Jamie Bissonnette

Jamie Bissonnette is an American restaurateur and chef. He and Ken Oringer are joint owners of a number of restaurants in Greater Boston area.[1] He is a recipient of the 2014 Best Chef Northeast for the James Beard Foundation Awards, a prestigious culinary award. He was also for the award in 2012 and 2013.[2]

Early life

Before he found success as a chef, he was described as a CTHC, "Connecticut punk-rock kid, straight-edge and vegetarian."[3] After culinary school he travelled and staged and at one point "his boss threatened to fire him if he didn’t start eating animals."[3]

Career

He earned a Culinary Arts degree from The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale at age 19.[4] He travelled and staged, landing in Hartford, before settling in Boston. He has worked in Peking Tom's, Pigalle, Andy Husband's Tremont 647, and Eastern Standard.[4] In 2007, Oringer hired him to "head up the kitchen" at KO Prime. His work was noticed and "the Improper Bostonian named Bissonnette “Rising Star Chef” and KO Prime “Best New Restaurant.”"[4] In 2014 his first book, The New Charcuterie Cookbook: Exceptional Cured Meats to Make and Serve at Home, was published by Page Street Publishing.[5]

Awards and honors

  • 2014 Best Chef Northeast for the James Beard Foundation Awards, considered to be the Oscars of the culinary world; nominated in 2012 and 2013.[6]
  • Food & Wine People’s Best New Chef award,[3][7] He was the first to win that award.[4]
  • He won $10,000 on The Food Network show Chopped[8]

References

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