Previous Page  18 / 60 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 18 / 60 Next Page
Page Background

16

MY

ROUSES

EVERYDAY

NOVEMBER | DECEMBER 2017

the

Holiday

issue

Gastreaux team discusses their work.Nick Puletti, a sous

chef with GastreauxNomica, moved to Baton Rouge

to attend LSU in 2010 and was quickly taken under

Rivera’s wing. “We believe in and love supporting each

other. Like last night, Ryan did a dinner in Downtown

Baton Rouge, and we all showed up for him. I don’t

know if it’s arrogance or what, but we believe that we

can outcook just about anybody, anywhere.”

And he might just be right. In addition to the Gastreaux

team, the city’s rich with a plethora of fresh talent.There

are the chefs at classic-leaning restaurants pushing their

menus in exciting new directions — like Peter Sclafani

of Ruffino’s and Chris Motto of Mansurs on the

Boulevard. At Chef Kelley McCann’s Kalurah Street

Grill, wok-seared shishito peppers and rabbit ragout sit

happily side by side on the menu. And a new wave of contemporary

gastropubs, like The Overpass Merchant, certainly opens up new

vistas for those looking for snappy ways to pair their tea-brined

fried chicken sandwich with local beers.

Make no mistake about it: These chefs are interested in playing

the long game to improve and diversify the city’s dining scene for

decades to come, creating a place where tradition and innovation

can cook side by side.

So Fresh, So Clean

Of course, diversifying the city’s dining options also means

introducing a variety of straight-from-the-garden ingredients to

balance out the less health-friendly explorations. Enter Pat Fellows:

founder of FRESHJUNKIE, a GastreauxNomica member and an

entrepreneurial dynamo in the city.

“I’m trying to cook healthy food in the most unhealthy place in the

world,” Fellows teases.

FRESHJUNKIE is a restaurant specializing in salads and wraps,

and Fellows considers himself something of an expert in the field.

“My strength is grilling and coming up with creative, delicious

dressings — things that might give people a healthy meal for the

first time, but they’re still going to enjoy it. When we started out,

we made everything healthy but we never really sold it as healthy.

We just had great flavor profiles, and it was kind of unassuming.We

didn’t smash them in the face with it.”

Fellows also runs Somos Bandidos, a taco joint, as well as a race

production company, FRESHJUNKIE Racing, which produces

12 events a year across the Gulf Coast. (Whew.) And where does

Fellows pick up his good-for-you fuel for all of these endeavors?

Rouses Markets, of course.

“I might be the odd man out a little bit with GastreauxNomica

because I come from such a different culinary background, but it’s

great to be a part of this new guard.”

For the People

This experimental, devil-may-care attitude towards flipping the

script on tradition also extends to the world of catering in the city.

Sydney Harkins and Jamie Brown are a duo of fireballs who, with

their powers combined, make up the BouillaBabes. And while

their company name clearly pays cheeky homage to the traditional

French Provençal seafood stew (get it?), their attitude towards their

guests is anything but cheeky.

“We never stop cooking, and we’re always thinking about cooking

even when we’re nowhere near a kitchen,” says Harkins. “I was

cuddling with my dog the other night and texted Jamie to say, ‘Yo,

why don’t we put chorizo in this new dish we’re doing?’ It’s that way

all the time.”

The pair met in April via Rivera (naturally) and immediately

bonded over a desire to both support and raise the profile of female

chefs in the city.

“We were like, ‘People are catching on that women are badass in

a male-dominated field, and now that people are getting with the

times, let’s capitalize on that!’” Harkins explains. “We’re female-

centric and very much female empowerment, right down to our

decor. If you look on TV at female chefs, it’s mostly this total ‘Holly

Homemaker’ look.We definitely aren’t that.We want to be like your

best friend, but better.”

The BouillaBabes are also about as populist as they come.Through

an innovative pricing model and a desire to work with clients’

budgetary needs in mind, Harkins and Brown are making catering

accessible for folks who might’ve never considered it an option.

“We’re caterers for the people,” laughs Brown.

[TOP] GastreauxNomica’s BouillaBabes, Sydney Harkins and Jamie Brown

[LEFT] GastreauxNomica’s Nick Puletti [RIGHT] GastreauxNomica’s Pat Fellows