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Archive for the ‘Dishing with the Chefs’ Category

Chef Siddharth Choudhary

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Siddharth Choudhary

Siddharth Choudhary grew up in New Delhi, India, when he was 19 years old he got into cooking, he did a 3 year diploma in culinary in New Delhi at a 5 star luxury hotel. He was then selected for a job at a restaurant chain in Ireland where he worked for 6 years. He received a bronze medal in a chefs competition in Ireland in presentation. He then bought an Italian restaurant and turned it into a Japanese restaurant and then won best restaurant of Ireland in 2008. He then sold the restaurant and moved to Canada where he opened Siddartha’s Indian Kitchen on Commercial Drive in late 2011.

What did you want to be growing up?

Commercial Pilot – since I wore glasses, I knew I could not do that in India.

What was your passion growing up?

I was always very artistic, I like colours, did lots of paintings, got into cooking, and liked to play with colours and create art.

What challenges you as a Chef?

  • How creative cooking and how appealing it can be with passion and love.
  • Being consistent with the staff, being happy, taste daily which is a big thing.

Name 5 Spices you love to cook with

  1. Cilantro
  2. Mint
  3. Cumin
  4. Cardamom
  5. Currey leaves

The First Dish:

Vegetable Heaven

Vegetable Heaven

Korma sauce (no nuts)

Portobello mushroom

Butternut squash

Beets

Tomato

Peppers – roasted in cinnamon, cumin and garlic

Cilantro pesto

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Personally everyone has an image of Indian cooking, cooking vegetables until they are too soft. Cooking is an art which we can show looks, taste, aroma and should satisfy all our senses. My vegetables are roasted so you get flavour and standout character.

What is your Favourite Food?

At home: Kidney Bean & Rice Curry

In a restaurant: a good pasta

From my mom: Fenugreek Parathas

What are your favourite Restaurants outside of your own?

  • Cinch Grill on Robson
  • La Grotta Del Formaggio ‏
  • Kishimoto
  • House of Dosa

 The Second Dish:

Paneer Stuffed Chicken Breast

Paneer Stuffed Chicken Breast with apricot and cumin sauce and roasted vegetables

Chicken breast stuffed with paneer, pickled spices and cloves.

Served with roasted local vegetables and apricot and cinnamon, cumin sauce.

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Except the spice everything is locally produced, seasonal vegetables. Anyone can make it at home, simple and fast to cook.

What do you do in your Off Time?

  • Gardening
  • Taking photos of Vancouver
  • Internet surfing
  • Family time

What is your definition of Perfection?

An artist is never perfect he keeps on creating something, an artist is never satisfied. I am always experimenting with flavours and dishes.

The Third Dish:

Chicken Haryali

Chicken Haryali

Spinach mousse cooked with Siddarthas hot sauce with ginger and garlic.

Chicken marinated with fenugreek leaves, and creamy garlic and yogurt

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Chicken Harialy is usually drenched in spinach, my version everything is a standout from the ingredients to the chicken.

Who are your Mentors?

  • My elder aunt – who taught me how to cook
  • Chankya – philosopher
  • My mom
  • My uncle

Tell me about your interest in Art

Oil paintings and anything with bright colours. I spend a lot of time studying the arrangement of colours which gives me new inspiration.

Tell me about your Hot Sauce

I created my own hot sauce without any preservatives. Concentrate of spices and chillis took me a while to fine tune it, lots of experimenting. We now bottle it and sell it at the restaurant. I also make my own Tamarind Sauce.

