Bedford Post Inn

    Cleveland, OH
    L'Albatros Brasserie & Bar

    Las Vegas, NV
    Society Café Encore

    Los Angeles, CA –
    Rivera

    Miami, FL
    Area 31
    Sra. Martinez

    Naples, FL
    Sea Salt

    New York, NY
    Corton
    Locanda Verde
    Marea
    SHO Shaun Hergatt

    Paradise Valley, AZ
    Prado

    Richmond, VA
    Lemaire

    San Francisco, CA
    Nopalito

    Washington, D.C
    Blue Ridge

    Yountville, CA
    Bottega

    ANOTHER FIFTEEN PLACES NOT TO MISS
    Ajax Tavern, Aspen
    Apiary, New York
    Aureole, New York
    The Bristol, Chicago
    8100 Mountainside Bar and Grill, Avon, CO
    Il Casale, Belmont, MA
    Minetta Tavern, New York
    Passionfish, Reston, VA
    Province, Chicago
    The Publican, Chicago
    Rambla, New Orleans
    RH, Los Angeles
    Sepia, Chicago
    Vermilion, New York
    West Side Tavern, Los Angeles

    FOUR BREAKOUT CHEFS TO WATCH:
    David Katz, Meme, Philadelphia, PA
    Chris Lusk, Cafe Adelaide, New Orleans, LA
    Victoria Ann Moore, The Lazy Goat, Greenville, SC
    Raymond Mohan, Onda, New York, NY - "One of the most creative South American chefs - via Guyana - working in the U.S. right now."

    HOSTESS OF THE YEAR:
    Kaitlin Yelle, Meat Market, Miami, FL 



'Top Chef' Winner Taking a Break

Posted on September 29, 2009 by brelleva

From Lori Midson of Denver Westworld: Beginning Thursday, October 1, Hosea Rosenberg -- Bravo's Top Chef: New York conquistador and Jax-Boulder exec chef -- is launching www.whereishosea.com, to more or less announce his five-month sabbatical from the house of aquatics that made him famous.

The new site, explains Bryce Clark, marketing director for Big Red F, the Dave Query restaurant group that owns Jax, "will be a combination of a blog that Hosea will write himself, Twitter and Facebook feeds, recipes, travel guides and pictures and videos of his travels."

Late last week, Leah Cohen, the contestant on Top Chef: New York best known for swapping spit with Rosenberg in a PG-rated sex scene while filming the show (they've since denied a relationship), suddenly upped and vacated her exec chef position at New York's Centro Vinoteca to "continue her culinary education by studying in Southeast Asia and Spain." Her departure, coincidentally, comes at the exact same time that Rosenberg plans to "travel all over the United States and to South America," which he'll be doing in between "attending the Latin Food and Wine Festival in Florida, cooking at a James Beard dinner in Wisconsin and touring Louisiana for the best food and drink," says Clark.

All of which leaves us to wonder where Rosenberg and Cohen will hook up in between their worldly jaunts.

Nah, not really.

Far more important is who'll be cooking in the kitchen that Rosenberg is leaving behind. And that person, says Clark, is none other than Sheila Lucero, the exec chef at Jax-Denver, 1539 17th Street. "Sheila and Hosea have been collaborating for some time now, taking both of their strengths and and infusing them into the menu at Jax Boulder. The current menu in Boulder is actually a bi-product of both of them," notes Clark.

Lucero will put in equal time at both kitchens, while Rosenberg will "still be in the kitchen as much as possible, popping in for special dinners and jumping on the line while he's in town," Clark promises.

 





The Twenty Biggest Chef Empires

Posted on September 29, 2009 by brelleva

From Grub Street New York: The business of being a chef has expanded enormously in the last 25 years. Once upon a time, it was considered a working-class trade. Now Gordon Ramsay has 27 restaurants and five TV shows. Alain Ducasse has authored eighteen cookbooks; Nobu Matsuhisa has five. Batali acts, Colicchio sells Diet Coke and fly-fishes for AmEx, Charlie Palmer hawks home décor in Sonoma. But which chef has his hand in the most pots around the globe?

