Tag: Chefs

  • i8tonite with Traverse City’s amical Chef Dave Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s amical Chef Dave Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie RecipeTraverse City, Michigan is a special place. Globally known as an incredibly beautiful location, there’s so much more to Traverse City than Sleeping Bear Dunes, named the most beautiful place in America. It seems that everyone here loves food, as you can tell from the array of incredible restaurants, second homes of well-known chefs, and a farm to table movement that has been going on for over a hundred years.

    Two of the things I love most about TC are the friendliness and sense community. Whenever I head north from our cottage an hour south, I ask my friend Mike Norton, of Traverse City Tourism, for a recommendation. He’s got the goods, and knows the best in town (including his contributions for my 50 best Midwest Coffee Roasters, but I digress). Mike recommended amical restaurant to me a while back, and I couldn’t wait to share this favorite restaurant with our readers.

    Owner and Chef Dave Denison is one of those people you immediately love. He’s funny, creative, and extremely interesting. You’d pick him, if you were going to be stuck on a desert island (hopefully, his chef knife would come with him, because I would be carrying sunscreen). He started by cooking at a young age, and has always worked in restaurants. When he moved out west to California, he thought about getting out of this line of work. Luckily for us, his plan backfired, as he got a job at a growing chain restaurant, and moved up through the ranks and opened up restaurants all over the country for them.

    Denison grew up in Southeast Michigan, as well as in Alamaba and Georgia. When he and his family decided to leave California and find a place to start a new restaurant, Traverse City fit the bill. He’s one of Traverse City’s top chefs, with his restaurant amical, which opened in 1994. amical started as a quick service gourmet cafeteria, and has evolved into a European-style bistro.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe

    Denison remarked that they were fortunate in that through all these changes, their customers supported them and kept coming back.  He noted that “how amical started, to where we are now, is very, very different. We’ve always treated our guests and visitors with respect and knowing that they are the reason we are here.”

    I was intrigued by his description of the local food scene. Denison said that “TC has obviously enjoyed national and international recognition over the last 10 years, and it’s well-deserved. It might look like it’s an overnight sensation, but people have worked a long time at their craft here, and many established chefs have been here for a while – in fact, moved to the area with the intention of practicing their craft, using local ingredients. Generations of families have been raising these local ingredients for 100+ years! The farm to table movement was always here, but we were able to utilize it well in our restaurants, and then people ‘discovered’ it. However, it’s always been going on in this area – now just on a bigger scale. This is an agricultural community that has lived for centuries with such natural beauty. We’re surrounded by farmers and people that create a bounty from the land, and we’re happy to be able to be a part of that legacy, and know that this will continue for quite some time.”

    amical’s food is local, fresh, creative, and delicious. The staff are incredible – supportive, supported, and intent on creating an excellent dining experience in the community.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    Cookbook School!

    There’s one more thing you’ll love about amical – the annual Cookbook school, held during the winter months. Denison shared, “for those new to the series, this is what we do: once a month, our kitchen staff will create a week-long dinner menu that consists of recipes from a cookbook. You will find a nice blend of cookbooks from the past, previously featured chefs with new publications, and first time cookbooks. Over the past 19 years, the kitchen team has developed menus from over 100 different cookbooks…while preparing almost one thousand recipes. We credit our loyal patrons for their support and our staff for their passionate drive in making this series an incredible success.”

    A community treasure, indeed. 

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    The winner of the big game gets milk and cookies! Go (your team here)!

    Chef Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    “Professionally” since I was 15. My mom was, admittedly, a lousy cook, but for some reason I had an interest at an earlier age. She says it was due to my survival instincts.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    Amish chicken with ancho chile cream and tomatillo salsa

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    I like to prepare hearty soups, especially during the winter months. Can you tell I’m from the Midwest?

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Tortillas (corn & flour)… and cheese – usually a St. Andre or a local chevre or Raclette. P’tit Basque, too.

    What do you cook at home?
    For a quick bite, it would be tacos. Or a stir fry.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    Cardamom-Nutmeg Custard

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    The fact that they continue to return!

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Paranoia. A few people think “we’re out to get them” or treat them differently because they were late, not from around here, etc… and for the record, we are not, unless you are late or from another town. JK on that.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Pyrex, then it’s on to ziplocks.

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Cocktail. Right now its tequila, ginger beer, and lime.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    I plagiarize cookbook authors on a frequent basis. Everyone from Mario to Jamie Oliver are represented somewhere on our menus. Right now we are using Pickles, Pigs and Whisky recipes from John Currence. But Yotam Ottolenghi is quickly becoming a new favorite.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    A 10” French knife but I like having a good quality mandolin around. A garlic slicer is a neat little gadget to have around, too.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    Garlic Shrimp, Potato Shells, Lamb Meatballs, and Mussels in Coconut-Chile Sauce

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Onions, onions of all kinds. Caramelized onions, grilled onions, roasted onions, onion soubise, fried onions, don’t forget the chives, red onion, Vidalia onion, green onions…

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    Eggplant. My mom would pan-fry it and pour maple syrup on it. Yikes! Did I mention she was not a very good cook? But I love you, mom!

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Re-make a dish because we made a mistake.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Asian preparations for their versatility, quickness, and healthy attributes. Mexican is a close second.

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    C’mon. Pork.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    Heritage appetizers

    Favorite vegetable?
    Local asparagus. It’s only around up here for a few weeks in the Spring.

    Chef you most admire?
    One you would recognize would be Eric Ripert. Locally, it would be Harlan “Pete” Peterson of Tapawingo fame in Ellsworth, Michigan. He is so talented but incredibly humble. He just opened Alliance here in town. Already a favorite of many!

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Fresh seafood and shellfish. Walleye is a favorite. But put a fried egg on something and I’ll order it.

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe
    Rice Centennial Farm Ribeye ready for the Carnivore menu.

    Food you dislike the most?
    I never really acquired a taste for calf’s liver. I’ll get my iron somewhere else, thank you. (<<Look left)

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    None so far, but my wife has one. Does that count?

