Chefs

 

Great chefs know that a recipe is only as good as the quality of the ingredients. That's why top Texas chefs choose the freshest and best selections that the Lone Star State has to offer, including unparalleled Texas shrimp. Here we highlight some of these progressive chefs who promote the bounty of Texas agriculture on their menus.

Chef Randy Evans

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"Here in Texas we are spoiled with the bounty the Gulf of Mexico, I love the sweet, firm snap Wild Texas Shrimp offers in every bite!  My job as a chef is easier when using Wild Texas Shrimp because the clean, sweet flavor gives me the opportunity to combine many flavors with Wild Texas Shrimp."


Photo Courtesy of Steven Harris


"Black-eye peas, lady creamers, purple hull, cream crowder peas..." Ask Chef Randy Evans what his favorite variety of peas is – or any other type of produce – and you receive a passionate, knowledgeable list. Taking deep and competitive pride in sourcing out the highest quality, fresh-from-the-earth product from local farmers and purveyors, Evans often drives out to the farms during the day to handpick his produce from the vine, soil or the back of a farmer’s pick up truck for that night’s meals.  The goal: to create dishes for his guests that are at their seasonal peak, offering maximum flavor and freshness.  

 Little wonder that Haven, Evans’ latest culinary endeavor of which he serves as executive chef and co-owner, was Houston’s most highly-anticipated restaurant opening for 2009. The green-certified restaurant located at Houston’s 59/Kirby corridor opened in December 2009.

“Haven’s menu is farm-to-table, and what I call New Texas Cuisine,” says Evans, who was born in Houston and raised an hour North of Houston in Willis, Texas.  “It features favorite foods that I enjoyed as a child, but with new vision.”  According to Evans, the menu changes weekly, depending on what’s best in the fields that week.  Everything is local, fresh and handmade.  A chef’s garden, just outside the kitchen, instills the importance of utilizing only the freshest ingredients.

Evans, who grew up near his grandfather’s farm eating the freshest produce and vegetables and watching his mother bake countless country desserts, had no intentions of becoming a chef. Instead, he studied biology at Baylor University, planning to become a doctor, like his sister.  But after hosting numerous dinner parties and bragging about his latest antique cookbook find to friends, he discovered that cooking in the kitchen was where he truly belonged.

While completing the culinary program at The Art Institute of Houston in 1996, Evans joined Brennan’s of Houston, working his way through every station and rank in the kitchen; he was appointed executive chef in November of 2003. Evans’ cookbook, The Kitchen Table (Bright Sky Press, November 2006, $29.95) received the gold medal in the cookbook category at the 11th Annual Independent Publisher Book Awards. The Kitchen Table features a plethora of recipes served over the past 15 years at Brennan’s unique Kitchen Table, situated in the middle of its bustling kitchen.

Evans’ other big culinary interest lies in organic gardening.  “I knew a lot about gardening but wanted to learn more, so I recently completed a course on organic gardening offered by Urban Harvest,” he says.  “I want to teach my kitchen staff to have respect for the food and ingredients we serve.  Our chef’s garden will be a natural, sustainable garden, with no chemicals, and cisterns to collect rain water.”  

As for awards, Haven was named Best New Restaurant in Houston by My Table Magazine in October 2010, Top 20 Best New Restaurants in the Nation by Esquire Magazine in November 2010, One of 5 Best New Restaurants in the South by Southern Living in January 2011, Second Best New Restaurant in Texas by Texas Monthly in February 2011, and Best New Restaurant by the readers of Houston Business Journal in May 2011.

Chef Evans also gives much of his time and energy to a number of philanthropic organizations and events in the Houston area, such as:  Recipe for Success; Urban Harvest; Texas Foodways; and many more. Chef Evans also currently serves as a spokesman and consultant for the Texas Department of Agriculture’s Shrimp Marketing Board and Texas Department of Forestry and Horticulture.