To decide, we narrowed the field to men and women who operate restaurants in the U.S. and then compiled a list of all their traditional food projects (restaurants, cookbooks), self-promotional activities (TV shows), and offbeat activities (recipes for online-dating sites, flavor sprays). Since we consider operating restaurants to be more important to a chef's empire than his ancillary product deals, we assigned each of these activities a point value and weighed them according to significance. Restaurants got four points; leading TV roles, three; cookbooks, two; and everything else counted as a single point. The top twenty high-scorers are listed below with highlights from their careers. Actual totals appear in the first four columns, while the overall score according to point value is tallied at the end.

Who's the king of all chefs, and who's a merchandiser? Decide for yourself in the comments.

#1 Gordon Ramsay: With both the most restaurants and starring roles on TV, it’s not surprising that Gordon Ramsay has gobbled the most points. Overextension has its limits: To stave off bankruptcy this summer, he cut costs by slashing staff by 15 percent and rescinding ownership of hotel restaurants in L.A. and Paris.
Restaurants TV Shows Cookbooks Misc. Score
27 5 17 10 167
 
#2 Alain Ducasse: Ducasse’s global empire includes a professional culinary school, a cooking school for amateurs, a chain of hotels and châteaus, four country hotel-estates (with restaurants), and a publishing house to churn out the most cookbooks of the group. 
Restaurants TV Shows Cookbooks Misc. Score
26 0 18 12 152
 
#3 Wolfgang Puck: Certainly not the only chef with a “Shop” section on his website, he shills salad spinners, coffee, cooking spray, soup stock, and a food-sealing system. 
Restaurants TV Shows Cookbooks Misc. Score
22 0 7 18 120
 
#4 Joël Robuchon: All that fawning on Top Chef Vegas, and no tchotchkes to sell for it; Robuchon concentrates on nineteen fine and casual restaurants from Paris to Macao and has authored sixteen cookbooks. 
Restaurants TV Shows Cookbooks Misc. Score
19 2 16 1 115
 
#5 Nobu Matsuhisa: Matsuhisa is credited with three acting roles on IMDb, for Memoirs of a Geisha (2005), Casino (1995), and Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002), in which he played Mr. Roboto. If he opens another Nobu in the U.S., New York City will consider the restaurant a chain and will require posted calorie counts.   
Restaurants TV Shows Cookbooks Misc. Score
22 0 5 12 110





Star Chef Ripert Now Has Own PBS Gig

Posted on September 29, 2009 by brelleva

From Greg Morago of The Houston Chronicle: It's a face easily remembered. The superstar chef's handsome mug has popped up as a guest judge on Top Chef. It has lit up shows hosted by Martha Stewart, David Letterman and Ellen DeGeneres. It has graced the glossy pages of numerous cooking magazines. It's a familiar visage to in-the-know foodies.

But Eric Ripert, whose Le Bernardin is recognized as one of the world's great seafood restaurants, has been the rare top toque without his own television show. Until now.

Starting Saturday, Ripert's Avec Eric, a lifestyle, travel and cooking show can be seen nationally on PBS stations. Avec Eric marks a new chapter for the classically-trained French chef who up until now has resisted jumping into the food television fricassee, partly in favor of minding the store at his seafood temple (he's kept Le Bernardin's four-star rating from the New York Times longer than any other chef now cooking in New York).

We were able to chat avec Ripert about his show, which, surprisingly, isn't about seafood but embraces Ripert's own love for culinary travel.

Q: Why did you wait so long to get into food television?

A: We couldn't find a network that would do the food I wanted to do. Food Network has a different audience and different views than the PBS audience. It took us a lot of time but we finally we found the right producer, the right partners and PBS picked up the show. It's a format I like very much. I can cook in a kitchen the way I like to cook.

Q: And cooking not just fish and seafood?

A: Although I'm associated with fish, I know how to cook everything. I like cooking meat. I'm very good with it.