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Jimmy Stewart

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Jimmy Stewart

Jimmy attended Dubrulle International Culinary Arts in 2005 right after he graduated high school, he lasted 6 months. While at school, he worked at The Beachside Café in West Vancouver for 6 months until it closed. He then worked at CinCin as a prep cook for 4 months, was then promoted to  Chef/Garmange, moved up the ladder after 2 years. He tried to get a job at Lumierre and bugged Chef Dale Mackay everyday for 2 weeks, he finally got in to stage. Dale then hooked him up with a job in England at Maze (Gordon Ramsey’s restaurant), Jimmy stayed in England for 1-1/2 years, then went to The Ledbury (Maze competitor) to be the demi Chef de Partie (The Ledbury was amazing and so different than Maze) he was part of the team that made pastry (was there for 4-1/2 months). His visa expired and he had to return to Canada, he ended up going to Windsor ( to follow his girlfriend whom he met while in England) where he lasted 2 months. He then moved to Toronto and worked at Colburn Lane ending as a Jr Sous Chef. Then worked as the Raw Bar Chef at Origin for 4 months, he then moved back to Vancouver and went straight to DB Moderne. He then quit his job and moved to Whistler to go snowboarding, ended up getting a job as a Dishwasher at The Bearfoot as that was all he wanted to do, He didn’t want the responsibility he wanted to snowboard. Andre and Chef Melissa wouldn’t let him be a dishwasher, he was then hired to work in the kitchen as the Sous Chef. From there he applied to Top Chef Canada. Jimmy auditioned for the show and got on the show, came in 6th place. After the show he went back to The Bearfoot in Whistler and worked as the Exec Sous Chef for a year. Moved to Vancouver and took a job with Gourmet Syndicate working on the Roaming Dragon food truck for 6 months, he was helping out at Fable Kitchen as well, through a connection he got an interview at House Guest and soon-after joined House Guest in early 2013 as their Executive Chef.

You can follow Chef Jimmy Stewart on twitter @JimmyCStewart

What are the top 3 things you have learned in the past few years?

1)    Importance of your palette

2)    Follow your instincts

3)    Be happy – got to have fun

Where did you learn foraging?

Brett at  The Ledbury – I saw the food at Noma (Denmark), took a trip to the Yukon, met up with a woman who showed me everything that was growing there, I learned so much. Then while I was back in Whistler, I went walking and picked stuff in the woods. All types of mushrooms and weeds, and took it to work at The Bearfoot, from pine shoots, cranberries and more.

What does Presentation on the plate mean to you?

At The Ledbury, Colborne Lane, and CinCin –It’s all about what’s there, tell a story with your food and it has to taste really good. (Passion behind the dish and presentation).

What is your Favourite Food?

Fried Chicken – (Chicken Karage with scallions, and Japanese Mayo).

What are your favourite Restaurants outside of where you work?

  • L’Abbotoir
  • Gyoza King
  • C Lovers

Name 5 Ingredients you love to cook with

  1. Ramps
  2. Asparagus
  3. Pig cheek
  4. Offal
  5. Tuna

The First Dish:

Winter Salad

Winter Salad

Osaka Mustard leaves

Wild Mushroom leaves

Nastertions

White Pea shoots

Lemon balm

Salad burnet

Quebec ash goat cheese

Ruby beets

Yellow beets

Heirloom carrots

Brussel sprouts

Shared button mushrooms

Pickled Shimiji mushrooms

Beech mushrooms

Pickled carrots

Pickled celery

Red chicory

Hazelnuts

Hazelnut oil

Mushroom puree

Mushroom soil

Buttermilk dressing

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

My fave dish I ever made under another chef. I wanted to take it to the next level, I wanted to make now early in my career.

How did you get a Tuna Tattoo?

I was living in Toronto, the restaurant closed for the day due to a power outage, I went out with a bottle of rum with the other chefs, went to Chinatown and ate then went back to my house and we all drank. Me and the meat cook went out to get tattoos, she got a pig tattoo and I got a tuna tattoo.

The Second Dish:

Prawn Tacos

Prawn Tacos

House made taco shell (soft corn, gluten free)

Syrachi mayonnaise

Suchoy cabbage

White gulf prawns

Rempha

Yuzu mayo

Pickled daikon

Radish

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Girls, the ladies came in and ate tacos like the guys and not feel bad about it.

How do you create the dishes you do to appeal to everyone?

I want to appease the date night people, the late night crowd, people love brunch and I love brunch. I’m researching food and products. Learning to put myself in the diners shoes, I go out and I appreciate what other restaurants do as well.

Who are your Mentors?

Dale Mackay

Mellissa Craig

Brett Graham

What has inspired you lately?

  • Aprons for Gloves –community and be so tight together.
  • The ingredients
  • The colour green

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Paul Mon-Kau

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Paul Mon-Kau

At 17,  Paul was working at the Red Robin Restaurant, started at VCC in the culinary program for 1 year at the same time he was working at the Waterfront Centre Hotel as a cook. He then spent the next 10 years working in hospitality in various roles including front of house, during that time 1-1/2 years was spent working for Cactus Club. In 2007, he opened The District in North Vancouver, followed by El Matador in 2012.

