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CONGRATULATIONS TO THE WINNER OF THE 2010 MOOSE ISLAND SCALLOP
BEST DISH CHALLENGE!!
CHEF
PHILLIP FOSS
LOCKWOOD – CHICAGO PALMER HOUSE HILTON
17 East Monroe Street
Chicago, IL 60603-5608
(312) 917-3404
www.lockwoodrestaurant.com
http://thepickledtongue.com/
Moose Island
Day Boat Scallops, Potato & Lemon Blini, Heritage Prairie Farm’s
Spinach & Pickled Vegetables, Fried Wild Mountain Capers, Candied
Sage.
You could consider cooking an innate
calling for Lockwood executive chef Phillip Foss. As a
two-year-old, Foss was always in the kitchen watching his mom
cook. Aware that young Phillip wanted to get in on the action,
Foss' father built him a cardboard stovetop and let his son’s
imagination and future career take him away. Years later, Foss got
his first restaurant job as a short order cook in his hometown of
Milwaukee. With a passion for the behind-the-scenes speed and
intensity of a kitchen, Foss quickly worked his way into better
restaurants. And then came a break. An employer noticed Foss'
cooking talents and referred him to the Culinary Institute of
America (CIA) in Hyde Park, New York.
After graduating from the CIA in
1991, Foss joined the New York City dining scene with a job at the
New York Times four-star rated Lafayette restaurant in the
Drake Swissotel. There, Foss basked in the shadow of one of the
country's leading chefs, Jean-Georges Vongerichten, who gained
international acclaim for his innovative interpretation of classic
French cuisine. Foss then went to the Quilted Giraffe, another
four-star New York Times-rated restaurant, and under the
tutelage of Barry Wine, worked every station in the kitchen. Here
he learned how unique food presentations can make conceptually
simple dishes more innovative and ethereal.
Recognized as a rising haute-cuisine
star, Foss was hired by one of the world’s best restaurants, Le
Cirque. There he worked as an entremetier preparing vegetables,
pastas and accompaniments, on the fish station as a poissonier,
and as a saucier, preparing and perfecting sauces, soups and meat
dishes. After more than three years, he was made a sous chef.
Foss went on to help open Le Cirque
2000 in the Palace Hotel. "This was the first time in my career
where I took on a leadership position," Foss explains. "People
looked to me as the go-to person for Le Cirque’s standards." At Le
Cirque 2000, Foss had the privilege to cook for several U.S.
presidents, including Nixon, Reagan and Clinton, and for Pope John
Paul II, whom he served lobster bisque. Bill Cosby was his
favorite celebrity. "His charisma was amazing. He sat in the
kitchen and we made him a private dinner with roast chicken and
truffles. To date, that was the best roast chicken I ever made."
Foss acknowledges the additional
challenge in making great dishes that let the flavor and freshness
of the ingredients shine through, rather than falling back on the
legerdemain of heavy sauces. "Making a good roast chicken is
something almost everyone can learn," Foss added. "But making a
standout dish takes years and years to master."
After Le Cirque 2000, Foss traveled
the world learning about indigenous ingredients and perfecting
cooking styles from France, where he worked with super chef
Jacques Maximin, as well as Israel, where he worked at the King
David Hotel serving dignitaries such as Condoleezza Rice and Tony
Blair. Foss' time with three-star Michelin chef Maximin made a
lasting impression. "Maximin's uncompromising attention to detail
and the quality of the products he used were incredible. Most
everything came straight from the farmer to the plate." Foss also
worked as a private chef in Palm Beach, Florida where the families
of Winston Churchill and Donald Trump enjoyed his cookery. In
addition, Foss also 'hung his toque' in the kitchens of Bistro
Margot in Chicago (which earned three stars in the Chicago
Tribune), the Four Seasons in Maui, and the AAA five diamond
Newport Room in Bermuda.
"Cooking is and always will be a mixture of art and science. One
of the things I love best about being a chef is the constant
challenge to adapt and advance what was previously considered 'the
best there is.' There is no recipe in the world that you can
follow like a rote play book when you're striving to bring out
optimal flavor from the freshest, finest ingredients every day,
and make each dish and presentation a unique experience," notes
the Chef.
At the helm of Lockwood, Chef Foss
has complete discretion with one requirement: perpetual
innovation. And that's just fine with Philip Foss. Of all his many
culinary accomplishments, he's most proud of "Never being
complacent and having an open mind to do new things, yet always
honoring the traditions of where the cuisine has come from." |
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Gulf of
Maine's Moose Island Day Boat Scallop season is now open!!
