Episode 7: Michael Fojtasek

I feel that Southern food is very much representative of American food in general. I think it is to me the most indicative of what American food has been and continues to evolve. Personally I try to keep it much in line with who I am and what my background speaks to. I try not to appropriate cultures that are not mine. I understand that Southern food in general comes from a culture that is not my culture.  There are a lot of those influences in the food that I cook, I feel more comfortable that I'm not appropriating them because I'm seeing them through the lens of time.

What we covered In this episode

  •  His roots are in the South (Mississippi and Tenesse) and the importance of his mother's and grandmother's influences.
  • Southern cuisine celebrates Seasonality and Local Ingredients.
  •  The constant evolution of Southern cuisine with new influences like South East Asian in Southern Louisiana and East Texas.
  •  The deliberate choice from chef Michael Fojtasek to ground his creative process in local ingredients that are important to him.
  • He made a decision not appropriate cultures that are not his.
  • Discover the moderne twists he applies on buttermilk and benne seeds.
  •  He like to keep the soul in the food and do not like to “manipulate” the food.
  •  Discover which tools in the kitchen are important to him.
  •  The parallel that exist between being part of a sport team and a kitchen.
  •  Chef Michael talks about his mentor Jonathan Benno.
  •  His relatively long creative process starts at the market on Saturdays.
  •  His menu is based on small plates and on a series of “sets” (fish, chicken, pork, beef and vegetarian).
  •  One aspect of the creative process is about problem solving.
  •  Dairy ingredients (butter, cream, buttermilk, crème fraîche) are irreplaceable to him.
  •  Listen to Chef Michael talking about his dish called “boiled peanut” that has been constantly evolving since he created it.
  • Chef encourages everyone to seek different type of rice and to learn how to cook it properly.
  •  5 rapid-fire questions.

Links to other episodes in Austin

Start by learning how to cook rice properly...

I think that the greatest mistake that happens with rice most often is that it's just not cook properly. So learning how to cook the rice in a good way.  It just requires you to think about cooking rice in a different way. What's best for each individual rice. 

Seek out rice is that costs more money. Probably a great place to start with that is any of the Asian markets.

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Chef Michael Fojtasek

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