     

    Recipe: amical’s Chicken Pot Pie

     

    i8tonite with Traverse City’s Amical Chef David J. Denison & Chicken Pot Pie Recipe

    Servings: 6
    Size: 1.5 Cup(s)
    Prep. Time: 0:35

    Ingredients:
    2 c chicken breast, cooked and diced
    1/2 c carrots, peeled and diced
    1/2 c celery, diced
    half a medium onion, peeled and diced
    1/2 c frozen peas
    1 pound potatoes, peeled, cooked, diced
    1 c mushrooms, sliced
    1 c heavy whipping cream
    1 c whole milk
    1 T chervil
    1/2 T dried basil
    1/4 T salt
    1/4 T pepper
    2 c chicken stock
    4 oz butter
    1/2 c all-purpose flour
    2 T grated parmesan
    2 pieces puff pastry dough
    1 egg, beaten

    Directions
    1. Saute vegetables in butter in a small stock pot.
    2. When onions are translucent, add flour and mix. Simmer for 5 minutes.
    3. Add milk, cream, potatoes, stock, spices, and parmesan. Heat until sauce has thickened. Check for seasoning and proper thickness. Add more roux if needed.
    4. Place filling in individual oven-proof dishes. Cut out a puff pastry dough lid to fit the top of the dish. Brush with eggwash and bake at 350 degrees for 12-14 minutes or until pastry is golden brown, and the filling bubbles.

    – The End. Go Eat. – 

     

     

  • i8tonite with Phoenix’s TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo Recipe

    i8tonite with Phoenix’s TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo Recipe

    i8tonite with Phoenix's TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo RecipeChef and owner of TEXAZ Grill Steven Freidkin is that rarity in restaurants nowadays. Long before the Food Network and celebrity cooks ruled our dinner tables, Freidkin had always been a good, respectable chef, and learning the trade not in fancy culinary schools, but employed in the eateries were he worked. As a pre-teen, he began his kitchen career working at his family’s kosher deli in Shreveport, Louisiana cutting up corned beef in the front and then hanging with his friends. Reminiscing about his youth, Freidkin said, “We would be hiding behind the pickle barrels.  We were the only store that cured our own pickles.”

    His first job away from his parents’ store was as a dishwasher. Then while attending college in the Dallas, he cooked in many kitchens, learning that this could be his way of making a living instead of getting a social work degree. Ultimately, this led him to turn specifically failing restaurants into moneymakers. For a bit of time, he worked for well-known Victoria Station, a popular chain of railroad themed steakhouses that proliferated throughout the 1970s and 80s.

    Arriving in Phoenix in 1976 on a proposition to a restaurant called Pointe of View located by Squaw Peak, he’s been in the Valley of the Sun ever since.

    Before TEXAZ Grill, there were a couple of other stints in restaurants and a catering company, but in 1985, he, along with a former partner, opened the Phoenician steakhouse landmark. TEXAZ Grill isn’t one of the high-end places where people drop their credit cards to pay for the hefty price-tag on a wine and ribeye. No. Freidkin has established an important Valley of the Sun staple – as important as a saguaro cactus on a dusky evening — among the steak and chops set, leading the southwestern pack in crafting down home eats.

    i8tonite with Phoenix's TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo Recipe

    Regulars come to sit in the eclectically decorated space. Walls filled with hundreds of baseball hats, deer heads, pen and ink drawings found in thrift stores, black and white photos, and beer labels lavishly cover the space. It’s an homage to roadhouses long gone, or it’s an actual roadhouse, depending on your personal age and reference.

    Among the ribeye and the New York Strip, listed above the delicious stalwart of fried chicken, is the house specialty – the chicken fried steak. Friedkin recalls, “When we first opened, we had a lot of requests for it. We put it on the menu for a special, and then gradually it stayed.” Two big breaded cubed steaks are dredged in flour, deep-fried, and served with white gravy. “We have served more than 900,000 of these since we opened,” Freidkin comments. Here’s to 900,000 more.

    i8tonite with Phoenix's TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo Recipe

     

    Chef Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    I started cooking in our family delicatessen in Louisiana when I was 10, so I have been cooking 50 years.

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    My favorite dish to cook is noodles, Cajun and Creole.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    I always have pickled okra in my fridge.

    What do you cook at home?
    I cook everything- Mexican, Asian, Southern, Italian, Greek, Middle Eastern…and I fridge raid (clearing out the fridge and making a full meal).

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    Friendliness.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Unfriendliness.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Pyrex.

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    All of the above. My favorites range from a Shiner Bock, Old Vine Zin, and Tito’s on the rocks with a pickled Okra.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Robb Walsh.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Japanese Cleaver.

    Your favorite ingredient?
    My favorite ingredient is black pepper.

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    My least favorite ingredient is CILANTRO!

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Clean up!

    i8tonite with Phoenix's TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo Recipe

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Southern, Italian, Mexican, and Asian.

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Beef.

    Favorite vegetable?
    Eggplant.

    Chef you most admire?
    The chef I admire most locally is Robert McGrath.

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Noodles, Creole and Cajun are my favorite foods to eat. My absolute favorite is Texas BBQ.

    Food you dislike the most?
    Liver.

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    N/A.

    Recipe: Chicken Fideo

    i8tonite with Phoenix's TEXAZ Grill Chef Steve Freidkin & Chicken Fideo Recipe

    Serving Size: 5
    Prep Time: 0:21

    Ingredients:
    7 oz vermicelli — fideo
    1 oz butter
    3 cups cubed chicken thigh meat
    1 c julienned onion
    2 t minced garlic
    1 can Ro-tel tomatoes
    3 cups water
    2 t chicken bouillion paste
    1 t oregano
    2 t whole cumin
    2 oz canned jalapeno peppers – juice

    Directions:
    Brown fideo in butter until golden.
    Add onion and garlic and saute briefly.
    Add chicken and cook for 3 minutes.
    Add the rest of the ingredients and cook over moderate heat, until done – about 30 minutes.
    Serve topped with sliced green onion and grated cheddar.
    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with Phoenix’s Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe

    i8tonite with Phoenix’s Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe“After college, I thought I was going to go to California, but I got delayed,” says noted Chef Cullen Campbell, chef owner of the nationally known Phoenix-based Crudo, which he opened in 2012 with mixologist Micah Olson. Last year, the duo, along with Campbell’s wife Maureen McGrath, unlocked Okra, a Southern-themed restaurant with touches of Italy, harkening back to growing up in Arkansas. Although born in the 48th state, Campbell spent time on the Arkansas family farm and attended university in Memphis, where he picked up some of the deep Southern touches that craft the excellent flavors of his sophomore effort. Clearly, he wanted to bring some of that country to Arizona.