What made you want to open a restaurant?

I was running a nightclub downtown, had lots of ideas but I never got the credit for my ideas. I am from Europe and have travelled all over extensively. I wanted a place to have that was what I liked then. There was nothing like this in the suburbs. I am now the biggest restaurateur you have never heard of in North Van.

Was opening the restaurant everything you thought it would be after a year?

I was nothing I thought it was going to be. You quickly become a master of all trades. Fixing everything from the plumbing, cleaning, repairing etc you end up well versed to everything your business is related too.

What is your Favourite Food?

Fois Gras

What are your favourite Restaurants outside of your own?

  • Suika
  • Kingyo
  • Deacons Corner
  • Les Faux Bourgeois
  • Yew in the Four Seasons Hotel for brunch

The First Dish:

Bacon & Blue Mussels

Bacon & Blue Mussels

White onions

Bacon

Blue cheese

Cream

White wine

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Just the love of bacon and blue cheese. The challenge of making this into a seafood dish. Focus of being an Oceanwise member –enhancing the flavour of the mussels.

What do you want your staff to learn from you?

This isn’t rocket science, we are just serving food and drink, they have my support.

What is the most challenging part of running a restaurant?

There is always a leak, always something, never nothing. Elements of running a business where cash flow in the biggest challenge.

What is your role like these-days at your restaurants?

More restaurateur and less chef these days. I do a lot of graphics, marketing and such.

What do you like to do in your Off Time?

  • Chill out with friends
  • Photoshop and graphics

Who are your Mentors?

  • My dad
  • Ivo Staiano

How many sauces do you have on your menu in one form or another?

42

The Second Dish:

Gehaktballen

Gehaktballen

chuck

pork belly

anchovy paste

dates

eggs

ketchup

worchestshire

thyme

onions

sundried tomatoes

panko

mustard

rosemary

parsley

 

The Mojo Picon sauce has

garlic

paprika

olive oil

salt

pepper

ketchup

tabasco

sambal oelek

cumin

white wine vinegar

onion

worchestshire

cocoa

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Classic Dutch dish – I wanted to bring on another appetizer that wasn’t vegetarian. The best meatball we could make.

What is it about flavours for you?

Many restaurants food is bland and needs seasoning. Lots of my flavours are complex to keep them unique and ours. The other is a show of skill to make the dish taste amazing.

What are the 5 flavour profiles?

  • Salt
  • Sweet
  • Sour
  • Bitter
  • Umami

The Third Dish:

Pan Seared Sirloin

Pan Seared Sirloin

Prime high grade beef

Butter

Fries

Asparagus

Tomato

Our steak herb butter has:

dill

parsley

pepper

salt

tarragon

garlic

and the sauce options are:

peppercorn brandy sauce

Smokehead Scotch Demiglace

Field mushroom sauce

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Oma (my grandma) pan seared steak in butter with great flavour.

What has inspired you lately?

  • A trip to Seattle a month ago, “Cannon” in Seattle was like going to Mecca as an alcoholic, they have 2,660 bottles – largest selection for a bar in North America.

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Simon McNeil

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Simon McNeil

Simon McNeil grew up in Ontario, he studied at George Brown College of Applied Arts and Technology, where he was a Culinary Apprentice 89 and 91 and a Red Seal Journeyman. He was Pastry Chef at Pronto in Toronto in 1994 for a year, then the Executive Souse Chef at the Vancouver Club 1995-2001, then the Executive Chef at the Jericho Club 2001-2003, then the Executive Chef & Food and Beverage Manager at The Galiano Inn and Spa in 2003 for a year, then Corporate Chef in Grand Cayman, then a Chef Instructor at Dubrulle Culinary Arts in Vancouver in 2004 for 2 years, Simon then consulted and had his own catering company for a few years before becoming the Executive Chef of the Hilton Vancouver Airport Hotel in 2010 where he was for a year, he then became the Executive Chef of the Granville Island Hotel where he is today.

Did you always want to be a Chef ?        

Always, when I was 4 years old I wanted to make cookies from scratch. Later on in my teenage years, I would take a part a kitchen and make dishes and make a big mess.

Did you go to Culinary school?

Yes I went to George Brown College in Toronto and while studying I also worked in Burlington at Collette’s on and off for 6 years, I had 4 jobs while going to school.

