Each
night promises a new challenge for Chef Michael Young…
Whether it is turning a traditional kugel dessert into a starch dish
by adding wild canary mushrooms or accentuating a Thai grilled
red snapper into a visually appetizing feast, there is one
certainty to expect from his cuisine: the unexpected. With
indubitably well-rounded skills, Michael can, and has, conquered
different styles of food without compromise. Creating new
and diverse dishes through inspiration as well as a natural
awareness for food combinations, each must be prepared with
just the right spice, vegetable, seasonal ingredient and attitude.
Michael's
interest in cooking was developed at an early age…
Every Sunday,
he would watch and study his father, a chef in a French restaurant,
cook a meal for his family. Developing his culinary skills
during high school, Michael honed them in college to help
pay his way. It was at a Thai restaurant in what some consider
to be the Mecca of the culinary world, Manhattan, where the
budding chef developed his passion for creating food that
provides a pure balance of the bitter, sour, spicy, sweet,
and salty. Disparate presentations, aromas, and flavors tantalize
and satisfy the diner's sight and smell even before the taste
buds are finest.
At
the tender age of 21, Michael became chef of Buckaroo’s,
specializing in south-western cuisine. Here, he quickly became
adept at kitchen supervision, calculating food and labor costs,
and menu design, thus adding a new dimension to his restaurant
repertoire.
In 1994, Michael began working with Douglas Rodriguez at the
three star nuevo latino restaurant, Patria in Manhattan. Under
the tutelage of this renowned chef, who received the "Rising Star Chef of the Year"
award by the James Beard Foundation, Michael was privy to
a whole new type of cuisine as well as rare and wonderful
new ingredients. Taking salsas and adding unusual fruits and
tomatoes or playing with Latin American tubers with goat cheese, roasted
garlic or bacon, Michael began to elaborate on his already
well-developed creativity. As the Tournade, he assisted the
opening of the prestigious 125-seat restaurant, and was responsible
for training in all areas of the kitchen.
This experience
helped him during his tenure as a consultant for Erizo Latino,
a 70-seat seafood restaurant in the heart of Soho. Through designing
the opening menu and purchasing the kitchen's equipment, Chef Young was
an integral part of Erizo Latino's enormous success. During this time, he was
also the Executive Chef of the Doral Park Avenue Hotel. For his efforts of being
responsible for all American food and beverage styles for the hotel, as well as
the training of kitchen staff members, he received the "Chef 2000" award
from "The American Tasting Institute".
While Michael has garnered a well-rounded resume encompassing
every aspect
of the restaurant industry, it is his food which best defines
him…
The owners of a then yet-to-be-established southwestern
restaurant in Aspen, Colorado were so thoroughly impressed by him that they invited him to consult
for their designing team. As the Chef de Cuisine, he created the theme and menu
for Blue Maize, which catapulted the restaurant into its present
luster.
Michael's reputation brought him back to his hometown of New
York City and he was promptly presented with the immense challenge
of revamping a hip, kosher restaurant whose food was generally
considered sub-par, The menu of Lansky Lounge has been transformed
into whimsical fantasy, featuring such delicious innovations
as battered sole coupled with traditional kasha, a dish that
excels in both presentation and taste.
In
1999, excited to work with the nuevo latino style that he
learned under Douglas Rodriguez, Michael became Executive
Chef of Habana in South Norwalk, Connecticut. He expertly
reacquainted himself with those rare ingredients, such as
malanga and yucca, which he enjoyed working so much with at
Patria, all the while maintaining the "very good"
rating that the New York Times attributed to the restaurant
under the previous Executive Chef. Working for Habana provided
Michael with the opportunity to truly test his skills as he
was offered the position of Executive Chef at its new sister
restaurant Ocean Drive, Located in close proximity of one
another, both restaurants are fortunate enough to have Michael
lend his expertise and guidance and divide his time equally
between the two. Here, he also helped Ocean Drive to garner
its own New York Times rating of "very good". Over
fifty kitchen staff members at both restaurants regard him
with the most respect and admiration, as they are treated
as his equals rather than his employees. Remaining forever
calm, even during the busiest of dinner rushes, Michael exemplifies
true patience and returns the respect that his cooks show
for him. |