Hail to the Chefs

Eight mouths of the South who elevate regional fare with true grits
Published 06.15.05
Jim Stawniak
SERVE IT FORTH: Goren Avery, a venerated server at Birmingham’s Highlands Bar & Grill and a noted caterer, delivers chef Frank Stitt’s powerhouse pork chop.
Eight chefs. Six restaurants. Six states. A heap of driving. And one speeding ticket (curse those Savannah traffic cops).

I've spent my recent weekends trekking to the restaurants of some of the Southeast's finest practitioners of its native regional cuisines. Of course, that could include barbecue pit masters who cook out of remote rural shacks, or local speakeasies where the owner has been making biscuits by hand for 20 years.

But I took the high-end road.

I sought out pre-eminent chefs of the Southeast (excluding New Orleans, which is a subject onto itself) not just because I wanted to see if their food was worth the commotion - I pretty much trusted it was. I cast off for these dining destinations because I longed to taste the sense of place engendered in their food. While chefs in New York or Chicago may be celebrated for their sense of invention or outlandishness, most of the South prizes local cooks who honor their roots and do the region proud. Southerners - and we can be generous and include seasoned transplants in that group, particularly since I'm one of them - luxuriate in fried green tomatoes or mac-n-cheese treated with some well-earned respect.

Obviously, these chefs also take appreciated creative liberties. "It's good not to be strictly Southern," Ben Barker told me at his Durham, N.C., restaurant, Magnolia Grill. "Our guests enjoy the worldly sensibility." Surveying Barker's full dining room as I ate octopus salame with green olive guacamole alongside his deconstructed Brunswick stew, I could see he made a seductive argument.

Cosmopolitan embellishments aside, a pride and passion for indigenous ingredients and classic dishes provide the starch in the backbone that each of the chefs display in their compelling menus.

Ready for a road trip? I'd gladly take to the highways again to dine at the tables of these caretakers of Southern culinary traditions. Just help me keep an eye out for the boys in blue next time.

MORE IN THE FOOD ISSUE

Cover
John Currence
City Grocery in Oxford, Miss.
BY BILL ADDISON

Frank Stitt
Highlands Bar & Grill in Birmingham
BY BILL ADDISON

Cover
Ben and Karen Barker
Magnolia Grill in Durham, N.C.
BY BILL ADDISON

Cover
Michael and Laurence Gottlieb
Gottlieb's in Savannah
BY BILL ADDISON

Cover
Louis Osteen
Louis's at Pawleys on Pawley's Island, S.C.

Cover
Norman Van Aken
Norman's in Orlando
BY BILL ADDISON

Cover Feature
Southern exposure
A photographic buffet sampling some of our favorite traditional eats around the Atlanta metro area

Cover Feature
Soused in the South
Southern-style beverages take the edge off summer's long, hot days
BY TONY WARE

Feature
Great Scott
A candid conversation with Watershed's executive chef Scott Peacock
BY CLIFF BOSTOCK

Kitchen Witch
Come Fry With Me
Tips to take the intimidation out of fried chicken
BY KIM O'DONNEL

Grazing
As if on cue ...
The smoky confluence of barbecue and nostalgia
BY CLIFF BOSTOCK

Corkscrew
In Our Own Back Yard
Some wines from the Southeast are worth a sip
BY TAYLOR EASON

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