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Daniel Patterson (chef)

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Name
  
Daniel Patterson

Role
  
Chef


Education
  
Duke University

Books
  
Coi: Stories and Recipes

Daniel Patterson (chef) Food Secrets of ChefRestaurateurWriter Daniel Patterson


Awards
  
James Beard Award for Best Chef: West

Nominations
  
James Beard Award for Best New Restaurant, James Beard Foundation Award for Best Chef: Pacific

Profiles

Chef s night out daniel patterson


Daniel Patterson is an American chef, restaurateur, and food writer, considered a leading proponent of California cuisine.

Contents

Daniel Patterson (chef) Best New Chef AllStars 2013 Food amp Wine

Breville presents beef encrusted in lichen by chef daniel patterson


Life and career

Daniel Patterson (chef) Chef Daniel Patterson of Coi Biography StarChefscom

A self-taught chef, Patterson was born in Lynn, Massachusetts. His mother was a French and history teacher, and his father was a lawyer. He says his family's frequent travels to France influenced his views on food. He began working as a restaurant dishwasher at age 14, and attended Duke University before dropping out. In 1989 he moved to Sonoma, California with then-girlfriend (and later wife) Elizabeth Ramsey. With Ramsey, Patterson opened Babette's, a French-inspired restaurant, in Sonoma in 1994 at age 25. The restaurant subsequently closed in 1999 when his lease expired. Wine Spector described it as a "top" restaurant in the town. Patterson and Ramsey opened Elizabeth Daniel in 2000, and closed it on New Years Day, 2004 due to slow business despite a strong reputation. He was opening chef at Frisson, a short-lived restaurant that incorporated elements of aromatherapy and molecular gastronomy.

Daniel Patterson (chef) httpspixelnymagcomimgsdailygrub20141120

Coi, which he opened in 2006, earned two Michelin stars, and was one of several restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area to earn four stars from the San Francisco Chronicle. Patterson describes its concept as combining haute cuisine, an emphasis on local vegetables, a modern aesthetic, and a personal approach to cooking, with "a casual, neighborhood feeling". The approach was uncommon at the time, but later became a hallmark of Northern California restaurants. His cooking at Coi involves foraging for wild ingredients, using aromas and essential oils (including asking patrons to rub grapefruit oil on their hands before a dish, or placing inedible fragrant flowers on a dish), and making his own ingredients (for example, butter churned in-house).

He opened an informal rotisserie, Il Cane Rosso ("the red dog" in Italian), in the San Francisco Ferry Building with co-owner Lauren Kiino, before selling the business to her entirely. He opened restaurants Plum in Uptown Oakland in 2010 and Haven in Oakland's Jack London Square in 2012.

Patterson lives in Oakland, California, and is married to litigation attorney Alexandra Foote.

Writing

Patterson also writes about food. He is an occasional contributor to New York Times Magazine, Food & Wine Magazine, and San Francisco Magazine. In 2004 he wrote The Magic of Essential Oils in Food and Fragrance together with co-author Mandy Aftel, a noted perfume maker. "To the Moon, Alice" (a reference to Alice Waters of Chez Panisse) published in 2005, generated considerable controversy for criticizing the tendency of San Francisco restaurants to copy the Chez Panisse style and approach, which he said resulted in self-righteousness over ingredients and a lack of creativity, complexity, or technical finesse. He also criticized San Francisco diners for avoiding food they considered too fancy, while paying similar prices for restaurants that featured home-style cooking, as a form of affected populism. One quote from the essay that is often repeated is: "so deeply embedded is the mythology of Chez Panisse in the DNA of local food culture that it threatens to smother stylistic diversity and extinguish the creativity that it originally sought to spark.”

Awards and recognition

  • Best New Chef, Food & Wine Magazine, 1997
  • Rising Star Chef, San Francisco Chronicle, 1997
  • Best New Restaurant, James Beard Foundation, 2001 (for Elizabeth Daniel)
  • Chef of the Year, San Francisco Magazine, 2007
  • Best Chef: Pacific (nominee), James Beard Foundation, 2009 and 2010
  • References

    Daniel Patterson (chef) Wikipedia