Eat My Words

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Cooks Who Draw Inspiration from Their Mothers

Numerous Texas chefs credit their profound talents to years of hard work in culinary school, rigorous training alongside great chefs, or hours of sweat equity in restaurant kitchens. Great cooking, however, is not a subject that can be summed up in the span of a few short years in the kitchen; lessons usually begin when an individual is too small to even see over the kitchen counter. In fact, our earliest culinary memories usually stem from witnessing, smelling, and tasting food prepared by our mothers and grandmothers.

This Mother’s Day, TEXAS MONTHLY spoke with three cooks who say much of their culinary knowledge comes from days of studying their mothers cooking. Eric Silverstein of The Peached Tortilla and Yumé Burger believes growing up in Japan eating street food and his mother’s adventurous Chinese dishes helped develop his extensive palate. Nineteen-year-old Thorne Russell, son of Sonya Coté, says his mother’s work at East Side Show Room and Hillside Farmacy has inspired him to watch and learn from her. Miguel Ravago, executive chef of Fonda San Miguel, was excited to bring the authentic Mexican dishes from his childhood and his mother’s cooking to the Austin culinary scene. Read below to see some of the cooks’ culinary experiences with their mothers.

Did your mother teach you how to cook?

Thorne Russell: Learning how to cook from my mother was like osmosis for me. I watched her do everything. She told me what she was doing when she was doing it, but that was it. We never did anything that was a lesson, like ‘Let’s make this together!’ I watched her do it, and she would say, “This is the right way to do it.” I now cook every single day and try to make something different every single day. I’m lucky enough where I can have people come over and ask them, “What do you want to eat? What’s your favorite food?” and I can make that for them. I wouldn’t have been able to do that without my mom… She was busy with her chef career when I was a kid, and she couldn’t always be home to make dinner for me. I learned how to make my own gourmet meals, and now I cook for her a lot of the time.

Sonya Coté: It’s funny. I didn’t necessarily want to teach him how to cook. I wanted to teach him how to eat, but knowing how to eat usually means knowing how to cook for yourself. Part of raising a kid is making sure they have the skills to take care of themselves.

Thorne and Sonya

What did you make for Thorne when he was a kid?

Sonya Coté: I got him a weekly produce box from Farmhouse Delivery every Wednesday and bought proteins to stock the fridge. I made him a lot of Italian food that was half-homestyle and half-hippie. We’d go out to eat Asian food a lot when we were in Dallas.

Do you want Thorne to be a chef?

Sonya Coté: No, I don’t want him to be a chef. I want him to be something like an environmental engineer or do something good for the environment. He is a smart kid. I don’t want him in the kitchen.

Thorne Russell: It totally depends. I don’t have a calling to do the stressful line work. I like to work under pressure. I love to cook, and I see it as an art.

What culinary influence did your mother have on you?

Eric Silverstein: She had a big influence on me in terms of food culture. Food was an integral part of her own family growing up. Whenever we would we would go visit her family, food was always central to those visits. She carried on traditional Chinese cooking methods into our family, so whenever she made meals for us it was usually stuff she grew up eating.

What did you grow up eating?

Eric Silverstein: I was raised in Japan, and Japanese food culture is one of the most intriguing ones out there. They put a lot of emphasis on quality. I still remember eating street food and at hole in the wall restaurants in Japan. Japanese cuisine is much more diverse than sushi, and we usually think [Japanese food] is just sushi in the U.S. Eighty percent of the rest of Japanese food takes a backseat to sushi here, and I wanted to bring a new concept forward through the Japanese burgers at Yumé Burger.

Eric Silverstein and his mother

What was your mother like as a cook?

Eric Silverstein: She cooked a lot with her own mother. She doesn’t have a culinary degree or anything, but she was a great home chef. Every day was family dinner. There wasn’t one day when we weren’t eating together. And she cooked everything. We would eat a lot of pot stickers, soy-sauce chicken, steamed fish, different noodle dishes, a lot of very unique Chinese dishes, and different stir-fry dishes. She also made something that was almost like a meatloaf, but with steamed pork.

What influence has she had on your culinary projects?

Eric Silverstein: She had less of an influence on The Peached Tortilla, but when we started Yumé Burger I flew her out here and to be involved with the tastings. She had the Japanese burgers that influenced me in this project when we were living in Japan.

How does she respond to your success?

Eric Silverstein: She is proud of what I’m doing. I know she follows me more closely than anyone out there. She finds it exciting, but my family comes from the restaurant business. They’ve had their successes and they’ve had their failures, so she is always cautiously optimistic. I get that from her. I want to do a restaurant down the road. It’s always been a dream of mine. To really be considered an icon in Austin, you have to have a restaurant.