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe

    Like the Sonoran Desert, the interiors of both places are wide and vast. There aren’t any nooks or cubby holes  for clandestine dinners to hide in. The restaurants are boisterous, raucous affairs, letting the diner know they are in for a delicious meal. Crudo is the higher end of the two, with a collage of shutters as artwork at the entrance, but it’s the casual wood-tones of Okra which come across warmly. Both restaurants, though, are a showcase of Campbell’s kitchen talent. Arizona Republic’s restaurant critic Howard Sefetel said in his 2012 review of Crudo, “What makes Campbell’s fare stand out? Certainly, the ingredients are primo. But what Campbell does with them is often highly original and always skillfully executed.”

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe

    Since then, the kitchen star has been on the rise, putting Valley of the Sun’s dining and drinking culture on the national culinary map, with noted stories in Sunset Magazine, USA Today, and Los Angeles Times.

    What’s next on the horizon for the Arizona cooking wunderkind? “I have a bunch of different concepts I want to try out. Something small and higher end with no more than a dozen tables. Then I have a hot dog concept I want to do with Micah. Cocktails. Beer and wine list all paired for the dogs.”

    Whatever Campbell does, we know it will be delicious.

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    I have been cooking for 20 years.

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    My least favorite food is Shellfish.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    I have wine, water, & leftovers.

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe
    Squid Ink Risotto

    What do you cook at home?
    Not much but sometimes, I r&d at my house. I just made some pici, which is like a thick hand rolled spaghetti. I love hand rolling pasta!

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    The person wanting to try everything.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    The person that is scared to try new things.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Rubbermaid.

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Wine all the way, especially really great white wine.

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe
    Burrata

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    David Joachim. Not only has he written his own books, he has also collaborated on some of my favorite books.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Spoons.

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Olive Oil.

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    Anything processed.

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Clean. I make a mess haha!

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    I go through spurts. Of course Italian & southern. But I have started playing around with Polynesian.

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e PepeBeef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Pork.

    Favorite vegetable?
    Rapini.

    Chef you most admire?
    I have two: Jean Georges Vongerichten & Marc Vetri. One is very refined & the other is more rustic, but they both work with the best ingredients & don’t overcomplicate dishes.

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Cheeseburger & fries!

    Food you dislike the most?
    I eat everything!

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e PepeHow many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    I only have two at the moment. One of them is an alcohol in Japanese. But I want to get a fork & spoon on me. Also, one that celebrates my restaurants – Crudo & Okra.

    Recipe: Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe

    i8tonite with Phoenix's Crudo Chef Cullen Campbell & Recipe for Semolina Gnocci with Trotter Ragu & Cacio e Pepe
    Semolina Gnocchi

    Semolina Gnocchi
    3 cups milk
    1/2 cup butter
    11/2tsp salt
    4 egg yolks
    1 cup parmesan
    1 cup semolina

    Put milk, butter, & salt into a medium pot (bring to a boil).
    Add semolina & whisk vigorously for 4 minutes.
    Add 1 egg yolk at a time while stirring.
    Then add the parmesan and whisk until the cheese melts, about 3 minutes.
    Spread mixture on a sheet tray & let cool for 45 minutes.
    When cooled, cut out circles with a ring mold.
    Sear the gnocchi in a pan on medium heat until golden brown.

    Cacio e Pepe
    1 cup heavy cream
    1/2 cup grated parmesan
    1/2 cup grated pecorino remano
    1tbs roux
    2tbs fresh ground black pepper
    Salt to taste

    Heat heavy cream & both cheeses together until melted.
    Add roux to thicken & then add the pepper.

    Trotter Ragu
    5lbs pig trotters
    1 yellow onion chopped
    1 head of garlic chopped
    1/4 cup olive oil
    3oz thyme picked & chopped
    6 cups da napoli crushed tomatoes
    6 cups meat stock
    2tbs salt
    1tbs fresh ground pepper

    Preheat oven to 375 degrees
    In a roasting pan, brown the trotters in the olive oil.
    Add onion, garlic, and thyme & stir until fragrant.
    Season with the salt & pepper.
    Add crushed tomatoes and meat stock & cover the pan tightly with foil or lid.
    Lower the oven to 300 degrees & cook for 3.5 hours.
    After pulled from the oven, let the trotters cool down for about an hour.
    After cooled, shred the trotters off the bones & mix back into the sauce.

    To Plate
    Put the ragu in the bottom of the bowl, arrange gnocchi, & top with a generous amount of cacio e pepe

    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw RecipeIn our global world, food is often the first thing that changes. Chinese noodles appropriated by the Italians after Marco Polo’s visit. How about al pastor brought to Mexico by Lebanese immigrants, or the deliciousness of a French-Vietnamese banh mi, which features tons of crunchy vegetables and savory pork stuffed into a baguette? This is the case for the much-lauded Revolutionario, near the University of Southern California, helmed by Chef Farid Zadi and his wife Susan Park. The couple came up with an ingenious concept of marrying North African diaspora (Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya) tastes with Mexico. The successful result is a delicious fusion of international flavors as noted by the alternative paper, LA Weekly, The Los Angeles Times, and the queue of college students and food-oriented people standing at the counter ordering their $3.00 tacos.

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe
    Revolutionario

    Zadi’s career started in his birthplace of Lyon, France, ultimately leading him to working in Michelin starred restaurants throughout the world, including stints in Seoul, Korea, and Scotland. Upon coming to the United States, Zadi focused his epicurean talents on being a chef consultant and culinary educator, teaching cooking classes – for the beginner to the accomplished – at such places as Sur La Table, Whole Foods Market, and Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts.