How did you end up in Vancouver?

I was a Pastry Chef in Toronto, my first wife found her biological family here in Vancouver. I always wanted to go West, jumped on the opportunity and moved to Vancouver in 1996.

Tell me about one of your Crazy Experiences

I had a student at Dubrulle Culinary Arts who wanted to do a gingerbread house for the Hyatt Gingerbread Lane. We entered together on the Professional team and had 5 nights in the school restaurant kitchen to get it done. Built a stone old mill out of gingerbread, chocolate, sugar and pastiage, it looked very realistic we got 2nd place in the professional division and public choice.

What Challenges you as a Chef?

Managing people is the hardest thing to do, figuring out how to motivate each person differently. So many variables change the direction along the way.

How many people do you have working in your kitchen at the Granville Island Hotel?

In the Peak season (summer) – we have 34 employees in the kitchen

In the off season we have 15 people in the kitchen

I understand you just had a life altering experience, what happened?

Over the past 5 months I lost 72 pounds, changed all my eating habits, dropped all the processed foods, exercised, lost all cravings to healthy foods and have a new appreciation for food now.

What are your favourite foods?

  • Beets
  • Kale
  • Red rice

Has your personal food lifestyle changes for food changed your menu choices in your restaurant?

Yes I took off some of the heavier menu items and lightened it up which is much healthier.

What are your favourite dishes to make at home for the family?

Lots, I always invite people over. Last night I made a Heritage Beef Shortrib braised with red rice and kale in broth.

The Dish:

The Market

The Market

Red rice

Red quinoa

Potatoes

Parsley

Arugula

Flat leaf parsley

Poached Omega eggs (Born 3)

Roasted vine tomatoes

Toasted almonds

Fire roasted peppers sauce

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

This is what I was eating at home. Lots of healthy grains, and colours on the plate.

What do you do in your off time?

  • Wood working
  • Working out
  • Family stuff
  • Snowboarding

Who is your Mentor?

Mario Batali

Is there anything different about working in a hotel vs all the other types of places you have worked?

No, it’s all the same sort of systems and organization.

Chocolate Show Piece

How did you end up working in Chocolate?

I read one book by Stephane Leroux “Matiere Chocolate” it is a two book set and I worked with Chef Tamas Ronyai at the Vancouver Club. The rest I did on my own. I have made two show pieces while here at this hotel.

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Ana Dander

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Ana Dander

Ana Dander was born in Mexico, she came to Vancouver to study English when she was 18. She then went to Pacific Institute of Culinary Arts. After graduation she went home to Mexico and worked for 6 months cooking in a Japanese restaurant (1 hour outside of Mexico City). Ana returned to Vancouver and worked at Capones in Yaletown cooking through all the stations working her way up to Sous Chef after 2 years, she then joined Brix and worked there for 1.5 years, then became the pasta chef at Café de Medici and worked for 6 months until the restaurant closed. She then worked as the restaurant Manager for Salsa & Agave for almost 3 years, after leaving there she opened her own restaurant The Mexican.

Did you always want to be a Chef ?

I think so, a few years ago we sold our house in Mexico. I found my elementary school yearbook where I wrote I wanted to be a chef when I grew up.

What Challenges have you faced running a Mexican restaurant in Vancouver?

For Mexicans it is word of mouth, they like homemade authentic food from Mexico. Getting Canadians in to the restaurant at the beginning was hard, this all changed once Alexandra Gill wrote an article about us in the Globe and Mail Newspaper, suddenly the locals embraced us.

What is the reaction to customers not seeing Burritos on your menu?

Once they understand our cuisine and our staff explain our dishes, they then understand why we don’t have Burritos on our menu.

Have you had any difficulty finding certain ingredients here?

Cactus leaves are a challenge to get sometimes. We can pretty much get anything now.

What is your favourite food?

Japanese

What are your favourite restaurants outside of the one you own?

  • Guu Garlic on Thurlow
  • The Flying Pig
  • Espana
  • Fable Kitchen for desserts

The First Dish:

Papas Con Chorizo Quesadillas

Papas Con Chorizo Quesadillas

Homemade Mexican chorizo

Potatoes

Asadero cheese

Feta cheese on top

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

The market food back home in Mexico, this is from the region of Mexico City.

