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Posts Tagged ‘Honolulu restaurants’

Chef de Cuisine Kevin Chong encourages Hawaii chefs to travel then come home

June 2nd, 2010 Chef Mavro No comments

excerpts from “The Boys are Back in Town” by Martha Cheng, Hon­olulu Mag­a­zine June 2010
“When we [Chong and a hand­ful of other Hawaii cooks], all left Hawaii we were all say­ing we don’t want to do this Pacific Rim stuff,” Chong says. “That’s why we went abroad, to learn other things.” In his time away, he worked his way from “the bot­tom of the bottom”—cooking for the chef’s dog at Le Cirque in New York—to open­ing a Le Cirque in Mex­ico at age 26 and super­vis­ing a brigade of 60 cooks.
As soon as he got mar­ried, he returned to Hawaii, and for the past five years, he’s been Chef Mavro’s chef de cui­sine, bring­ing global fla­vors to Hawaii Regional Cui­sine. These days, he says “some dishes may have Moroc­can, some Indian, some maybe Viet­namese, Korean or French.” Is it Pacific Rim? An escabeche of abalone with Manchego cheese cro­quette, ser­rano ham and sun­dried tomato sauce, inspired by time spent in Spain, is not. The betel-nut kurobuta pork loin with green papaya salad and lemon­grass pork jus, with its Viet­namese fla­vor­ings, is. For Chong, now 33, expe­ri­ence, a Viet­namese sous chef and Chi­nese pas­try chef have tem­pered his dis­dain for Asian fusion. “I love Pacific Rim,” he now says. “It’s just how you inter­pret Pacific Rim.”
Do all paths in Hawaii lead to Asian fusion? Will all chefs suc­cumb to the tyranny of Pacific Rim? Sure, it’s deli­cious, but isn’t a lit­tle vari­ety good? Even Chong con­cedes that he might wish for a “real Ital­ian trat­to­ria” in Hon­olulu, per­haps of the sort his best friend Tony Liu, also a local boy, helms in New York, Morandi.
Chong says, “Cooks from Hawaii have a good rep­u­ta­tion in New York. We work harder, we’re the first ones in, last ones out … We didn’t travel all that way to fail.”
“As soon as I got mar­ried I decided to resign and go back to Hawaii,” Chong says, “because Hawaii is more laid back, peo­ple are more laid back. In the restau­rant busi­ness it’s not as chaotic and com­pet­i­tive as New York and other coun­tries. I thought I would have a heart attack every day work­ing in a big brigade, big kitchen, with 60 cooks. I’ve reached my goals and now it’s time to do what I want.” He finds his posi­tion at Mavro ideal: “I really touch the food and cook.”
The cur­rent menu at Mavro is mostly free of Asian flavors—instead, offer­ing up Indian vadou­van, Basque espelette and Mid­dle East­ern tahini in dishes that are still grounded in Hawaii via their use of local prod­ucts.
Chong believes in a bright future for Hawaii chefs and cooks, par­tic­u­larly those who travel, work out­side of the Islands, and return. He sees their Pacific Rim-educated palates as one of their great­est assets: “Cooks from Hawaii have the best palates because they know Japan­ese and Viet­namese cuisines, [which have] a bal­ance of fla­vors: sweet, salty, sour, umami, bit­ter … [and] not just a bal­ance in fla­vors, but in tex­ture and tem­per­a­ture, cold, hot, crispy, soft.” This sort of food cul­ture, cou­pled with work and travel to mas­ter clas­sic tech­niques and taste new cuisines, gives Hawaii cooks a strong foun­da­tion. “They should come back and pro­duce what they learn and mix things up,” Chong says. “When I ask some cooks from Hawaii on the Main­land: You ever plan on com­ing back to Hawaii’? It’s ‘No, there’s noth­ing there.’ What do you mean there’s noth­ing? If you want to do things dif­fer­ently, you do it.”

Kevin Chong suc­ceeded in the trial-by-fire kitchens of New York City, then returned home to become Chef Mavro’s chef de cui­sine. Photo: Olivier Koning

Wine pairings & photos added to post on 3-course menu ($59)

February 22nd, 2010 Chef Mavro No comments

Chef Mavro Poisson CruWe’re get­ting lots of calls about our new menu and now we have the wine pair­ings and two recipe pho­tos. Don’t miss this one.

Back from Bora Bora
includes 3 courses plus pre-appetizer, pre-dessert & house-made sweets

Menu

Cock­tail sug­ges­tion: Tahit­ian Vanilla Mar­tini 15.00

three courses $59

POISSON CRU
big­eye ahi, lime juice, tomato, cucum­ber, car­rot, sweet onion, fresh coconut milk
HINANO BEER, TAHITI 7.00

PORC LAQUE A L’ANANAS
pineap­ple glazed island pork
vanilla umara (sweet potato) purée
fresh coconut spinach
CAMBRIA, 2006 BENCHBREAK PINOT NOIR, SANTA MARIA VALLEY 14.00

POE DE TARO
baked taro pud­ding with banana ice cream
OLIVARES, 2006 DULCE MONASTRELL, JUMILLA 13.00

Chef Mavro Poe Dessert

New 3-course “Back from Bora Bora” menu with flavors of French Polynesia

February 16th, 2010 Chef Mavro No comments

Chef Mavro “Back from Bora Bora” with Fla­vors of French Poly­ne­sia
new 3-course menu ($59) starts Feb­ru­ary 23rd

HONOLULU — The excit­ing French/Polynesian fla­vors of Bora Bora inspired Chef Mavro to cre­ate a spe­cial three-course menu, “Back from Bora Bora,” for only $59. The menu includes an irre­sistible ver­sion of Pois­son Cru (sur­prise pair­ing with the Tahit­ian beer Hinano), fol­lowed by a main course of Pineap­ple Glazed Pork with umara puree, and fin­ishes with a flavor-packed dessert of Poe of Taro. Of course the $59 includes all the Chef Mavro extras of pre-appetizer, pre-dessert and hand-crafted can­dies. This spe­cial menu is avail­able by reser­va­tion from Tues­day, Feb­ru­ary 23. Chef Mavro restau­rant is open Tuesday-Saturday from 6–9:30 p.m. Call 944‑4714 or email chef@chefmavro.com.

Chef Mavro just returned from his first trip ever to French Poly­ne­sia that included a short stop in Papeete, Tahiti fol­lowed by a stay on the idyl­lic island of Bora Bora. What caused him to leave his beloved Oahu? An invi­ta­tion to join the maiden voy­age of the very lux­u­ri­ous Seabourn Odyssey on a cruise to Bora Bora and to give a cook­ing demo and pre­pare a din­ner fea­tur­ing Hawaii Regional Cui­sine. Once there, Mavro had no choice but to soak up the culi­nary fla­vors of this idyl­lic island as return flights to Hon­olulu are only once a week!

“I told myself if I’m going all the way to French Poly­ne­sia I’d bet­ter come back with some new fla­vor ideas! By good luck I stepped off the ship just as a cook­ing demo of pois­son cru and poe dessert was get­ting under­way at the har­bor tourism office!” noted Mavro.

Menu
Three courses ($59)

MENU
POISSON CRU
big­eye ahi, lime juice, tomato, cucum­ber, car­rot, sweet onion, fresh coconut milk

PORC LAQUE A L’ANANAS
pineap­ple glazed Island pork, vanilla sweet pototo (umara) puree, fresh coconut spinach

POE DE TARO
baked taro pud­ding with banana ice cream

Open every night now through January 2, 2010

December 19th, 2009 Chef Mavro No comments

Interior

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