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe
    Makroud (Algerian Date Newtons)

    Last year, he and Susan wanted to create something different. Park says, “We saw the market going in a different direction towards a fast casual experience. Millennials didn’t really want to participate in the sit down service.” Along Jefferson, Revolutionario is not hard to find, as there are hordes of people waiting for service. Together, the couple have created a refreshing and unique melding of cultures…and the world was ready. Algerian butter and Mexican crema top a cob of corn. An Algerian roasted chicken with rasa al hanout – a Northern African spice mixture — called mechoui — is served up with feta and tortillas to wrap the bird. Wood-roasted cauliflower is also a standout when bound in a corn tortilla.

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe
    Mexican Street Corn with Algerian Creole Butter, Crema, and Cotija

    Park comments, “North African tacos are an interesting cuisine. Food writers, those who are well-traveled, and people exposed to unique flavors love our food. Where else can you get merguez sausage served like a burrito?

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    34 years professionally

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    Dover sole with lemon butter sauce

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Butter, cheese, and cured meat.

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe
    Merguez and Crispy Potato Tacos

    What do you cook at home?
    Nothing

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    Openness

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Don’t know what they want

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Pyrex

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Beer in the summer, wine for fall and winter

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Clifford Wright

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Chef’s knife

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Water

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    Lard

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Home stove that doesn’t burn high enough

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe
    Roasted Sweet Potato and Crispy Kale, Yukon Gold with Lentil Chili or Charred Vegetables.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Mediterranean and Californian

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Beef

    Favorite vegetable?
    Potatoes

    Chef you most admire?
    Pierre Gagnaire

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Buttered pasta

    Food you dislike the most?
    Calf’s brain

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    None. Never.

    Recipe: Fennel and carrot slaw

    i8tonite with LA’s Revolutionario Chef Farid Zadi & Fennel and Carrot Slaw Recipe

    • 2 medium fennel bulbs
    • 5 carrots, coarsely grated
    • 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
    • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
    • 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
    • 1/4 cup Spanish green olives, pitted and finely chopped
    • 1/4 teaspoon dried Aleppo chile or Espelette pepper flakes (optional), or to taste
    • 6 sun-dried tomatoes packed in oil, drained and very thinly sliced
    • 2 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley

    Chop enough fennel fronds to measure 3 tablespoons and reserve.

    Discard remaining fronds and stalks. Cut bulbs into thin matchsticks and toss with carrots in a bowl.

    Whisk together lemon juice, vinegar, oil, olives, Aleppo chile (if using), and salt to taste and toss with vegetables.

    Chill, covered, at least 30 minutes (for flavors to develop).

    Photo WILLIAM ABRANOWICZ

    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio PeperoncinoIn 2007, New York Times wine writer Eric Asimov devoted an entire column to Do Bianchi (a Venetian term meaning two wines), a blog started by Jeremy Parzen. Asimov calls him, “One of those annoyingly talented individuals who speaks multiple languages, writes music, plays in a band, and also writes about wine meaning and food.”

    Even though the annoying part was a gentle ribbing, Parzen is all those things. He holds a PhD in Italian, having lived in Pisa. He continues to travel back and forth to the boot-shaped country once a month from his home in Houston. Via his wine blog, Parzen is considered to be the foremost authority on Italian wines currently being written in North America; he has also been a food journalist and editor for the defunct Cucina Italiana, the widely popular magazine that was solely about Italian food, products, and cooking. He has penned additional stories for Wine & Spirits, Gastronomica, Men’s Vogue, and The Tasting Panel.

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino
    Sotto dining room. Photo Sean Murphy

    Yet more importantly for consumers, his formidable knowledge on the nearly 1000 grape varietals used in making Italian vino is on display and available for tasting at Sotto, the Beverly Hills restaurant dedicated to regional Romanesque cooking. Here, with his friend of 25 years, Chef Steven Samson, guests can drink extraordinary small productions of vermentino or the Sardinian red fruit, cannonau, pairing it with handmade rustic pizzas and pastas.

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino
    Wine pairing at Sotto

    “Working with Steve and knowing him for as long as I have, he let me push the envelope for the wine list,” says Parzen. “In the end, we have produced a menu that’s won a lot of people over and is selling.”
    “Steve always said to me, ‘When I’m ready to open my restaurant, you will (create) my wine list.’ (At Sotto), we try and give a voice to the youthful wine culture. I specialize in Italians wines that are looking to (the restaurant) to  give it a voice.”

    And when you can’t find Parzen drinking an Italian wine, you can find him on a stage playing French pop music in a band called Nous Non Plus. Renaissance man, indeed.

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    What is your favorite food to cook at home?
    Pasta.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Sparkling wine.

    What marked characteristic do you love in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    Hearty appetite.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a person with whom you are sharing a meal?
    Fear of pickled herring or horse meat.

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino
    Wine pairing at Sotto

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Wine.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Craig Claiborne.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Chef’s knife.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Italian, American, but not Italian-American.

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Horse.

    Favorite vegetable?
    Horse radish.

    Chef you most admire?
    Chef Steve Samson!

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Pasta.

    Food you dislike the most?
    Junk food. Processed food.

    What is your favorite non-food thing to do?
    Play music.

    Whom do you most admire in food?
    Darra Goldstein.

    Where is your favorite place to eat?
    Italy.

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio PeperoncinoWhat is your favorite restaurant?
    Sotto! For real…

    Do you have any tattoos?
    Jews generally don’t get tattoos, so n/a.

     

    Recipe: Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino

    i8tonite with Italian Wine Expert Jeremy Parzen & Recipe for Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino
    Pasta Olio Aglio Peperoncino. Photo: Flickr cc: Yusuke Kawasaki

     

    Heat EVOO in a pan. Add garlic and chili flakes.
    An anchovy, washed and cleaned, can be added as well, if desired.
    Cook spaghetti until al dente.
    Strain well and add to the pan.
    Toss well and drizzle with EVOO before serving with a glass of Verdicchio.

    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with OC’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas

    i8tonite with OC’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas

    i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas“The cuisine at Who Song’s & Larry is meant to be fun. It’s Mexican-inspired food,” say 32-year old Chef Johannes Bernau. “The food at Las Brisas finds its inspiration in Mexico, but is really Southern California.”

