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Posts tagged with: Celebrity Chefs

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In the Media

The Wonders of Ovaltine, Per Lark’s Johnathan Sundstrom

He calls it “malted milk with terroir.”

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Lark’s Johnathan Sundstrom hearts Ovaltine.

In what is a pretty edifying feature, the glossy Saveur asked 100 chefs east to west to name the people, places, tools, ingredients, and moments that get their culinary juices flowing. Representing Seattle is Johnathan Sundstrom of Capitol Hill’s Lark and Licorous. His kitchen go-to? Ovaltine.

I call it malted milk with terroir, because of its unique mineral flavor; it’s sweet but not achingly so, with an earthy edge. You can add it to everything from ice creams to pudding.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Capitol Hill, In The Media

Openings

For Your Weekend Consideration: Revel in Fremont

The menu takes as inspiration Asian curb cuisine.

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Ready for your biz: Revel in Fremont.

Don’t forget that today’s the day Revel, the Fremont restaurant of Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi, opens.

The duo’s first enterprise, Joule, is a Seattle food-lover favorite, and based on the dishes I saw Monday when I swung in for a tour, Revel is likely to follow suit.

For more on those dishes, and to take a gander at the new restaurant, check out our First Look.

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Tags: New Seattle Restaurants, Celebrity Chefs, Seattle Restaurant Openings, Fremont

High 5 Pie’s Dani Cone Is Coming Out With a Cookbook

Look for Cutie Pies in late spring/early summer of 2011.

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High 5’s cranberry nut pie. Photo by Kat Wertzler.

Drifts in the sweets world are signaling a pie moment, and here in Seattle Fuel Coffee ’s Dani Cone is doing her part to usher in the crusted heyday. On the horizon is a Capitol Hill retail space for her High 5 Pies. And, Cone tells Nosh Pit, a cookbook.

Cutie Pies is slated for a late spring/early summer 2011 release under publisher Andrews McMeel; Bellevue-based becker&mayer! is producing the tome. In it you’ll find 40 sweet-and-savory recipes for pies of all stripes: pies baked in muffin tins, pies baked in mason jars, hand pies, mini pies, deep-dish pies, nine-inch pies—even pie lollipops.

Though Cone penned the pie pub, she collabed with High 5 baker Cat Wilcox to craft the recipes—“And ate ridiculous amounts of pie in the process. And will be joining a gym.”—while local photographer Clare Barboza snapped the photos.

This is Cone’s second book, and like 2008 release Tall Skinny Bitter: Notes from the Center of Coffee Culture, this one materialized thanks to Fuel: “A couple of the great folks at becker&mayer! happen to be regular Fuel customers and have seen and enjoyed the High 5 Pies at the Fuel shops. As they are always looking for new ideas for books, and as the cookbook/foodie market is absolutely exploding, they contacted me to see if I had any interest in working with them to pitch a cookbook idea.”

Cone claims she’s “totally inept in the kitchen” (the folks at Bon Appétit may suggest otherwise) and lacks any formal training, ergo she never imagined she’d be putting her name on a cookbook.

Short on narrative but long on instruction, Cutie Pies nonetheless includes an anecdotal intro from her 92-year-old grandmother, Molly, a local author herself and source of High 5’s all-butter crust recipe. That’s Cone’s favorite part of the book.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Cookbooks, Locavore News, Food News, High 5 Pie, Pie

'Tis the Season

Likenesses of Matt Dillon and Ethan Stowell are Hanging in the Barneys Window

What do you think of the renderings?

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Ethan Stowell (left) and Matthew Dillon get the celebrity treatment at Barneys.

As part of the store’s “Have a Foodie Holiday” campaign, late last week Barneys downtown unveiled this window display. Featured are Matt Dillon (Sitka and Spruce, Corson Building) and Ethan Stowell (Anchovies and Olives, Staple and Fancy Mercantile , et al).

Barneys Visual Director Jodi Davis said the local buzz-fetchers make a good fit for the rollout because their “regional farm-to-table sensibility is what people are excited about in food currently,” adding: “Their restaurants are beautiful and accessible.”

A New York artist created the renderings, which, for better or worse, didn’t turn out like that of Mario Batali.

Thoughts?

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Barneys

On the Tube

Canlis’s Jason Franey Talks Turkey with Martha Stewart

Tune in this morning to watch.

