Daily dispatches on the Washington, DC area's food, restaurant and dining scene.
|
Three for Washington on Top Chef
By
Ann Limpert
Published Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Bravo just posted the cheftestant bios for its hit cooking competition/Glad ad Top Chef, and there are not one but three players with Washington ties. That’s big for a show that in all its seasons has given us only caterer Carla Hall to root for as a hometown prospect. (Spike Mendelsohn was living in New York during his stint on the show.) And Bravo’s thrown in another twist of novelty: Two of those three are brothers. There’s Bryan Voltaggio, longtime chef de cuisine at Charlie Palmer Steak, now chef/owner of the Frederick destination restaurant Volt, and little bro Michael Voltaggio, who impressed as chef at the Greenbrier’s Hemisphere and is now chef de cuisine at José Andrés’s many-starred Los Angeles restaurant, Bazaar. Also competing is Mike Isabella, chef de cuisine at another Andrés restaurant, DC’s Zaytinya.
Besides seeing photos of the chefs’ Terminator-like stares, we learn that M-Volt’s favorite “simple” summer recipe is a soft-poached egg with morel mushrooms, fava beans, and jamón ibérico consommé (a snap!). By contrast, Isabella’s answer is “squash blossoms.”
So when does the fun begin? The Vegas-based season six will kick off August 26. Hang onto those knife rolls, guys. More>> Best Bites Blog | Food & Dining | Restaurant Finder Follow the Best Bites Bloggers on Twitter at twitter.com/bestbitesblog
|
Comments
The young generation of chef’s now aspire to be on television. What happened to the days of aspiring to be great chefs and winning james beard awards.
The soul of a chef/cook is not about television. Its about vision and making people enjoy an experience of pleasure
Posted by: Old School, Jul 08, 2009 02:36:57 PM
That’s great news. Good to have someone to root for. I’ve been watching Top Chef Masters and it doesn’t compare. Glad to have the original back.
http://wereoutofheredc.com
Posted by: Emily, Jul 08, 2009 02:15:57 PM
|
Post a comment
Feel free to leave a comment or ask a question. Because of the prevalence of spam, we ask that you fill out the code in the image below to help us eliminate spam comments. By posting here, you affirm that you are 13 years of age or older. Washingtonian.com reserves the right to remove or edit content once posted.
|
|
Gone are the robust bureaus for the Los Angeles Times, Newhouse News, and other once-healthy news organizations. Digital media bureaus now are taking their places with as many reporters and plenty of swagger.
more
Sip some Beaujolais Nouveau, check out the Terra Cotta warriors, see a vintage murder thriller, and more this weekend.
more
|