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A Conversation with Chef James Boyce

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By Cheri Sicard
Photos: Mitch Mandell
Posted August 6th, 2007
Cheri Sicard - What is the most important tool you have in your kitchen?
James Boyce - Probably a good, sharp French knife. But, besides that, I would say a good French steel sauté pan. It's very Herb Gardenimportant in cooking fish. Those two are probably the most important ones.

Cheri Sicard - Are there any types of gadgets that maybe are a bit unnecessary that you still like?
James Boyce - One of those weird peelers, you know they're totally unnecessary, but I kind of like them. I always seem to have one or two around. And a plastic mandoline.

Cheri Sicard - I can never get them to work. I've tried and tried.
James Boyce - (laughs) It's sort of funny, I never could for a while. I was always afraid of cutting myself, but I guess if you cut yourself once in awhile it sort of helps to get over that.

Cheri Sicard - So to learn how to use it, you have to cut yourself, that's the trick?
James Boyce - (laughing more) Something like that, yeah.

Cheri Sicard - Do you have a secret chef's tip for our readers?
James Boyce - Hmmm...secret chef's tip. Probably it would be that when cooking fish, you don't have to cook it well done now. Most of our fish is farm raised. And also with pork. A lot of people that I teach tend to cook pork until it's extremely well done, but you can get away with a medium pork and a medium fish.

Cheri Sicard - Everyone's been taught to cook pork well done for safety reasons.
James Boyce - Yeah, yeah, especially from the east. You know, cook it until it's dead.

Cheri Sicard - How did you get into being a chef? Was anyone from your family in this profession?
James Boyce - No, my family was real business oriented. I went towards the culinary field because my next door neighbor opened a little deli/bakery/bagel place, so I started working there when I was fourteen. And then I went to college, but I still felt like I had to get back into the kitchen, so I just sort of put myself through school working towards that goal.

Cheri Sicard - You grew up in New York. What do you bring of your roots to your cooking, if anything?
James Boyce - Hmm. A good work ethic. I work...probably too many hours. That's sort of like a New York style, you know.

Cheri Sicard - That goes with the territory of being a chef, though.
James Boyce - Well, there are some chefs who don't put in the hours. But I like to be involved with everything. Growing up in New York, it's sort of a dog eat dog town, and working in New York City it was always, see who could get there first, see who could work more, so I think I brought that with me. It's always the work ethic that I carry on the most. Even if I could take off, I probably wouldn't.

Cheri Sicard - So do you love what you're doing, or is it just a compulsion?
James Boyce - No, I love what I'm doing! You have to love it, you have to be dedicated. It's never a routine. When something's good somewhere, there's a challenge somewhere else. Especially when you control the whole resort. I'd always like to work up here (the Azzura Point Restaurant) every night, but I don't always get the chance. We have four restaurants, many banquet halls, you know, it gets overwhelming. There are just not enough hours in the day. So you have to sacrifice some parts of your life to do it, to do it well anyway. It can be difficult.

Cheri Sicard - Here in Coronado Island, you are very close to the Mexican border. Does that bring any influence to your food?
James Boyce - Yeah, it does. I'd say that 75% of my cooks are Mexican. A lot of them travel over the border. We get a lot of preparation styles that are different. We have a clientele that's attracted to that, so we try to bring some of that influence in here. We have the pool that sells a lot of south-of-the-border style dishes. I write the menus, but the cooks translate them into their own styles. Same thing with downstairs (the hotel's casual cafe), we do a lot of buffets. In this room (Azzura Point) we don't use too much of a south of the border influence but downstairs, it makes sense to. We also have Mediterranean influences with pizza and pastas and salads. So, it's a good mix. We could never go 100% with the Mexican influence, but the influence is there. And I've learned a lot, with the salsas and the raw vegetables and the fruits mixed together. And the juices they have down there, that are phenomenal, that we don't get here. And the way they cook their meat in marinades. So, I have picked up a lot of that.

Cheri Sicard - Tell us about the changes to Azzura Point.
James Boyce - Well, it used to be very white, very austere, very Cape Cod looking. No tablecloths, there was a wood floor, but it was whimsical with the checkers. Now it's sort of a semi-sophisticated supper club atmosphere. In the lounge area we Herb Gardenwill be offering a lighter menu, sort of bistro style. We serve appetizers out here. We've brought a little bit of an international feel to it, the animals, sconces on the wall, Venetian - style chandeliers and banquettes. My food is still the same. Maybe it didn't match the room before, but it's closer, more well suited now. Before it was sort of a light, airy kind of feel, sort of a California Casual, which I hate to hear. Now we have tablecloths on all of the tables, Limoges china, fine crystal; I think we're ahead of our time here. And you'll see how it transforms at night, with the lights. We have a pianist or a jazz guitarist that comes in. The staff is well trained. You feel as though you're taken out of the resort and into a private restaurant. I don't know how you would categorize the room, it's about each person's own interpretation, which adds to the excitement.

Cheri Sicard - I've heard that you do cooking demonstrations here at the resort.
James Boyce - All the time. We have one on Saturdays at 11 AM in the kitchen of Azzura Point for resort guests. I also do them for organized groups. I do herb garden tours. I do a fall and spring cooking class series. In the fall we usually do it around Thanksgiving. Last year we did an alternative Thanksgiving dinner. We did desserts for the holidays with our pastry chef. What's interesting too, is we do a farmer's market, where we bring in the local purveyors that supply us all year and they set up the last Friday of every month starting after Memorial Day. It's more than a farmer's market because we also bring in micro-brews that are made in the area, local tortilla makers, we have corn on the cob. Pretty much everything we buy in the resort.

Cheri Sicard - Is that just for resort guests, or does it attract locals too?
James Boyce - We started off with like seventy-five people, so then we changed it to more of that market place, where you can get anything from fresh cut flowers to cooking demonstrations. I usually bring in a regional chef or cookbook author and they do a cooking demo with tastings. So now we get over two hundred people.

Cheri Sicard - Have you found in general that the public's consciousness is being raised about good food and cooking?
James Boyce - Yeah, I do. Especially where we sit. We've brought a lot features here that are not usual for a 4-star, 4-diamond resort. We offer a lot for the outside. Cooking classes, our markets, demonstrations, kitchen tours. We are involved.



 

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