The
Eastport Area communities located on Moose Island in

Washington
County Maine are committed to preserving their heritage and the
natural beauty of their environment. These communities are rich in
history, with settlements dating back as early as 1763. The area
is one of the eastern most points of the U.S.A with miles of
beautiful cobble beaches, tidal covers, rivers, streams, and
inland lakes. Moose Island is truly one of the last unspoiled
stretches of Maine coast. It is from these pristine, nutrient-rich
waters that fishermen harvest the finest sea scallop in the world.
The
Gulf of Maine, Moose Island Scallop fishery is a small community
based fishery consisting of only around 40 family owned vessels.
Strictly enforced government regulations and the fishermen’s
dedication to offering only the finest artisan products makes this
short seasonal fishery one of the most sustainable fisheries in
the world. In order
to participate in the fishery, boats are required to have a system
that tracks their locations via satellite (in order to enforce
prohibitions in entering areas closed to scalloping). The Gulf of
Maine Moose Island fishery harvests within three miles of shore
and limits catches to only a few hundred pounds per vessel.
The uncharacteristically high
levels of phytoplankton and
microzooplankton in the area waters
produces a scallop that has the
highest sugar content of any sea scallop on the planet. Often
referred to as "sugar" or "honey" scallops, their extremely high
natural sugar content provides these beautiful scallops with a
slightly peach colored meat and buttery nectarous
flavor that is versatile on both raw
and cooked applications. our
rep today to grab your share and start planning those dishes
because the prize is $500.00!!!!
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Those are the only guidelines. We want our area chefs to flex their
muscles and be as creative as possible! Dishes can be
appetizers, entrees, hors d’oeuvres, or even deserts for the
more adventurous. Some of the best in the city will be
competing for the prizes of a
$500 American Express Gift Card,
Supreme’s Master Chef Trophy and a spot as a guest judge in
our next competition.
Do you think you have the chops to take the win??
Gulf of Maine, Moose Island Day Boat Scallop
CHEF CHALLENGE
Guest Judges |
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Louisa Chu
has appeared on television as a judge on Iron Chef America
on Food Network, a fixer/sidekick on "Anthony Bourdain: No
Reservations" on the Travel Channel, a host in "Gourmet's
Diary of a Foodie" on PBS (internationally on National
Geographic as "Food Lover’s Guide to the Planet"), and
commentator in "Big Ideas for a Small Planet" on the
Sundance Channel.
Chef Chu has
staged at El Bulli in Spain, Alain Ducasse in Paris, and
Alinea and Moto in Chicago.
Chef Chu
worked in numerous establishments as a cook - from the
Michelin two-starred restaurant Les Ambassadeurs under Chef
Jean-François Piège in the Hôtel de Crillon in Paris to the
chef for a fishing boat and lodge in Alaska
Louisa graduated from Le Cordon Bleu in Paris with Le Grand
Diplôme, the school's highest honor for concurrently training
in Cuisine and Pâtisserie, after receiving a James Beard
Foundation Scholarship.
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DANNY SALGADO
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Executive Chef
for Culinary Landscape at the Chicago Botanic Garden, Chef
Salgado was the winner of our
Wild Alpine Char Chef Challenge in September of 2009.
Danny has been an Executive Chef with Culinary Landscape
for more than a year, but is certainly no stranger to the
kitchen.
Graduating with
honors from the Culinary Institute of America and fifteen
years experience, Danny has developed a profound
appreciation for food, which is abundantly clear the
second you see him action. It is his passion for
gastronomic excellence that inspires him to experiment
with new techniques, source only the freshest ingredients
and stay ahead of the curve by continually honing his
skills.
While there are
many interesting aspects to Danny’s approach to food, what
is perhaps most impressive is his meticulous attention to
detail and ability to incorporate the most unsuspecting
ingredient into any dish.
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Mike Sula
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Mike Sula is a
staff writer at the Chicago Reader who writes the weekly
food and drink column Omnivorous and blogs at The Food
Chain.
He is a native
of Pittsburgh, PA, where the Dirty O puts to shame every
Chicago hot dog he's ever tried. Still, he's been
deliriously eating his way through the Windy City since 1995
when he began contributing regularly to the Reader. He
credits his voraciousness for a period in his misguided
youth when he subsisted as a lacto-ovo-pescatarian, a
experiment in extended indigestion brought to a halt by an
entire barbecued chicken at the late, great N.N. Smokehouse.
Making up for
lost time, he approaches a roiling bowl of soondubu
chigae with as much reverence as he does a 12-course
degustation with wine pairings. Apart from food, he's
written about politics, crime, film, healthcare,
paleontology, and profiled a rainbow of urban eccentrics.
His work has
also appeared in the Chicago Tribune, Harper's, The New York
Post and elsewhere. In 2009 he was nominated for a James
Beard Award in multimedia journalism for the Reader's epic
snout-to-tail Whole Hog Project. He has a particular
affinity for zombie movies, and yes, he's eaten
brains--though not the human variety. Not yet.
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