    Born in Utah to a Japanese mother and Dutch Indonesian father, the talented man behind the Real Mex Restaurants stove holds the unwieldy title of Corporate Chef for Specialty Brands. Behind that long designation lies a thoughtful human who creates delectable South of the Border-encouraged dishes at Las Brisas, an iconic cliff side eatery overlooking California’s famed Laguna Beach, and Who Song’s & Larry’s, a newcomer to the restaurant scene. Real Mex also owns additional Southern California chains such as Acapulco, Chevy’s, and El Torito Grill. Bernau oversees the kitchens of the single standing operations, which include the aforementioned, but also El Paso Cantina in Torrance, CA and New York City’s Sinigual.

    i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas

    “Like every chef, I started out helping as a kid in the kitchen, then I started inviting my friends over for barbeques that I would make,” Bernau recalls. “I worked at a pizza place between the ages of 18 – 19. Today, I still crank out a pizza for family (staff) meals.”

    Seafood Tower Las Brisas. i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas
    Seafood Tower Las Brisas

    The food at Las Brisas, with its breaktaking views of Laguna’s golden sand beaches and Pacific Ocean waves, is a must for every traveler and visitor to the legendary ocean community. The white tablecloth eatery serves dishes such as the fruta del mar, a mixture of lobster, scallops, shrimp, and the catch of the day with a saffron sauce. Also, surf and turf plates exist with Latin flavors, such as the New York Strip with Mexican Shrimp. Adding to the overall theme of Southern California dishes are starters such as ceviche and Ahi Tuna Poke.

    i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas

    Who Song’s & Larry is themed more like a cantina with lustful eats, including Hangover Fries. Created by Chef Bernau, the dish is crispy fries covered in carnitas, bacon, green chili sauce, melted pepper jack cheese, pico de gallo, a fried egg, and fresno chiles. Served in a small crock, the mighty curative sounds overwhelming but in truth, it’s delicious with bold flavors to settle anyone who might be leaning too far after a night of drinking. “The inspiration was from the Canadian poutine and from my love of smothered fries…plus a fried egg can go on anything,” chuckles Bernau. “It was so popular we named our brunch after our fries.”

    Hangover fries. i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas
    Hangover fries

     

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    Since I was able to crack eggs… (Mom and dad probably ate plenty of egg shell omelets…)

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    Anything off the grill, especially Steak.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Surge (classic soda from the 90’s) – they took it away once… not going to let that happen again.

    What do you cook at home?
    Mac and cheese.

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    Their love for food.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Customers that want their steaks well done.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Rubbermaid

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Beer

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Ferran Adria

    Street Corn - Who Song and Larry's. i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas
    Street Corn – Who Song and Larry’s

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Chef’s Knife.

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Thyme – everything could use a little more thyme.

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    MSG

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    When I was a young cook, one of my jobs was to peel grapes.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Tacos

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Beef

    Favorite vegetable?
    Broccolini

    Chef you most admire?
    Jose Andreas – worked for him back in the day & learned how to cook with liquid nitrogen.

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Ramen (not instant)

    Food you dislike the most?
    Natto, a Japanese dish of fermented soy beans.

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    none

    Recipe: Coke Cola Carnitas

    i8tonite with LA’s Las Brisas Chef Johannes Bernau and Recipe for Coca Cola Carnitas
    Photo Wikimedia Commons: Mike McCune

    5 lbs of large chunks of pork butt
    1 onion chopped
    1 sprig of thyme
    1 sprig of oregano
    1 can of coke
    1 can of beer
    2 TBSP salt
    1 tsp pepper
    Water

    Put everything in crock pot on medium before you go to work.

    Eat after work. With tortillas and cheese.

    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu Sauce

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu Sauce

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu Sauce

    The world is full of great food and chefs – we only need to open our tastebuds to them. For instance, at Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse, at The Phoenician, a Starwood property, French-born Executive Chef Jacques Qualin may be the area’s only stove helmer to have worked at four Michelin restaurants – two in France and two in New York – a very rare distinction. If you are a sports fan, it’s like saying you played soccer with Manchester United and Real Madrid; then moved to the United States, and played baseball with the Yankees and Mets.

    Qualin, like many chefs, started cooking with his mother, tying his apron strings and sticking close to her, learning about food from the region of his birthplace, Franche-Comté, home to Comte and Emmenthaler cheeses. As a young cook, he traveled to Paris, where he studied under Michelin-rated chef Michel de Matteis, working at his three-star Restaurant Taillevent, defined by The New York Times as “the best in Paris, if not all of France.” Several other kitchens later, including working for Daniel Boulud in New York at the world famous Le Cirque, Qualin worked again in Paris as at the cosmopolitan Restaurant La Marée, before working with his friend Jean-Georges Vongerichten at Jojo’s on East 58th Street as the culinary great’s first sous chef.

    After closing his seventy seat restaurant in upstate New York, The French Corner, The New York Times reviewer said, “(Qualin) created a unique and wonderful restaurant…delightfully rustic and complex all at once.” Vongerichten asked him about working together again, this time in Phoenix. He says, “I had been in France and New York City for fourteen years and I was looking for opportunities to come to the West Coast.”

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu SauceWorking in the Valley of the Sun, Qualin now defines himself as a “Frenchman who cooks with an Asian flair,” speaking to Vongerichten’s penchant for European and Asian cuisine. He says about working at J& G Steakhouse, a long distance from European Michelin restaurants, “I like good food and I like the brasserie-style we have at J&G. It’s a different restaurant than before, but it’s a steakhouse. I like that.”

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu Sauce

    How long have you been cooking?
    I have been cooking as far back as I can remember, I have loved cooking my whole life.

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    I get very excited when I see or find a product that looks pristine in quality and freshness, and that’s the way the flavors will come out the best. French cooking is my soul, Italian my guilty pleasure, and I like all Asian types of cooking.

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    I love hot sauce, so I always have good selections from wacky hot to mild. French mustard is a must too and fresh herbs.

    What do you cook at home?
    Everything from a six course tasting for my friends, to a simply grilled fresh fish. I do like to do some classical French dishes that remind me my childhood or some Asian dishes, like a Pad Thai.

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    To be open to try new things and flavors.

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu Sauce

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Ignorance.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    I used all of them, but I tend to go back to Pyrex as it’s PBA free and can take extreme heat or cold, such as liquid nitrogen.

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    All of them! Depending on the mood and the occasion or the food. I love to start with a ginger margarita or a crafted beer and wine (red or white), with a preference to the old world.