The Second Dish:

Sopes – Calabacitas con Crema

Sopes – Calabacitas con Crema

Calabacitas (similar to Zucchini)

Tomatoes

Onions

Beans

Crème

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

My Sunday breakfast with my parentes. There is a trick to picking the tortillas.

What do you do in your off time?

  • Rollerblading
  • Read
  • Movies

 How do you get inspired to create the dishes on your menu?

Every time I go to Mexico I get inspired to create new dishes. I want to give my customers a Mexican experience. Always come back with books. My mom and grandmother are great cooks.

Do you think the palates of Vancouverites are more adventurous than they used to be when you came to Vancouver?

Yes people will try dishes here but also at Guu and the others people are always trying new dishes that they hadn’t seen previously.

Why don’t you have a mole on your menu?

Its hard to get the ingredients here, you need lots of time to make this authentic dish.

The Third Dish:

Chile Relleno

Chile Relleno

Poblano pepper

Ground beef

Potatoes

Tomatoes

Onions

Roasted poblanos, corn and crème (for the sauce)

–served with rice and beans

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

A dish that I ate growing up in Mexico, the stuffing was different than what I make here now.

Who is your Mentor?

My mom

Any dishes you are thinking of putting on the menu?

Octopus Tostada

Braised Lamb Tacos

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Trevor Bird

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Trevor Bird

Trevor Bird was born and raised in Montreal. He opened his first restaurant Fable Kitchen in Kitsilano in May 2012. He was featured on Top Chef Canada 2nd season winning the 2nd spot on Top Chef. Prior to this, he was the chef de partie at the Shangri-La hotel in Vancouver. He also worked as a chef at Truffert and as a sous chef at Restaurant Garcon, both in Montreal. Trevor has a degree in culinary management from Algonquin College in Ottawa. A restless spirit, Trevor has spent equal parts of his career on the east and west coasts of Canada. His constant searching even led to a stint in Peru to cook for an NGO.

Opening a restaurant, what challenges did you expect to have?

When I first purchased the restaurant from Robert Belcham, he told me to be ready for the ride. I never thought it would be this hard and an emotional roller coaster since day 1. Being as busy as I am now, you know how to handle yourself. Juggling and being a business owner and to see what is important and knowing what to do is key. My partners and I get along so well, we have the perfect partnership.

What challenges you as a chef?

Over extending myself, from when I was a young cook I saw my mentor be involved in the community and he did everything – I aspire to that.

I say yes to everything and I have to know how to manage my life.

What did you expect your restaurant to be like after opening?

When I opened the restaurant I never expected the success we are having now.

Tell me about your tattoo on your left arm?

Well the tattoo is all heirloom tomatoes and my slicer. When I was 26 years old I got this tattoo, only took me 6 years to get it, when I was 20 I was growing my own tomatoes at an organic farm, I was harvesting, it was my first look at farming on a horse powered farm. That was what started the farm to table movement for me. My Mac slicer was my very 1st knife and it felt so good. The tattoo represents my style of cooking, doesn’t over complicate things, stays true to what I believe.

How did you get into canning and preserving?

I always liked to see vegetables and fruits in preserves in other restaurants. I like grass roots cooking, from butchery to baking bread – Fundamental Cuisine – the best that we can do with the equipment we have.

What are you canning in the restaurant?

We make a few to use as condiments in our dishes and we sell them to the public in our restaurant on request:

  • Blueberry and bayleaf
  • Raspberry ginger
  • Black pepper jam
  • Tomato jam

How do you find passionate chefs who believe in your vision?

Start with the vision of Fable, the less you get paid, the more you work, the more you learn, which will benefit you in your future. It teaches work ethic, how to handle your product from beginning to end.

You say I am going to buckle down for a couple of years, live by the skin of my teeth or you go work in a hotel where they pay you too much. It will kill your perspective of quality food. You didn’t do the prep, it is about handling your product from beginning to end. You are going to want to treat that which says a lot. How to deal with food from beginning to end. You have to be a workaholic.

What is it like to have an open kitchen?

Personally I love it, I am a social person, not shy, it teaches cooks to keep me cool. Its almost like a show for me. Food is my lift, I love talking about it, anything you want to know.

How do you hire Chefs?

I will never hire based on a resume. School will never teach you work ethic, one of my chefs I hired never went to cooking school. I helped him get placed in another kitchen for 3 months prior to our opening Fable, then I hired him and he has been here since day 1.