Chef Michael Flores

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Michael Flores has a degree from the Culinary Institute of America. He graduated with honors and completed an impressive internship with the world-renowned Chef Susan Spicer. Still, his roots are cemented in classical cuisine and are as true as a Hollandaise and as deep as the simmering stockpots of his grandmothers' kitchens. Flores arrived on the San Antonio culinary scene with overflowing talent and enthusiasm. Almost immediately he became chef de cuisine at Polo's at the Fairmont, and subsequently executive chef at Barcelona's Mediterranean Café where recipes such as Mediterranean Nachos and Crêpés Escargots became instant sensations. Soon after, he opened Firewheel, a hip gourmet store and cooking academy. He has created meals for the Napa Valley Wine Auction, for presidential cabinet members and has appeared as guest chef aboard the Orient Express. He's even had the honor of cooking at the renowned James Beard House in New York City. Among the awards he has received, he was honored with the coveted "People's Choice Award" at the nationally acclaimed Texas Hill Country Wine & Food Festival.

Chef Michael Flores
In this multi-cultural society he has become an expert at exploring the richness of flavors, aromas and presentation, which reflect his appreciation of peoples from all nationalities and backgrounds. It is for this very reason that in November 2004, the Texas Department of Agriculture named Flores a "Rising Star Chef," referring to his unique style of cuisine as "multi-cultural metropolitan."

If that still weren't enough, Flores is also an author. Fulfilling a life-long dream, he published his first cookbook titled My Family My Friends My Food: Recipes Celebrating People and Life. Currently, he operates a successful catering company that provides the best in culinary arts to clients across the nation and operates his own line of gourmet products appropriately called "Chef Michael." He is often invited as a guest chef at charity galas and on various television and radio programs because his cuisine is not only innovative and creatively presented, but also because he is an articulate and humorous spokesman for his profession, and is warmly interactive with his patrons and audience.

Committed to community service, Flores founded Nutcracker Sweets which benefited the Battered Women's Shelter of Bexar County. For this immensely successful fund-raiser he brought together the talents of Texas chefs with those of nationally and internationally recognized ones. Flores has been a spokesperson for the National Dairy Association, the Texas Department of Agriculture, Nature Sweet Tomatoes, Mexican Avocados, Best Maid Pickles and Texas Shrimp. 

Chef Michael Flores resides in San Antonio, Texas, with his brother and business partner, Tommy. Recently, one of Michael's biggest accomplishments was launching a new project called Learn Aboard!TM- cooking classes on a Rio San Antonio Cruiser while sailing along the famous San Antonio River.

For more information, visit www.chefmichael.com.

Chef Molly Fowler

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Molly Fowler, The Dining Diva, is a traveling culinary instructor, television personality, recipe developer, product spokesperson and cookbook author who demonstrates entertaining with ease, flair and impact. Her credo, "Make every day an occasion," reflects her attitude and approach to cooking. 


Author of Menus for Entertaining, Molly hosts her own 30-minute television cooking show, All the Right Ingredients, airing in Houston on KHOU Channel 11, 11.2 and Comcast Cable 310. Molly is a spokesperson for the Texas Department of Agriculture and is a frequent speaker and presenter at various civic venues such as the Fredericksburg Food and Wine Fest, the Grand Wine and Food Affair in Fort Bend County and the State Fair of Texas. She also sponsors culinary tours throughout Europe. Her culinary career began in 1989 when she founded a catering company in Denver. She now resides in Houston where she has an extensive fan base because of her regular appearances on Houston's KHOU/CBS Channel 11 Great Day Houston and Victoria's KAVU/ABC Channel 25 Sunrise. She has appeared on KPRC/NBC Channel 2 in Houston, on ABC and Fox Affiliates in Dallas, in Comcast Cable's Cookin' With Carol in Arlington and on radio affiliates across Texas. Molly is a frequent instructor for Texas' H-E-B Central Market Cooking Schools in Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio and Austin, as well as at Sub-Zero/Wolf showrooms in Dallas and Houston, The Arbor Gate in Tomball, The Cooking Depot in Cuero and other private and public venues across the state. Molly also creates custom cooking videos to post on clients' Web sites. 

Molly's skill, humor and food artistry come together in presentations that provide a delicious serving of information and entertainment. 

For more information, visit www.thediningdiva.com.

Chef Terry Thompson-Anderson, CCP

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“I love to cook with Texas wild-caught Gulf brown shrimp.  My husband, Roger, who was himself a shrimper in his younger days, is very particular about the shrimp he eats and made me a believer in ‘Texas browns’ years ago.  Having my culinary roots in Cajun-Creole foods, I’m known for the bold and spicy flavors of my style of cooking.  Texas wild-caught Gulf brown shrimp have a depth of flavor that stands up to lots of heat and spice and a clean brininess that is missing in shrimp from other regions.  To me, they’re the flavor benchmark of what shrimp should taste like.”
 



