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1 Ingredient, 4 Ways

Articles on how to make one ingredient versatile with four different dishes from independent restaurants across the country

One ingredient four ways: Honey

Bees serve up a flavor enhancer and recipe workhorse

Tara Fitzpatrick, Senior Editor

March 18, 2019

2 Min Read
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Fresh from the hive, drizzled here and there on the menu for sticky-sweet impact, honey can do a lot as an ingredient: it can emulsify a sauce, balance fiery flavors and give your plates a sense of place. According to Datassential, honey is one of the top sauces/flavors on U.S. restaurant menus as of December, increasing 11% since 2012.

Honeycomb in a frame
Jamie Simpson, executive chef liaison, Culinary Vegetable Institute at The Chef’s Garden, Huron, Ohio
Price: for special events, varies
Just as The Chef’s Garden’s Farmer Lee Jones is instantly recognizable by his bow-tie-overalls combo, Chef Jamie Simpson, a transplant to Ohio from the South, is identified by his ponytail and a look of intensity as he hunches over intricate plates. For garden-centric events at the Culinary Vegetable Institute (CVI) at The Chef’s Garden (and offsite events, too, like a recent James Beard dinner in New York), this whole honeycomb frame (pictured above) can be interactive or part of a cheese service that’s served to guests.

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The Big Bite B.L.A.T.
Guy Fieri, Chicken Guy!, Orlando and Miami
Price: $6.99
Sauces offer a pathway to Flavor Town in 22 different ways at Guy Fieri’s two Florida chicken joints, the perfect accent to the hand-pounded-and-breaded-daily-for-maximum-crunch chicken. Sauce choices range from Fieri’s signature Donkey Sauce to curry mayo to garlic parmesan and the new avocado crema. Honey is the star of Nashville Hot Honey sauce, combining the sweet stuff with red chilies, cayenne, garlic and onion, shown here with the Big Bite B.L.A.T., a crispy chicken sammie with bacon, lettuce, avocado crema and tomatoes.

DSC_0256.JPG.pngBrown butter-honey-tahini toast
Carey Hynes, chef, Mockingbird, Miami
Price: $5
Mockingbird is the hip brunchy sister to cocktail bar Jaguar Sun, both located in the lobby of X Miami apartments, a luxe new development in downtown Miami with a tropical-vintage vibe. Alongside avocado toast on the menu at Mockingbird is the newish tahini toast, with nutty brown butter and honey.Lucky_Louie_FS_Honey_Teriyaki_Salmon_5144.png

Honey Teriyaki Alaska Wild Salmon
Kathy Casey, chief creative officer, Lucky Louie Fish Shack, Seattle, Wash.
Price: $16.99
Later this month, Lucky Louie Fish Shack will open in the Central Terminal at Sea Tac Airport. The new menu features a fanciful sketch of a buzzing bee next to this menu item, a pretty slab of salmon with a sweet, savory and salty teriyaki sauce with honey as its backbone. “The sauce really makes the dish,” said Kathy Casey, who is also owner of Kathy Casey Food Studios-Liquid Kitchen, a multi-national food concept agency. “We combine clover honey with gluten-free soy, garlic, ginger and a touch of Korean gochujang for spice and depth of flavor.”

About the Author

Tara Fitzpatrick

Senior Editor, Informa Restaurant & Food Group

Tara Fitzpatrick is Food Management’s senior editor and a contributor to Restaurant Hospitality and Nation’s Restaurant News, creating editorial content for digital, print and events. Tara holds a bachelor of science degree from the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at Kent State University. Before joining Food Management in 2008, Tara was associate editor at National Association of College Stores in Oberlin, Ohio. Prior to that, Tara worked as a newspaper reporter in her hometown of Lorain, Ohio, where she lives now. Tara is a fan of food history, legends, lore, ghost stories, urban farming and old cookbooks. 

Tara Fitzpatrick’s areas of expertise include the onsite foodservice industry (K-12 schools, colleges and universities, healthcare and B&I), menu trends, sustainability in foodservice, senior dining, farm-to-table and innovation.

Tara Fitzpatrick is a frequent webinar and podcast host and has served on the board of directors for IFEC (International Food Editors Consortium).

Tara Fitzpatrick’s experience:

Senior Editor, Food Management (Feb 2008-present)

Associate Editor, National Association of College Stores (2005-2008)

Reporter, The Morning Journal (2002-2005)

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tara-fitzpatrick-4a08451/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tara_Fitzie

Insta: https://www.instagram.com/tarafitzie/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tara.y.fitzpatrick

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