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Many of them! I do have quite a extensive collection, from old traditional French cookbooks to the latest trends in cooking.

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Cake tasters are very helpful for checking the food.

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Hard to say; there are too many I like, from yuzu to ginger or mint.

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    Fish sauce.

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Not doing anything in the kitchen.

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    French/Asian.

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu SauceBeef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    All, I like a nice Prime beef grilled to perfection, Milk feed Chicken roasted whole, Smoked and Braise Pulled pork sandwich with Habanero sauce, or seared tofu with a cilantro pesto.

    Favorite vegetable?
    Beets.

    Chef you most admire?
    Hard to pick because there are so many. Maybe Francis Mallman, as I like his philosophy of cooking and being genuine to the product.

    Food you like the most to eat?
    I like perfectly cooked pastas, Miruguai sashimi, fresh line-caught fish, and flavorful soups.

    Food you dislike the most?
    Okra.

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    None, not into that at all.

    Recipe: Roasted Whole Snapper Citrus and Garlic with Yuzu sauce

    i8tonite with Scottsdale’s J&G Steakhouse Chef Jacques Qualin & Recipe for Roasted Whole Snapper with Yuzu Sauce

    For the Yuzu Mayonnaise
    3 each Egg yolks
    1 tsp Salt
    2 oz Yuzu juice
    1 oz Lemon juice
    1 oz Orange juice
    1/2 qt Grape seed oil

    Combine all but the oil in the robot coupe and drizzle in the oil to emulsify. Put in a siphon and charge with 2 cartridges.(soda)

    Roasted Snapper:
    1 pc Snapper 1.2# deboned from the inside and still attached and scored.
    3 slices of Yuzu
    3 slices of oranges
    6 slices of fresh Ginger
    1 tbsp. cilantro picked and chiffonade
    1 tbsp. mint picked and chiffonade
    6 slices of Serrano peppers
    15 g garlic sliced ¾ inch
    ½ cup Olive oil

    Season the fish with salt on all sides, arrange all the slices and the herbs evenly inside the fish. In a Dover plate, pour the oil and the garlic in the bottom then lay the fish on it, baste with the olive oil. Cook in the oven at 375 F for 10 min, basting it often. When almost cooked, finish under the broiler to get a nice brown color while basting. Drain ¾ of the oil, leaving the garlic inside.

    To serve:
    1 pc of fancy lemon
    1 small bunch of cilantro
    On a big black plate, fold a white napkin squared, put the hot plate on it. Add the lemon and cilantro and cover with the lid, serve the Yuzu mayonnaise on the side.
    – The End. Go Eat. –

  • i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes RecipeOn a Wednesday night in Larchmont Village in the heart of Los Angeles, every table at Vernetti was full. The owner and chef Steve Vernetti was in the house, moving between the kitchen and the dining room, talking to everyone as though they were old friends. Indeed, it was obvious that there were many regulars. Vernetti is a neighborhood restaurant, the kind of place you come to rely on for all the important events of life – birthdays, anniversaries, and first dates. The atmosphere was lively, casual, and comfortable. There’s a modern European bistro aesthetic, thanks to Steve’s wife Joanne, who worked with designer David Thompson on the remodel of the original space. The staff made us feel like rock stars. The food was excellent.

    His chef training started early. Vernetti notes, “Growing up, we learned how to butcher our goats, pigs, chicken, and turkeys. My brother and I got up at 5 every day before we went to school and milked the goats. We learned how to grow our food. My mother bought me my first cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking. The first thing I made from that book was chocolate eclairs.”

    Before settling in Los Angeles in the 90s, Vernetti traveled throughout Europe, gathering influences from Berlin, Paris, Venice, Amsterdam, and Florence. He then lived in London for seven years, working with Chef Charles Fontaine at Quality Chop House and Le Caprice. It is easy to see the old world influences mixed with the new at Vernetti, where Steve is in the kitchen every day experimenting with inventive takes on classic recipes.

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe

    He’s also a thoughtful owner – “Working in the restaurant industry for as long as I have, I want my staff to be happy. We run a place where my dishwashers are key players in the business, just as much as the front of the house. We need the staff to be happy. If they are happy, my customers will notice it and they will be happy, too.”

    We decided to try many dishes and share them round, starting with the gnocchi, a traditional northern Italian dish that is typically a rather dense potato pasta. This gnocchi was light and airy, rich with ricotta cheese and egg yolks, and topped with sage butter.

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe

    We followed the gnocchi with vongole and shrimp scampi, since Vernetti is known for their house-made pastas. You’ll definitely want to try at least one.

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe
    Linguine alla Vongole
    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe
    Shrimp Scampi

    Dessert was a trifecta of orange cannoli, strawberry cheesecake, and chocolate mousse. Hey, there were three of us! I didn’t eat all of this on my own. Look, though…

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe
    Chocolate Budino

    Vernetti has an excellent wine menu, with a selection of Italian wines that covers the boot from north to south. There are also some great California wines on the menu. We decided to order by the glass so we could pair a different wine with each dish, which I think is a lot more fun. If you find something you love, you can always order more! You can also bring your own bottle and pay the corkage fee of $25.00. If wine is not your thing, Vernetti’s has a decent beer selection, though I confess my knowledge of beer is limited. I prefer the juice of the grape.

    Vernetti is a neighborhood restaurant, and since I’m not a local there, I felt quite lucky to have found it. It reminded me of an Italian trattoria where the owners are always there and live nearby. The menu is fresh, and dishes are served until they run out of the ingredients to make that particular dish. I recommend this restaurant to everyone!

    Steve Vernetti’s philosophy is to “feed the community as I do my family, providing a special place to celebrate all the amazing things that happen when sharing a delicious meal.” Cin Cin, Steve Vernetti.