Q: As a young chef, you went from La Tour d'Argent to Joël Robuchon then to Jean-Louis Palladin then to David Bouley. That's quite a start before you went to Le Bernardin. I think it would be fair to say you've only worked with the best chefs.

A: For sure. When you work with those chefs who are amazing, you learn high standards, and it becomes a part of you.

Q: Do you think about four stars and maintaining them? Is it on your mind?

A: No, if you do that, you die. You die of a heart attack. I don't think like that. I wake up in the morning and I drink my coffee like everyone else. I walk for 45 minutes in Central Park and then I go to work. I never think about the pictures of me in the magazine. My focus is on the aspects of the cuisine and running a restaurant. My priority has always been to focus on what is my job, which is to be a chef.

Q: You are known for fish and seafood, and it's great that Americans are eating more seafood. But not all of us are good with fish. What are we doing wrong?

A: The problem in lot of the regions of the country is that people buy cheap stuff, not fresh. Fish should never smell like fish. The shopping part is very important. We buy fish that's old, and we have a tendency to kill the smell by overcooking.

Q: But we're also in a recession, and seafood is expensive.

A: If you're on a budget you can cut a protein. Have a smaller portion of good-quality protein, and eat more vegetables and more starch. In Europe, it's the way people eat. They never eat huge steaks. Everything is much smaller there. You don't really need to eat so much protein.

Q: What was the most difficult part of doing your first show?

A: To read a script. I cannot have a script. I lose my concentration. I am not good at repeating lines.

Q: The promo for Avec Eric says your show is not about what to cook but why. What do you mean?

A: If we believe that cooking is artistry, you have to be inspired by something. Obviously what inspires us is interaction with people when I travel. Growers, farmers, winemakers. The show is an extension of my lifestyle. The show is a very natural process to me. We're filming what I do usually in my normal life. That translates to an inspiration to cook something that is meaningful to me and my guest.





25 Things Chefs Never Tell You

Posted on September 3, 2009 by brelleva

From FoodNetwork.com: Do restaurants recycle the bread basket? Are most of us bad tippers? We surveyed chefs across the country — anonymously — to find out everything we’ve always wanted to know.

Chefs are pickier than you think.
Liver, sea urchin, tofu, eggplant and oysters, of all things, topped the list of foods chefs hate most. Only 15% of chefs surveyed said they’d eat absolutely anything.

Still, chefs hate picky eaters.
More than 60% said requests for substitutions are annoying. Some of their biggest pet peeves: when customers pretend to be allergic to an ingredient, and when vegetarians make up rules, like “a little chicken stock is OK.”

When eating out in other restaurants, chefs say they avoid pasta and chicken.
Why? These dishes are often the most overpriced (and least interesting) on the menu. Said one chef, “I won’t pay $24 for half a chicken breast.” Said another, “I want something I can’t make myself.”

Chefs have expensive taste.
The restaurant chefs most often cited as the best in the country was The French Laundry, in California’s Napa Valley. It ought to be — dinner there is $240 per person, before wine.

...and yet they like fast food.
Their favorite chain: Wendy’s. Culinary degrees aren’t necessarily the norm. Just half the chefs surveyed graduated from a cooking school. The rest got their training the old-fashioned way, by working their way up through the kitchen ranks.

Critics trump movie stars in the VIP pecking order.
A whopping 71% of chefs said they give special treatment to restaurant critics when they spot them; only 63% do the same for celebrities. Making out in the bathroom is old news. More than half of the chefs have found customers kissing — and much more — in the restaurant loo.

Roaches are more common than you think.
Yes, 75% of chefs said they’ve seen roaches in the kitchen. And yet, chefs swear their kitchens are clean. On a scale of 1 to 10, 85% of chefs ranked their kitchens an 8 or higher for cleanliness.

Only 13% of chefs have seen a cook do unsavory things to a customer’s food.
The most unbelievable tale: “Someone once ran a steak through a dishwasher after the diner sent it back twice. Ironically, the customer was happy with it then.”

Your bread basket might be recycled.
Three chefs admitted that uneaten bread from one basket goes right into another one.

