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Bobby Flay (born October 9, 1964) is an
American celebrity chef and restaurateur. He is the owner and executive
chef of four restaurants: Mesa Grill, Bolo and Bar Americain in New York
City, and Mesa Grill Las Vegas. Flay also hosts three Food Network
television programs, and appears regularly on a fourth. He married
actress Stephanie March on February 20,
2005.
Career
Flay got his start at age 17 in Joe Allen's
New York City restaurant. Owner Allen was so impressed by Flay's talents
that he personally paid for his tuition to the French Culinary Institute.
Though he earned the first Outstanding Graduate Award from the school
later in 1993, Flay did not take to French cooking. He later developed his
own style of American southwestern food incorporating ingredients
introduced to him by Jonathan Waxman such as chiles, avocados, and
beans.
He later took a job as executive chef at the Miracle Grill
from 1988 to 1990 and caught the attention of Jerome Kretchmer. In 1991 he
offered Flay the opportunity to open Mesa Grill in New York City. After
this restaurant was met with critical acclaim, Flay again teamed with
Kretchmer in 1993 to open Bolo only a few blocks away from Mesa Grill.
Bolo continues to be voted the best Spanish restaurant in New York City by
the Zagat Survey. That same year, Flay was voted the James Beard
Foundation's Rising Star Chef of the Year. In 2004 he opened another Mesa
Grill at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas.
Publicity
He has
authored several cookbooks, including Bobby Flay's Bold American
Food (1994), From My Kitchen to Your Table (1998), and
Boy Meets Grill (1999). His latest book, Boy Gets Grill,
was released in 2005.
Flay is the host of four cooking shows on Food
Network, of which three continue to run:
* Hot Off the Grill
with Bobby Flay * FoodNation * Boy Meets
Grill * BBQ with Bobby Flay
He is also an Iron
Chef on the show Iron Chef America. Flay has had a controversial
history with the original Japanese Iron Chef show. He also
starred in the Disney Channel Original movie Eddies Million Dollar Cook
Off!
In 2000, when the show traveled to New York for a special
battle, he challenged Iron Chef Masaharu Morimoto for Battle Rock Crab.
After cutting his finger, he suffered an electric shock from faulty wiring
in the makeshift Kitchen Stadium in New York. After the hour
battle ended, Flay stood up on top of his cutting board and made the
"raise the roof" gesture with the cheering audience.
Not realizing
that all cooking instruments are sacred in Japan, he greatly angered Iron
Chef Morimoto who criticized his professionalism, saying that Flay was
"not a chef". After all this, Flay lost the battle, but the rivalry
between him and Morimoto had just begun.
Flay challenged Morimoto
to a rematch in Morimoto's native Japan. In this battle, at the end of the
hour, Flay threw his cutting board across the room and stood on the counter
yet again to raise the roof with the audience. This time, Flay won. Though
they share a heated past, Flay and Morimoto, who are both Iron Chefs on
Iron Chef America, are now
friends.
Trivia
*Flay hates lentils. "An early draft of
Bar Americain's menu had a beet and goat cheese salad with lentils, but
Mr. Flay rejected it before the restaurant opened. 'When I go on vacation,
they run specials on lentils,' he said."1
*Flay guest starred on an
episode of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, in which his
character was rectally violated with a cattle prod.
*His nickname
is "Bo."
References
* "About Bobby Flay". Bobby Flay's
official website. Retrieved February 11, 2005.
* Official
website
Flay, Bobby Flay, Bobby Flay, Bobby
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