     

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking? 41 years

    What is your favorite food to cook? Thanksgiving dinner

    What do you always have in your fridge at home? strawberry jam

    What do you cook at home? everything

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer? hunger

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer? unadventurous

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex? pyrex

    Beer, wine, or cocktail? wine

    Your favorite cookbook author? Julia Child

    Your favorite kitchen tool? my tongue

    Your favorite ingredient? salt

    Your least favorite ingredient? kale

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes RecipeLeast favorite thing to do in a kitchen? dishes

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook? French, Italian, & British

    Beef, chicken, pork or tofu? beef

    Favorite vegetable? potato

    Chef you most admire? Eric Rippert

    Food you like the most to eat? sweetbreads prepared by my mother

    Food you dislike the most? anything that has the word molecular in it

    How many tattoos? one

    And if so, how many are of food? None

    Recipe: Vernetti’s Semolina Pancakes

    i8tonite with Larchmont Village’s Vernetti Chef Steve Vernetti & his Semolina Pancakes Recipe

    Ingredients
    2cups Semolina
    2cups all purpose flour
    4tsp baking powder
    2tsp baking soda
    1/2tsp salt

    Sift dry ingredients in a bowl and add:
    4eggs
    3-4 cups buttermilk (plain whole milk will work)
    1/2cup vegetable oil

    Directions
    Mix but leave lumps. Use well oiled cast iron pan or griddle on medium high heat and brush browned tops with melted butter – enjoy!

     

     

    The End. Go Eat. 

  • i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for BorschtA cursory internet search on Lithuanian chefs yields one or two male names located in Europe. Narrowing the searching to California leads us to San Francisco’s East Bay and the Los Angeles’ Annual Lithuanian Festival, which recently celebrated its annual event in the city’s Silver Lake neighborhood.  Digging a little deeper brings us to Doma (which means “home” in Lithuanian) Kitchen in Los Angeles County’s coastal community of Manhattan Beach. It’s a delicious neighborhood bistro with a heavy focus on Eastern European foods using seasonal California ingredients. In other words, going to Doma Kitchen is an enlightening travel experience without having to leave the county.

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    Owned by three people, Chef Kristina Miksyte and entrepreneurial couple Angelika Corrente and Stanislav Mayzalis, Doma Kitchen brings together a taste of Lithuania to the Southern California food scene. The latter was already a working chef in her homeland before winning the green card lottery and becoming an American citizen.

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    Having attended a culinary school in her hometown of Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, like so many immigrants, Miksyte’s dream was to live and cook in the United States. She says, “I love my country but it didn’t give me the opportunities to work. In Los Angeles, I have a restaurant, I am married, and I cook what I want.”

    Lithuanian food is characterized by the cooking of potatoes, beets, pork, barley, berries, and mushrooms. The use of indigenous herbs such as dill, caraway, and juniper mimic their Eastern European neighbors (Uzbekistan, southern Russia, Latvia, Poland, and Belarus). And Doma Kitchen’s menu reflects this rich, fragrant cuisine with plov (braised rice or rice pilaf), kasha (braised barley or buckwheat-like risotto), and vareniki (similar to pierogies).

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    However the food isn’t all relegated to the “stans” of the world; Chef Miksyte makes liberal use of other Mediterranean ingredients, such as burrata, basil, tomato, and walnuts to showcase her global tastes. “I wanted to come to the States to become a better cook and learn more of what the world offers,” says Doma Kitchen’s stove director.

    Los Angeles is all the better for it.

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    How long have you been cooking?
    I’ve been cooking for almost twenty years.

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    I love to bake and also enjoy cooking good meat

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for BorschtWhat do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Fresh veggies and fruits, fresh meat or fish, few cheeses and salami. Almost nothing in the freezer. Basically I’m stocked with produce for all meals, something for breakfast, snacks and for a nice dinner.

    What do you cook at home?
    I’m constantly experimenting and messing around with new recipes. Often go back to authentic recipes either from Russia, Lithuania, or Persian. Weekends are BBQ.

    What marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    I love to make my customers happy through eating my food. When I see the excitement after first look at the food followed up with “Wow,” “OMG,” “This looks so good and tastes even better.” The love is mutual between us – I love to cook and they like to eat.

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    I hate when the customer changes the ingredients in my dishes. It’s basically changing the whole dish completely, and creating a new dish.

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Pyrex

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    Wine

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    My Grandma

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Knives

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Fresh herbs and dill, of course!

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    Don’t have one

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Wipe down and polishing the dishes

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    Central Asian, Middle eastern, and whatever that’s on my mind

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Beef

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for BorschtFavorite vegetable?
    Fresh cucumbers from my mother’s garden

    Chef you most admire?
    Egidijus Lapinskas in Lithuania

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Good piece of meat, sushi, or fish

    Food you dislike the most?
    Overly spicy food that you can’t taste anything else.

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    I have two tattoos. No food tattoos to date.

    Recipe: Doma Kitchen’s Borscht

    i8tonite with Manhattan Beach’s Doma Kitchen Chef Kristina Miksyte & Recipe for Borscht

    Doma Kitchen Borscht recipe

    Ingredients

    • 1 lb Lamb, stew meat, or whatever kind of beef you like, bone-in or boneless
    • 1 Tbsp salt + more to taste
    • 2 large or 3 medium beets, washed, peeled and grated
    • 4 Tbsp olive oil
    • 1 Tbsp vinegar
    • 1 Tbsp sugar
    • 1 Tbsp butter
    • 1 medium onion, finely diced
    • 2 carrots, grated
    • 2 large or 3 medium potatoes, peeled and sliced into bite-sized pieces
    • ½ head of small cabbage, sliced
    • 2 tomatoes, peeled and diced (**see note)
    • 2 bay leaves
    • ¼ tsp freshly ground pepper
    • ¼ cup chopped fresh parsley and dill
    • 2 cloves garlic, pressed
    • Garnish: Sour cream and fresh sprigs of parsley or dill.