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Martha and Canlis’s Jason Franey talk turkey.

We told you earlier in the week the Canlis brothers, Mark and Brian, along with the restaurant’s chef, Jason Franey, were heading East to tape a segment on the Martha Stewart show. In just a few hours the bit will air, says Seattlest.

Franey and Stewart will swap turkey tips, and by the sounds of the preview, Franey goes molecular gastro. Stewart asks, “What if ice could keep your turkey from drying out? Scentific tips for the perfect Thanksgiving.”

Tune in to the Hallmark Channel at 10am ET to find out.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Chefs,

Rene Redzepi Chefs the Best Restaurant in the World. Would You Like to Meet Him?

Say hello to the man himself at MistralKitchen on October 5.

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This guy makes food at the best restaurant in the world.

Next time your hyperbole-prone friend calls you and says “Oh my god, I seriously went to the best restaurant in the whole world last night!” don’t just roll your eyes. Say this: Was it Noma in Copenhagen, Denmark?" If she responds that no, it wasn’t Noma, feel free to in-your-face her with a smug “then it wasn’t the best restaurant in the world, pal.”

Because Noma is, they say, the best restaurant in the world. This pertains to we, the citizens of Seattle, in two ways:

1. It makes us excited that Blaine Wetzel, apprentice to Noma chef Rene Redzepi, has chosen the Willow’s Inn on Lummi Island in the San Juans as his new place of employ.

2. It makes us excited that Redzepi, who recently authored a cookbook called NOMA: Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine, will be stopping by Seattle’s own Mistralkitchen next Tuesday, October 5 at 6pm for a Cooks and Books Event. Tickets are still available and cost $150—that buys you the book, plus cocktails and snacks and a chance to talk to the great Redzepi himself. Call 206-632-2419.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs

On the Tube

Bravo Announces New Top Chef Lineup

Did any Seattleites make the cut?

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The eighth season of Top Chef will premiere December 1.

The rumor mills have been working overtime as to who’d be toque-ing up on the eighth edition of Top Chef (ever heard of it?). Now, Bravo confirms what blogs were speculating for weeks: the lineup will include 18 “all-stars” from seasons past.

Sadly, Seattle—no stranger to the TV competition —won’t be repped in this go-round.

The aptly-titled Top Chef: All-Stars is set to air December 1. Grub Street has a video preview of the show and the contestants.

Next time, Seattle. Next time.

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Tags: Reality TV, Celebrity Chefs

Hometown Pride

See Which Local Scribes Landed on Eater National’s Most Anticipated Cookbook List

Familiar names crop up in the blog’s must-buy roundup.

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Kim O’Donnel’s Meat Lover’s Meatless Cookbook comes out September 14.

Last week the editors at Eater National, a five-city-aggregate monster of a food blog, churned out a catalog of hot-ticket cookbooks soon to hit the shelves. The list runs 11 categories deep, each led by one (or in some cases, a couple) pubs the site’s “particularly excited about,” then several more honorable mentions. Yay for us, called out are several homegrown gastronomes:

Kim O’Donnel’s Meat Lover’s Meatless Cookbook is the first of the tomes you’ll see this fall. The September 14 release gets a mention in the “single subject” subhead for its vindication of vegetables and other animal-free meals. O’Donnel, a Canning Across America wonk, serves up 52 such menus in the book.

More flattery for Ethan Stowell: he lands on the “chefs, restaurants, and other famous food folk” list for his New Italian Kitchen, due out September 21. Stowell penned the ode to the Boot along with Leslie Miller.

Taking the top spot in the “professional and reference” category is the mammoth Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, authored in part by Food Lovers’ fave Chris Young. He and Nathan Myhrvold and Maxime Bilet are compiling the insanely ambitious anthology (it’s 2,200 pages—zoiks!), which Young has described as “part cookbook, part reference work, part textbook, part philosophical statement.” Look for it in early December.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Cookbooks

Marination Mobile Contends for Spot on The Great Food Truck Race

Love those kalua pork sliders? Tell it to the Food Network.

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The Marination Mobile truck: Destined for the Food Network?

Well lookie here. Seattle may get its due from Food Network after all.

