In the wake of last night's October 4 premiere of The Next Iron Chef on the Food Network (airing regularly at 9pm on Sundays), Eater staged an elimination tournament with the chefs to determine the best food city. Today, the grand champion is revealed...
[Nate Appleman and Seamus Mullen. Photos courtesy The Food Network]
Following 3,980 reader votes cast over the past two weeks, at last, a winner has been cast in the Next Iron Chef challenge to name the Best Food City. In the finale, New York's Seamus Mullen faced off against San Francisco's Nate Appleman. It was close, but in the end, New York took the crown. Thanks to all for playing.
Which city is home in your chef's heart? Ideally, it's the city you grew up in.
SM:New York, it’s my adopted hometown.
What's the first and most essential restaurant stop when you return to that city?
SM: Sushi. When I'm away from New York, I rarely get to have Japanese food (unless I'm in Japan, obviously). I love Soto, Sushi Zen, Yasuda, Kyo Ya.
What are three other great places in the city that you recommend to friends or visitors, with a few quick words about why?
SM: For refined Italian food, it's hard to get better than Marco Canora?I love Hearth and Insieme. Red Hook ballfields in Brooklyn are a must stop for Mexican and Salvadorean food. It's not exactly in the city, but a Sunday lunch at Blue Hill Stone Barns followed by a walk through the farm is one of the best dining experiences I've had in New York.
What's the dish that represents that city the best?
SM: Pizza?born in Naples, ubiquitous in New York.
Is there a special local ingredient from that city that you still incorporate into your cooking?
SM: Long Island Fluke, Bonito and Razor Clams and Scallops. It always kills me when I'm in Europe and chefs poopoo the States for not having great ingredients or great food. The fish from our waters is wonderful fish, the Tomatoes from Jersey in August are amazing. We have great products.
A final sentence on why it's the best food city in America.
SM: New York City is the most diverse place in the world?no where else will you find so many people from so many cultures in one small place and there is nothing that preserves culture better than food. In the world of fine dining, it's extremely challenging to be successful in New York, we have crazy building and fire codes, outrageous rents and a very discerning and critical dining public. Most mediocre restaurants don't stick around that long.