Have you ever fired a chef?

No – it is about mentoring chefs, they work so hard at what they do.

What is your favourite food?

Shepherds Pie

What are your favourite restaurants outside of the one you own?

  • Nook
  • Oakwood Kits
  • Guu on Thurlow
  • The Diamond – for drinks
  • Peaceful on Broadway

What do you do in your off time?

  • Workout
  • See friends
  • Snowboarding
  • I want to train for a triathalon and crossfit

How different would it have been for you if you didn’t do the tv show?

I think it would have taken a lot longer than it has, at least 3 years longer.

What is it about a chef owner restaurant that makes you successful?

I don’t know, it has been a lot of work, but I have no idea what I did to make it happen. I wish I could tell you.

What did you want to be growing up?

I started cooking at 15 years old. I was interested in being healthy. I wanted to be a Personal Trainer or a Chef and it unfolded into being a chef and fitness as a hobby.

The Dish:

Potato Crusted Chicken

Potato Crusted Chicken

Chicken

Russet potatoes

Eggplant

Onion

Red peppers

Red wine vinegar

Chives

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

I needed a chicken dish for the menu. I used to do the same dish with rabbit, I like to wrap things in saran wrap, I know it isn’t good for the enviroment but it makes nice food.

What is the art of tasting while cooking?

Making sure you have enough seasoning, salt is key to use. Tasting for your sweet and sour, making sure you have all of the elements.

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Chris Bisaro

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Chris Bisaro

My parents were in the restaurant business and owned Bisaro downtown Vancouver. Then they opened the Dundarave Café in West Vancouver. When I was 11 years old I started working as a dishwasher, then worked my way up to a line cook. When I was 16 years old I worked at the Cactus Club nights and weekends as a line cook. At 19 I moved to Kelowna and worked at some of the vineyards cooking, moved back to Vancouver. I then worked for the Glowbal Group for 4 years as a Sous Chef, and then I started at Brix as the Executive Chef, a year later they opened George Ultra Lounge and I have been the Executive Chef of both of these restaurants ever since.

Was it expected for you to go into the restaurant industry?

My dad liked the idea, my mom didn’t.

What challenges you as a chef?

Every day I learn something, surrounding myself with people who teach something. It`s about creating creativity and the challenge of the challenge.

How did you end up being creative from the get go at Brix?

Getting pushed into comfortability and woken up by a loud alarm clock.

What do you want your chefs to learn from you in the kitchen?

To be better and that is my common goal. Whether its patience or butchery.

The First Dish:

Prosciutto Wrapped Scallops

Prosciutto Wrapped Scallops

Bbq duck fried risotto

Japanese radish sprouts

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Marrying Italian with Asian influence just like my life.

What is your favourite food?

Thai and Japanese food

What are your favourite restaurants outside of the one you work at?

  • Baoqi
  • Alpha Sushi
  • Le’do on Hastings
  • Come Along Seafood
  • Golden Harvest
  • Motamachi on Denman

What are your favourite 5 ingredients in your restaurant kitchen?

  1. Chillis
  2. Pork belly, my own bacon
  3. Japanese mayonnaise
  4. Sriracha chili sauce
  5. Housemade pickles/kimchi

The Second Dish:

Grilled Humbolt Salad

Grilled Humbolt Salad

With lemongrass, ginger, lime, chili, sautéed gailan, pickled jalapenos

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Ode to Chef Sean Riley

What do you do in your off time?

  • Play with my 3 dogs
  • Watch football
  • Shopping with my wife

What sparks your creativity?

For liquor dinners (spirits and wines)

You have to taste the product to design the dishes.

We want to have a proper representation of what we do, tweak here and there. Disecting on will it kill it, match it or symmetrical. I am not symmetrical.

The Third Dish:

Cherry and Coffee Braised Shortrib

Cherry and Coffee Braised Shortrib

With caramelized cauliflower puree, foie gras terrine

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

Winter – warm, cozy, filling

Who are your mentors?

  • Mr David Cheng of Momofuko
  • Vikram Vij

What has inspired your lately?

Hopefully one day this whole city’s tastebuds will catch-up.

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

Chef Armand Savet

Vancouver is home to some of the best chefs in the world, many have worked for the top chefs and restaurants around the world as well as around the city. Dishing with the Chefs is a series of Interviews with some of the top chefs in and around Vancouver.

