CULINARY COMPETITION
Chefs Under Fire competition to name best up-and-coming culinary talent in Texas
Texas has been a breeding ground for culinary savants for quite some time—and folks around the nation are starting to take notice. Bravo’s Top Chef, Bon Appétit, Food & Wine Magazine, the James Beard Foundation—they’re all on board. The gastronomic scene is ever evolving and the pressure to find the next up-and-coming chef is boiling, and thanks to a number of already notable Texas-based chefs and restaurateurs, the bar for local chefs is set tremendously high. And what better way to sift through all of the Lone Star State’s raw cooking talent, than by putting wannabes to the ultimate test?
If you’re a fan of Food Network’s cooking competition show, Chopped, then Chefs Under Fire is just the adrenaline rush for you. Professional chefs and culinary students from across the state submitted their video entries, and only eight contestants per region—Houston, Dallas/Ft. Worth, and Austin/San Antonio—were chosen by popular vote. But winning isn’t based on popularity alone. Each region narrowed the pool from eight contenders to four regional semi-finalists by testing cooking skills through mini challenges and a semi-finals spitfire competition.
With Chefs Under Fire now progressing into the final round, only three finalists remain, each representing their respective regions. Chef Harold Wong of Azuma Sushi & Robata Bar will represent the Houston region. His winning plate was a dish he named, “Cap’n Carpaccio": Lightly seared sirloin flap steak topped with an orange jam, micro shiso, garlic chips, and fried leeks mixed with ito togarashi and paired with eggplant slices—then sprinkled with crumbled Cap’n Crunch cereal.
Chef Kevin Martinez of Tokyo Café will represent the Dallas/Ft. Worth area and won with his plate of seared tilefish with fresh peach & tomato salsa on a corn & okra-yuzu succotash topped with crispy shallots.
The third contestant is local favorite, Chef Daniel Valenzuela of Auguste Escoffier School of Culinary Arts of Austin, who won judges over with Red Snapper 2 Ways: Pan Seared & Ceviche with Texas Pomegranate, Zephyr Squash Risotto with Saffron Beurre Blanc.
These three finalists will battle it out in the final round, which will take place on October 16th at the AT&T Executive Education & Conference Center in Austin.
Spectators can purchase tickets and look forward to seeing culinary geniuses at their best. Not only must finalists use a secret mandatory ingredient, but they will be allowed to pick only one of three additional components to add to their dish. They will be given only a certain amount of time to compose a creative, yet toothsome plate, which will then be judged by a panel of celebrity chefs including acclaimed chef and owner of Uchi and Uchiko, Tyson Cole, restaurateur and chef, Kent Rathbun, and David Bull of Congress and Second Bar + Kitchen. Judges will pick the Chefs Under Fire champion based on presentation, taste and originality.
The grand prize is a week-long stay in Cabo San Lucas, courtesy of main sponsor, Keeper Collection, but also some major bragging rights and buzz that will most certainly come with it.
---
The excitement builds as this weekend, the best up-and-coming chef of Texas will be named, and CultureMap will be there to report!