Category Archives: Arts & Culture
Chef John Minas adds Armenian Flair to Florida Fare as New Executive Chef at the Governor’s Mansion
Chef John Minas adds Armenian Flair to Florida Fare as New Executive Chef at the Governor’s Mansion
By Doug Kalajian
FLArmenians Cuisine Contributor
Ask anyone with a glimmer of culinary consciousness about Florida cuisine and you’ll most likely hear a tale of Caribbean-Latin fusion that sizzles like the sands of South Beach.
Then ask Chef John Minas.
For one of his first dinners as Executive Chef at the Florida governor’s mansion, Minas served notice that there’s a new culinary accent in the Sunshine State: Armenian.
“I made grape leaves,” he said proudly.
Minas, who grew up in the deep-rooted Armenian community of Watertown, Mass., inherited a love of food from his Armenian and Assyrian family. He credits his paternal grandfather, Bashir Minas, with inspiring him.
“Every Sunday, we’d go to my grandfather’s house,” he said. “He cooked the best Armenian and Middle Eastern food I ever tasted. Dolmas, sarmas. And his fasoulia — oh my gosh! He made it all and he made it amazing. He wasn’t a trained chef, but he was a great cook.”
On weekdays, young Minas rushed home from high school to watch the back-to-back shows of Food Network pioneers Emeril Lagasse and Mario Batali. “Those guys were all about the food and the technique,” he said.
The idea took hold that he could meld the elegance and discipline of Western fine dining with the flavors and ingredients he grew up with.
After training at the prestigious Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York, Minas worked at several restaurants in the Northeast and was planning to open his own when he heard about the unique opportunity in far-off Tallahassee, Florida. He sent a resume and got a quick invitation for an interview on April 11, his 26th birthday.
The interview turned out to be an audition.
“All of a sudden I was cooking breakfast at the mansion,” he said. “That was followed by lunch and then dinner.” While he was at it, Minas volunteered an afternoon snack, “a real mezze platter” including feta cheese and pita bread.
Nearly every dish in his day-long cooking marathon reflected Minas’ cultural connection.
“My dinner entree was a watercress tabbouleh with Chilean sea bass and grilled asparagus,” he said. “It was a French take on Middle Eastern. I’m very big on that.”
The fourth of six candidates to try out, Minas was barely back in Boston when he received news that he’d been hired. He started his new job in May and launched straight into an exciting yet demanding routine. Minas supervises all planning and preparation for a whirlwind of state dinners and charity events as well as daily meals for Gov. Rick Scott and First Lady Ann Scott.
Minas said he’s excited about Florida’s rich variety of fresh seafood and produce, but the job has kept him so busy that he’s had limited opportunity to travel around the state. “I’m really looking forward not only to getting to know the state, but to meet the Armenians here,” he said. “I want to get to Boca Raton and all the other Armenian communities.”
So far, Minas has brought not only Armenian touches to the mansion menu but other Middle Eastern favorites.
“I take our cuisine and try to make it relevant for a new generation,” he said. “I make a very refined hummus, with several variations on a plate. For example, a kalamata hummus served with traditional pita chips and a basil-pesto hummus with tomato pita chips. It’s no better than my mother’s hummus, but it’s my version.”
Gov. Scott has become such a fan that he appointed Minas and his sous chef, Carin Butler, to represent the state in the 2011 Great American Seafood Cook-Off in New Orleans. “John is a talented chef and cooks up some of the best food I’ve ever tasted,” the governor announced. “He’s going to give those other chefs a run for their money.”
Minas presented a Florida black grouper with avocado crème fraiche and spicy shrimp toast that he said “tastes like the state of Florida on a plate.” He didn’t win, but he wasn’t discouraged.
“I’m just getting started,” he said. “The job and the people here are wonderful. I plan to be in Tallahassee for a long time. Then, who knows?”
Doug Kalajian is a retired journalist in Palm Beach County and Sous Chef at http://www.TheArmenianKitchen.com.
Article: FAU University Press: “The Overlooked Genocide”
Florida Atlantic University – University Press
The Overlooked Genocide
FAU is educating students for genocide awareness month through art
By Sarah Nance, FAU University Press
Published: Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Updated: Tuesday, April 12, 2011 14:04
FEATURE
The Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education at FAU is hosting an exhibition for April’s Genocide Awareness Month March 30 to April 27 in the Boca campus library.
“It is important for our community to learn about and memorialize the Armenian victims,” said Rose Gatens, director of the center. “Remembering strengthens our commitment to prevent and intervene against genocide.”
According to historians and human rights organizations, the Armenian Genocide was one of the first documented genocides that occurred within the last 100 years, yet it is usually the most overlooked.
Photo by Melissa Landolfa - A photo of the torch lighting ceremony at the Armenian Genocide Monument for the genocide victims of Darfur.
Mary Johnson, senior historian and curator of the exhibit, will give a discussion on the exhibition, which is designed to educate students and raise awareness by providing tours, discussions and films about the Armenian victims of World War I and bring to light the Armenian community.
The display, on loan from the Florida Holocaust Museum in St. Petersburg, shows the tragic murders of more than a million Armenians in World War I through 21 panels with photographs, quotes from witnesses, and the history of the genocide.
In addition, there will be free tours, available for groups of 10 to 15 people, on April 13 and 20. For more information or to make a reservation for the tours, call (561) 297-2929 or visit http://www.library.fau.edu/geninfo/hours.htm.
SOURCE: http://www.upressonline.com/the-overlooked-genocide-1.2539693