How has your mother influenced your restaurant?

Miguel Ravago: She helped me learn about Mexican cuisine. She would make me taste everything just to teach me about it. We traveled through Mexico a lot, and that’s how we realized each state has a different cuisine in Mexico. That really helped me understand the cuisine… Her and my grandmother helped me when I came to Texas because they knew the cuisine so well. They showed me how everything should taste. It has influenced me a lot.

Miguel Ravago and his mother

What dishes did your mother make for you?

Miguel Ravago: She’s from the northern part of Mexico, so she made a lot of stewed meats, corn tortillas and flour tortillas that were thin like crepes, tamales, and mole. We ate a lot of seafood. She did these great chile rellenos. It was fantastic. I liked her interest in it and her curiosity. That helped me a great deal.  I’m creative because of her.

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Texas Wine of the Month: Duchman Family Winery Montepulciano 2009

A lesson in Italian pronunciation…

VinoVee-noh

Chianti - Key-on-tee

Prosecco – Pro-sek-ko

Montepulciano – (you can do this…) Mon-teh-pool-chee-ah-no

Again… Mon-teh-pool-chee-ah-no…

Multo Bene!Mool-toe Beh-nay!

Don’t let the pronunciation intimidate you from ordering it if you see it on a menu. Among Italy’s well known wines including Chianti, Barolo, Barbaresco, and Super Tuscans, you should know Montepulciano as a red Italian grape variety widely planted throughout central and southern Italy producing a deep-colored wine with moderate acidity and ripened dark fruit.

(Not to throw a wrench in your brief wine education here, but Montepulciano should not be confused with Vino Nobile de Montepulciano, which is actually a highly respected Sangiovese-based wine from Montepulciano, a medieval hill village in the Chianti region of Tuscany.)

But for the sake of this post, all you need to know is that Montepulciano is an Italian varietal that just happens to be doing very well in Texas, and Duchman Family Vineyards has one to prove it—and at a decent price too! (~$15 retail.) Looking for a great food wine to serve at your next dinner party? this is the one.

It has a great dark fruit character on the nose and palate with a bit of tannic texture, but not near enough to make your mouth begin to pucker. It’s a tad high in acidity, which means you’ll likely begin to salivate after letting this sit on your tongue for a while. Acidity is a great component of wine that gives it its structure and vibrance. And a higher level of acidity, makes for a great wine to enjoy with food, particularly foods that balance that acidity such as classic Italian fare rich in tomatoes, garlic, and onion. But don’t take my word for it, take the advice of Brad Sharp, Certified Sommelier and Certified Specialist of Wine who runs the wine and beverage program at Austin’s Fonda San Miguel.

Sharp’s selection for Texas Wine of the Month is the Duchman Family Winery Montepulciano, 2009.

“I’m already thinking of what to serve at Thanksgiving this time of year. There’s so much pressure to serve the right wine. Thankfully, this year it’s easy. By a long shot. The Duchman Montepulciano screams to me an example of a specific Italian grape with distinct Italian characteristics learning a new soil in Texas. The sour cherry, black cherry and orange peel notes on this dry, medium-bodied wine pair well with roasted lamb, pasta dishes, or even chipotle-roasted turkey,” says Sharp.

Duchman sources its Montepulciano from The Reddy Vineyards in the High Plains AVA, where many Texas grapes are grown. Sharp is a particular fan of Duchman for its consistency in wine producing, and adds that the Montepulciano is the perfect Holiday wine. “This particular wine displays such potential, I say Drink this Now!” Sharps work at Fonda San Miguel has earned the restaurant a coveted Award of Excellence from Wine Spectator for the first time in its 35-year history. He’ll be showing off his wine knowledge and pairing expertise at an upcoming wine pairing dinner featuring the Spanish wines of Lerin Wines, which represents some of Spain’s most exclusive bodegas.  The dinner on November 2 will showcase a 5-course dinner including fried oysters, a duo of ceviche, steamed mussels with tomato chipotle sauces, roasted pork Veracruzano, and lamb chops with chile morita and roasted corn flan. Hungry now? For reservations call: 512-459-4121.

But in the mean time, swing by your area Spec’s, Central Market, or Whole Foods. As Sharp says, “This wine has such great potential that I say, drink this now!”

Winery: Duchman Family Winery

Price: ~$15

Availability: Spec’s, Whole Foods Market, Central Market

 

 

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