Chefs work hard for low pay.
The chefs we surveyed work between 60 and 80 hours a week and almost all of them work holidays. Sixty-five percent reported making less than $75,000 a year. Waiters take home an average of $662 a week, often tax free.

“Vegetarian” is open to interpretation.
About 15% of chefs said their vegetarian dishes might not be completely vegetarian. Beware if you’re one of those super-picky vegan types: One chef reported seeing a cook pour lamb’s blood into a vegan’s primavera.

Paying for a last-minute reservation probably won’t work.
Only one chef said bribes will help you score a table when the restaurant is fully booked; he suggested “promising to buy a bottle of Dom Pérignon or Opus One.” A better bet: being buddies with the chef.

Menu “specials” are often experimental dishes.
Contrary to popular belief — that specials are just a chef’s way of using up old ingredients — most chefs said they use specials to try out new ideas or serve seasonal ingredients. Only five chefs admitted that they try to empty out the fridge with their nightly specials.

The appropriate tip is 20%...
That’s what chefs leave when they eat out, and it’s the amount they think is fair.

...unless the service is really poor.
An astounding 90% of chefs said it’s fair to penalize bad waiters with a smaller tip.

That rule about not ordering fish on Sunday might be worth following.
Several chefs warned, “We don’t get fresh deliveries on Sunday.”

Chefs hate working on New Year’s Eve more than any other holiday.
Valentine’s Day was a close second, but don’t take that to mean chefs aren’t romantic: 54% of those surveyed said they like it when couples get engaged in their restaurant.

They secretly want to be Alton or Giada.
Nearly 60% of chefs said they’d want their own cooking show.

Chefs cook when they’re sick.
It’s a long-standing tradition in the restaurant industry: Cooks report to duty unless they’re practically hospitalized. Half of those we surveyed said they come to work sick, and they stay there through injuries, too. Many chefs have cut themselves on the job, gone to get stitches and returned to work to finish out the night. Accidents definitely happen: Almost every chef we surveyed has been injured on the job in some way, and several chefs said they’re missing parts of their fingers.

The five-second rule actually applies.
A quarter of the chefs surveyed said they’d pick up food that dropped on the floor and cook it.

Your waiter is trying to influence your order.
Almost every chef surveyed (95%) said he or she urges servers to steer customers toward specific dishes on the menu each night.

Restaurants mark up wine by a lot more than you might expect.
Most chefs said that a bottle on their wine list costs 2½ times what the same one would cost in a wine store.

There’s a reason so many restaurants serve molten chocolate cake.
More than 75% of chefs said they take inspiration from other restaurant menus.

FoodNetwork.com





Rick Bayless's Perfectly Timed 'Top Chef Masters' Victory

Posted on August 24, 2009 by brelleva

From Grub Street Chicago: Spoiler alert: if you don't already know who won Top Chef Masters [Aug. 19], we are amazed by your ability to evade information. Because basically everyone within 20 miles of the intersection of Clark and Illinois streets is being psyched (or recovering from being psyched) about Rick Bayless's epic victory on last night's season finale. And boy is he ever reaping the benefits: as of this morning, the next available reservation at Topolobampo is September 20, odds are good the lines at Frontera will be out the door for a good while yet. But even more lucky is the yet-to-open Xoco, Bayless's casual churros-and-tortas concept that's scheduled for a September 1 open, which will surely prosper from this mountain of publicity. We can't help but note an interesting coincidence: Xoco was announced with an anticipated opening date of April '09. As for Top Chef Masters, the show wrapped filming back in March, so Bayless has been sitting on the secret of his victory all this time. It'd be a simple matter to delay Xoco's opening to coincide with the inevitable media blitz his victory would gain - and he's already admitted that everything's been in place for the opening for a while now - so we're going to chalk this up to some brilliant synergistic strategy. Or conspiracy theory. Or whatever you'd like to call it. Either way, congratulations, Mr. Bayless. http://chicago.grubstreet.com/2009/08/victorious_on_top_chef_masters.html  