    Instructions

    1. Wash meat in cold water, cut into 1″ pieces and place in a large soup pot with 14 cups cold water and 1 Tbsp salt. Bring it to a boil and remove the foam crud as soon as it boils (if you wait, it will be hard to get rid of the crud as it integrates into the broth and you’d have to strain it later). Reduce heat, partially cover and simmer 45 minutes – 1 hr, periodically skimming off any crud that rises to the top.
    2. Grate beets on the large grater holes (a food processor works amazingly well). Place them in a large heavy-bottom skillet with 4 Tbsp olive oil and 1 Tbsp vinegar and sauté for 5 minutes, then reduce heat to med/low and add 1 Tbsp sugar. Mix thoroughly and sauté until starting to soften, stirring occasionally (about 10 min). Remove from pan and set aside. In the same skillet (no need to wash it), Sauté onion in 1 Tbsp butter for 2 min. Add grated carrot and sauté another 5 min or until softened, adding more oil if it seems too dry.
    3. Once the meat has been cooking at least 45 min, place sliced potatoes into the soup pot and cook 10 min, then add cabbage, sautéed beets, onion & carrot, and chopped tomatoes. Cook another 10 minutes or until potatoes can be easily pierced with a fork.
    4. Add 2 bay leaves, ¼ tsp pepper, and more salt to taste (I added another ½ tsp salt).
    5. Chop parsley and pressed garlic then stir them into the soup pot, immediately cover and remove from heat. Let the pot rest covered for 20 minutes for the flavors to meld.

    The End. Go Eat. 

  • i8tonite with Napa’s Chef Sean O’Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za’atar Roasted Chicken

    i8tonite with Napa’s Chef Sean O’Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za’atar Roasted Chicken

    i8tonite with Napa's Chef Sean O'Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za'atar Roasted ChickenSean O’Toole, the chef/owner of critically acclaimed TORC in downtown Napa, developed a passion for locally farmed produce early on in his cooking career. Originally from Massachusetts, O’Toole has a broad understanding of global cuisines and techniques as well as a deep appreciation of locally sourced, artisanal foods.

    Over the course of his cooking career, O’Toole cooked at San Francisco’s Ritz Carlton hotel, Restaurant Maximin in France, and Tabla Restaurant and Café Boulud in New York City. He cooked as Sous Chef at San Francisco’s Fifth Floor restaurant and Masa’s, Chef de Cuisine at Alain Ducasse’s Mix in Las Vegas, the Culinary Director of San Francisco’s Mina Group, Executive Chef at Bardessono in Yountville, and Chef/Director of Kitchen Operations at San Francisco’s Quince and Cotogna.

    i8tonite with Napa's Chef Sean O'Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za'atar Roasted Chicken

    O’Toole is culinary focused on cooking with the region’s bountiful selection of fresh products, forging longstanding relationships with the people that produce, forage, and glean them. His combination of experience, passion, and culinary skill define O’Toole’s ingredient-driven cuisine at TORC — a very personal endeavor that reflects his family heritage, and the culinary influences and mentors that have shaped his career.

    Chef’s Questionnaire (with a nod to Proust):

    What is your favorite food to cook?
    Any

    What do you always have in your fridge at home?
    Straus greek yogurt

    What do you cook at home?
    Mostly meats and grilled vegetables

    i8tonite with Napa's Chef Sean O'Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za'atar Roasted ChickenWhat marked characteristic do you love in a customer?
    People who know what they want

    What marked characteristic do you find unappealing in a customer?
    Indecisiveness

    Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or Pyrex?
    Pyrex

    Beer, wine, or cocktail?
    In that order: beer, wine, cocktails

    Your favorite cookbook author?
    Currently David Thompson

    Your favorite kitchen tool?
    Microplane

    Your favorite ingredient?
    Any mushroom wild and foraged

    Your least favorite ingredient?
    Ripe papaya

    Least favorite thing to do in a kitchen?
    Direct unmotivated people

    i8tonite with Napa's Chef Sean O'Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za'atar Roasted Chicken

    Favorite types of cuisine to cook?
    French infused American

    Beef, chicken, pork, or tofu?
    Beef

    Favorite vegetable?
    Artichoke

    Chef you most admire?
    Currently Chef Jean-Francois Piège

    Food you like the most to eat?
    Chicken wings

    Food you dislike the most?
    Ripe papaya

    How many tattoos? And if so, how many are of food?
    One!

    Recipe: Sumac and za’atar roasted chicken with roasted vegetables

    i8tonite with Napa's Chef Sean O'Toole of TORC & Recipe for Sumac and Za'atar Roasted Chicken

    Recipe serves 4 people

    Ingredients:
    3 tablespoons butter
    1 teaspoon finely chopped parsley
    1 teaspoon ground sumac
    2 teaspoons za’atar (Eastern Mediterranean spice blend containing thyme, cumin, sumac, and sesame seeds)
    1 clove garlic, peeled and finely chopped
    Finely grated zest of 1 lemon
    1/4 teaspoon salt, plus more to taste
    Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
    1 2 1/2- to 3-pound chicken, wings and wishbone removed

    Preheat the oven to 350° F. Soften 2 tablespoons of the butter to room temperature and combine with the parsley, sumac, za’atar, garlic, lemon zest, salt and pepper in a mixing bowl. Fill a small disposable piping bag (or plastic bag with a corner snipped off) with the mixture and reserve.
    Place the piping bag under the skin at the top of the breast and squeeze the butter mixture under the skin. Using your hands, spread it out to cover the whole breast. With butchers twine, make a loop below the knee joints on the drumsticks. Pull the neck skin underneath the bird and tuck the drumettes. Using the twine looped around the legs, tie a knot.
    Coat the outside of the chicken with the remaining tablespoon of soft butter, and season with salt and pepper. Place the chicken in a hot cast iron pan. Cook the chicken in the oven for 50 minutes, basting with the renderings every 10 minutes. Remove the chicken to rest and reserve the pan and the renderings to roast the vegetables.
    Roasted vegetables:
    1 piece fennel bulb, cut into quarters and cored
    6 white pearl onions, peeled
    6 small potatoes, cut lengthwise into quarters
    Finely grated zest of 1 Meyer lemon
    10 Taggiasca olives, pitted
    1 teaspoon finely chopped parsley
    Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

    Increase the oven temperature to 425° F. Toss the potatoes and fennel in the pan that was used to roast the chicken, so that they are coated with chicken renderings. (You may also choose to roast the vegetables in a clean pan, tossed in the renderings and additional butter or olive oil, if needed.) Roast for 15 minutes, then add the pearl onions and cook for an additional 10 minutes. Drain the excess renderings from the pan if necessary, then toss with the zest, olives and parsley. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
    To serve, quarter the chicken and cut the legs in half, at the joint between the drumstick and thigh. Serve the chicken and vegetables together on individual plates, or pass family-style.

     

    The End. Go Eat.