Chef Armand Savet

At a young boy my parents had a catering business and restaurant. I grew up in the restaurant working in the kitchen peeling vegetables at 6 years old. Years later I worked at Wendy’s, Cactus Club and Earls. Went on to VCC in the culinary program then dropped out and worked as a chef on the dinner cruise boats in the harbour when I was 21 years old. Worked for the Umberto group of restaurants for a few years. I then worked for the Sequoia group at Seasons in the Park as the 1st cook. At 23 years old I took a break from the culinary world and became a long haul truck driver cause I wanted to travel and see what else was out there. My job was to haul produce back and forth to California. After 4 years, I returned to the kitchen and worked at Ballentyne’s, then I moved on to Section 3 and became the Executive Chef, then left and went to Gotham Steakhouse as the Sous Chef, worked there for 3-4 years, I then moved over to work within the Aisenstat’s company, under the corporate umbrella doing the opening for their new restaurant, I then moved to Winnipeg where I was for 2 years to open Hy’s Winnipeg. Afterwards I was promoted to Assistant Corporate Chef when I moved back to Vancouver to open the Shore Club, I then took over Hy’s in Whistler. I was then promoted to Corporate Chef for Hy’s, Gotham Steakhouse and the Shore Club rotating every day. Since 2011 I have been the Corporate Chef of their Ki Japanese Restaurants and Shore Club’s across Canada.

Tell me about the Cheese Toast at Hy’s

The Hy’s Winnipeg recipe was different than the others, while I was there I tried to change their recipe and the city reacted in a negative way. A newspaper wrote an article about our changing the cheese toast recipe as it was a big deal. Complaint letters from customers were coming in and piling up. I then had to take control of the situation and had no choice but to revert back to their “Winnipeg” recipe to please everyone.

What is your job role now?

As the Corporate Chef I help and ensure the chefs are doing their jobs and help with events. About 40% of my job is cooking and the rest of the time I am doing paperwork, forecasting and constantly researching new menus and dishes and sourcing suppliers.

What is your favorite food to eat?

Rustic, slow cooking, BBQ and French country fare

What are your favourite Restaurants in Vancouver outside of where you work?

  • Meat & Bread
  • Zakushi
  • Salad de Frites
  • Ken’s Kitchen

The First Dish:

Kani Croquette

Kani Croquette

-         Dungenous Crab

-         Japanese mayonnaise

-         Panko

-         Chive

-         Yuzu juice

-         Shiso dried

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

A play off a crab cake and it’s great in the summer or winter.

 Tell me about one of your experiences in Winnipeg

Winnipeg has a huge Southern Italian Community. I used to eat at my Sous Chef family’s every Sunday eating Italian. I learned more about Italian food from this experience than I ever had.

What challenges you as a Corporate Chef?

Keeping our local markets happy but maintain balance of consistency and it is quite challenging.

 The Second Dish:

Seared Mallard Duck

Seared Mallard Duck

- Mallard duck breast

- Aritha Sanschou

- Chili ponzu

- Sesame oil

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

A play of Peking duck, I woke up this morning and I was craving Peking duck, went to Granville Island Market and bought the duck there to make this dish for you.

What do you like to do in your off-time?

  • Reptile enthusiast (love snakes)
  • Sport fishing
  • Camping
  • Spend time with the kids

What do you like to drink?

  • Italian red wine – Amarone
  • Old Fashioned Cocktail

How do you focus and work with two totally different restaurant concepts?

It is all about technique, and quality. I read like crazy, experiences, there are differences, such as handling fish, I help out and ensure

What challenges have you had working with suppliers nationally?

Consistency. I have to see that the product’s are available nationwide if our dishes are on the main menu across the country.

The Third Dish:

Carbonara Deconstructed

Carbonara Deconstructed

- Dried linguini

- Bacon infused crème

- Garlic

- Shitake and king oyster mushrooms

- Port

- Crispy pancetta

- Scallion garnish

What was your inspiration behind this dish?

I woke up this morning and it was cold. I wanted to show the experience of the dish and layering the flavours.

Who are your mentors?

  • Graham Kerr – the Galloping Gourmet
  • Steven Yan – Wok with Yan
  • Julia Child

Stay tuned for the next chef in the Dishing with the Chef series.

By: Richard Wolak

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