Word on the web is Marination Mobile is vying to compete on the channel’s second season of The Great Food Truck Race. To secure a spot on the show, diehards need to let Food Network know how much Marination mindblows by voting here Aug 29-Sept 10. If you’re more the American Idol type, text FT44 to 66789.

The food truck (and note: not a few are nominated) with the most votes also will be crowned America’s favorite and receive $10,000; MM has said it would donate half to the Puget Sound chapter of Susan G. Komen.

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Tags: Reality TV, Celebrity Chefs, Street Food, Food Network

Food Finds

Taste of the Town: Angela Stowell

The business partner of husband Ethan talks dining out and working out.

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Angela and Ethan Stowell: partners in business and marriage. Photo courtesy Geoffrey Smith.

The most stressful part about opening a restaurant with a celebrated Seattle chef? "Waiting to hear if people enjoyed [it]… there are always kinks to be worked out. I just hope the kinks happen without being obvious to anyone but us.”

Hot off unveiling Ballard’s Staple and Fancy Mercantile, Angela Stowell, business partner and wife of Ethan, took a moment to talk up Seatown.

Vita, Stumptown, or Starbucks? Vita

Where do you take out-of-town guests to eat? Besides our restaurants, Green Leaf, Boat Street Café, and Delancy.

Do you use recipes or wing it? I leave the cooking to the professional in the house.

Favorite way to burn calories: A few years ago, I started doing triathlons, and last year I did my first full marathon. I’m racing in my first half Ironman in September. It’s nice to be training for something, to have a goal. And being able to eat whatever you want on big training days isn’t bad either.

Are you or have you ever been a vegan? No

What’s your desert-island condiment? Peanut butter

Dessert or appetizer? Appetizer

Three restaurants that sum up Seattle: Canlis (we go bar-casual), Shiro’s (Japanese cuisine is a big part of Seattle history, and Shiro is a great chef), and Dick’s Drive-In (Bill Gates and Sir-Mix-A-Lot can’t both be wrong).

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Food Finds, Taste of the Town

On the Tube

Seattle Stiffed by Food Network’s
America’s Best

Say whaa?

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Seattle fails to make the cut for Food Network’s America’s Best. Boo.

On Tuesday the Food Network released its lineup of upcoming shows, among them America’s Best. The four-episode special finds one Alton Brown scouring the nation for top takers in several categories: comfort food, sweets, classic regional dishes, and dining destinations.

Ten finalists have been already announced in each group (winners will be chosen during the broadcast, beginning September 20), but bogusly absent is Seattle. Now, pardon the affront, but isn’t Seattle a natch for these type of things? Just look at the flurry of national nods to hit this city in recent months.

P-Town’s Slappy Cakes makes an appearance as one of the top 10 destinations, but otherwise that’s the closest Brown gets to showing the Northwest any love.

Surely you, too, think this bunk. Which Seattle restaurants would you put on the list?

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Food Network, Rankings,

Hometown Pride

Anchovies and Olives Among Bon Appétit’s Best New Restaurants

Ethan Stowell’s third fourth establishment chalks up another national accolade.

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Capitol Hill’s Anchovies and Olives: a national favorite. Photo: courtesy Geoffrey Smith

Lately, when it comes to Ethan Stowell, the conversation inevitably orbits around Staple and Fancy Mercantile, his just-opened Ballard restaurant. But it’s his previous venture, the stunner Anchovies and Olives, that today gives us cause to talk up the Seattle toque.

Stowell’s third fourth establishment (the since-departed Union, How to Cook a Wolf, and Tavolàta came first) is among Bon Appétit‘s “10 Best New Restaurants in America,” a list released in the AM of August 18. In its description, the glossy lauds Stowell’s geoduck crudo, mackerel, and seared prawn preparations, and declares: In a city full of outstanding seafood restaurants, Anchovies & Olives is arguably the best. “Less is more” seems to be the theme here—from the 40-seat space (with a beautiful open kitchen) to the pared-down menu that’s divided into two sections: crudo and plates (entrees). What’s more, nothing is priced over $16.

This isn’t the first time A & O has been favored by far-flung critics. GQ ’s Alan Richman deemed it among the nation’s 10 finest to open in 2009, and in February Anchovies was named a James Beard semifinalist for best newbie (and Stowell a finalist for Best Chef Northwest).

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Capitol Hill, Awards and Accolades, Rankings, Ethan Stowell

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