Top Louisiana Toque John Besh to Create Airline Menus

Posted on August 18, 2009 by brelleva

East Meadow, NY – August 7, 2009 -- For the first time this September and October, Lufthansa will offer its premium-class passengers a selection of dishes inspired by an iconic regional American cuisine.  Acclaimed Southern Louisiana culinary master John Besh, the newest member of the airline’s award-winning Star Chefs program, will create a menu featuring Creole- and Cajun-inspired dishes for First and Business Class passengers departing from Germany to Lufthansa’s 83 intercontinental destinations.
Chef Besh’s full First Class menu will include an amuse of Creole tuna with soy sauce and citrus fruit salad; a selection of starters such as Louisiana crawfish in gelee with lemon and tomato vinaigrette; and an assortment of entrées, including grilled beef tenderloin served with the chef’s signature steak sauce and macque choux, and Cajun vegetable ragout.  Dessert includes a streusel pear tear tart or passion fruit and grapefruit jelly, marshmallows and pecan with lime leaf sorbet.
 
First Class passengers may opt for the shorter express menu, featuring lighter choices such as crabmeat salad with marinated beetroot, king prawns with Creole remoulade, or heart of palm and goat’s cheese with grapefruit, followed by a cheese plate and fresh fruit.
 
Business Class passengers may choose one of several starters, including terrine of braised beef with beans, tomatoes and red onion chutney.  Guests bound for the U.S. may sample Chef Besh’s short ribs with mushrooms and macaroni and cheese or select one of two other appetizers that also will be offered to passengers travelling to other destinations worldwide. Main course selections include breast of chicken with tomato and bell pepper sauce served with corn bread puree, followed by a cheese plate and blueberry crumble with stewed fruit or fruit salad for dessert. A lighter Business Class menu of hot and cold dining choices will also be available.  Depending on the itinerary, the selection of entrées may include smoked trout with potato salad and Black Forest ham with pickled vegetables or pumpkin-filled ravioli with mushroom ragout and chestnut, followed by a dessert of bourbon pecan pie.
 
Chef Besh is no stranger to preparing fine food for consumption at 30,000 feet, where cabin pressure, altitude and the need to reheat warm dishes create a unique set of culinary requirements.  He was one of four remaining contenders to compete in the fifth challenge of The Food Network’s 2007 reality show, Next Iron Chef.  The rigorous two-day test involved cooking and chilling the ultimate First Class meal in the Munich kitchens of Lufthansa’s catering arm, LSG Sky Chefs.  Meals were then reheated and plated in the galley aboard an actual Airbus A340-600 before being served to a panel of judges.
 
“The Lufthansa challenge was certainly one of the most arduous of the Next Iron Chef competition as it required an approach to menu creation and execution that even the most seasoned culinary experts have not experienced,“ explained Chef Besh.  “I was intrigued by the subtle changes that make or break an in-flight meal and jumped at the chance to partner with Lufthansa to create a full menu for the airline’s global passengers.”
 
Renowned for combining classical European culinary techniques – honed during a demanding apprenticeship under German chef Karl Josef Fuchs – with the rich traditions and ingredients of his native Southern Louisiana, Chef Besh has earned numerous industry accolades.  The proprietor of award-winning Restaurant August, Besh Steak, Lüke, and La Provence, all in New Orleans, the Louisiana Restaurant Association named him Restaurateur of the Year in 2008. He earned the prestigious James Beard Award for Best Chef in the Southeast for 2006 and was recognized as one of Food & Wine’s Top 10 Best Chefs in America in 1999.
 
Chef Besh is as passionate about his home town as he is about its world-famous cuisine, and has been heavily involved in post-Hurricane Katrina rebuilding efforts.  His new tome, My New Orleans: The Cookbook  (Andrews McMeel Publishing), which will be released in October 2009, contains essays as well as recipes that map out the unique culinary history of the Crescent City by dish and season.  A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the book will go to Café Reconcile, a New Orleans-based non-profit organization that provides at-risk youth the opportunity to learn life and interpersonal skills coupled with workforce training for the hospitality and restaurant industries.




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