Terry Thompson-Anderson grew up in Houston in a typical suburban household, except for the fact that her mother was not much of a cook. So, when she married after pursuing a degree in English, she found herself as a new bride who, likewise, did not know how to cook. Saved from a life of culinary deprivation by a mother-in-law who was a fine southern cook from Macon, Georgia, Terry became fascinated by this new world of cooking. After a move to Austin, Texas, she began to take avocational cooking classes at every cooking school that opened. A move to  Lousiaina made Terry realize her love of food, and she made the decision to go back to the halls of academia, only this time to attend culinary school..  She also  had the privilege, along with five other women culinary professionals, to spend two weeks of intensive study with James Beard at the Stanford Court Hotel kitchens in San Francisco shortly before his death. She says it was an experience that could never be duplicated, and one that forever changed the way she looks at, purchases, tastes, and cooks food.

 

A nine-page feature in the December, 1983 issue of Bon Appetit magazine brought requests from across the country for consulting and her first book offer. Terry has written seven cookbooks, that first one, Cajun-Creole Cooking, was heralded as “the best Cajun-Creole cookbook on the market” by the Los Angeles Times (HP Books 1986 and 1984; Shearer Publishing, 2003); Eating Southern Style (HP Books 1988 and 1993); the award-winning Texas on the Plate (Shearer Publishing, 2003); and The Texas Hill Country – A Food and Wine Lover’s Paradise (Shearer Publishing, 2008), and Don Strange of Texas – His Life and Recipes (Shearer Publishing, 2009.) She also served as editor for The Cooking School Cookbook (Diamondhead Academy, 1988.) Her seventh book, Lone Star Eats, a compilation of recipes from legendary Texas cookbooks, which she edited, was released in October of 2011. She is currently writing a comprehensive book on the foods of Texas, for the University of Texas Press. Terry has also written for many local and national publications. She serves on the Advisory Board for Edible Austin magazine and also writes feature articles for that publication and a regular column on Texas wineries. She has appeared on numerous television and radio programs across the United States, including Fox and Friends in Times Square in New York City.

 

After owning her own restaurant in Bay St Louis, MS., a family tragedy brought Ms Thompson-Anderson back to Texas, where she accepted a position as Executive Chef rot he Halliburton Corporation, in charge of food and beverage service for their executive lodges. In 2004, Terry moved to Fredericksburg, Texas, in the heart of the Texas Hill Country, to launch a line of food products, based on recipes from her book, Texas on the Plate. She is sought after as a culinary consultant/chef, cooking teacher, cooking demonstrator, and lecturer/panelist at food and wine and other events. She remains an active member of the International Association of Culinary Professionals, the Southern Foodways Alliance, and the prestigious Les Dames d’Escoffier International. She lives in Fredericksburg with her husband, Roger, where they lovingly tend their flock of chickens, vegetable, herb, and chili gardens.

Chef Javier Lopez

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Chef Javier LopezBorn and raised in the northern part of Mexico, my interest for cooking didn't surface until I came to Houston, Texas.  I was introduced to the culinary talents of many chefs in the city and sampled a variety of cuisines and learned to cook them. Later, I realized that food was my passion and decided that professional experience was the beginning of my success as a chef. While working at Brennan's of Houston under Chef Carl Walker, I was inspired to obtain formal training and joined the Culinary Program at The Art Institute of Houston.

Upon graduation, I left Houston and obtained a position as the Tournant at Commander's Palace in New Orleans, under the late Chef Jamie Shannon. In New Orleans, the whole city is a big ol' kitchen. An adventure that lasted four incredible years.

Having a profound love for the southwest, I came back to Houston to accept the offer to join Damian Mandola and Johnny Carrabba to open Pesce.  It has been an extraordinary experience.  I contributed many of the menu selections and assisted in the development of procedures of operations and preparations.  Executive Chef Mark Holley and Pesce have given me an opportunity to expand my knowledge and the keys to success as a reputable chef in the city of Houston