| February 05, 2008 |
THE DAILY DISH
2205 Hillsboro Road,
Franklin, TN 37069
(615) 791-1255 |
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Delicious creations dished out daily
By Alexa Hinton, ahinton@nashvillecitypaper.com
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Chef Sean Begin |
At Copper Kettle, former executive chef
Sean Begin helped turn a sleepy neighborhood
nook along Granny White Pike into a culinary
standout.
His salads alone were leafy masterpieces
marked by flavor layerings, filling and
gourmet ingredients, and Sunday brunches
were a decadent spread of every Southern
rib-sticking delicacy imaginable.
Now, the Boston native's new Grassland
area restaurant, Daily Dish, stands to
become another food phenom that could transform
a dated strip along Hillsboro Road into
a hot dinner destination.
"I've had my eye on this place for
a while," Begin said. "Grassland,
I feel, has a need for something a little
different. There's a wonderful Chinese
restaurant, a great coffee shop right down
the road, but I felt there was a need for
a family-style restaurant. I think we fit
in great."
Begin (pronounced 'bay - jin') landed
in Nashville 13 years ago with a distinguished
résumé of esteemed stunts
in Cape Cod, Mass., Vail, Colo., and Palm
Beach, Fla., where he was immersed in rustic
Italian and classic French styles of cooking.
He got his start in Music City as a sous
chef at the Capitol Grille, then started
and ran catering for Bound'ry before his
five-year tenure at the Copper Kettle.
He added the technical flair of his past
to Southern cuisine to create Daily Dish's
fresh and daily-changing menu.
His wife, Jill, designed the restaurant's
cozy interior atmosphere of warm, earthy
colors and worked with a local artist to
design the detailed nuances of decoration,
like the plates that hang on the wall adorned
with the hand-painted description of each
salad.
"What makes this really sweet being
here is that we have been in this community
for about 10 years, and our son, Jon-Luc,
goes to Grassland Elementary just down
the road. I like to joke that he's old
enough that the school bus can easily drop
him off at the front door so that he can
do dishes," Begin said. "We feel
like we are at home here."
What kinds of foods were you raised
on?
I grew up in the Northeast, so lobster
dinners on special occasions and fresh
cod, fresh steamers, fresh fish. Your staples
like corn on the cob. We used to grill
a lot pork chops in the summer.
My uncle Ronnie, who was my father's brother,
he kept in contact with my family even
though my dad didn't. He owned a bakery
restaurant. He was a big influence in my
life because he had this restaurant of
his own and at a very young age it intrigued
me. I was amazed by it — just walking
in there and going, 'Wow, this is what
I want."
When did you know you wanted to
be a chef?
Probably when I was in high school because
I always liked to cook. I really did. When
I was younger I was really into making
breakfast. That was fun to me to make things
like French toast and omelets.
Later on in high school, I started working
at a catering company and my school didn't
have a huge culinary program, but they
had Foods 1, 2 and 3 — little cooking
classes. I had to get into that. Probably
about 25 percent of the students were boys.
But now I don't know how to change my oil.
You met your wife on the job?
She was the restaurant manager at Capitol
Grille and I was the sous chef there.
I remember it like it was yesterday.
She had just gotten the job and was standing
in the dining room with the food and
beverages manager, and I was in the kitchen
peering out the window going, 'Wow. She's
beautiful.'
What did this space look like
before Daily Dish opened?
It had been the Grassland Soda Shop, but
when we moved in this space, everything
had been ripped out. It looked like a garage.
We had a clean canvas to work with. The
walls were red — candy apple red — and
white and the floor was candy apple red.
Jill did the colors. The layout of the
whole thing was my idea. I wanted a restaurant
where people go through a line and order
something from the menu or get something
off the hot bar or cold salads we make
every day.
Your menu is created new each
morning. How?
What I like to do with the hot entrees
is do something healthy, like I'll do a
grilled chicken with some kind of light
red sauce and something that is roasted
for a really long time like pot roast or
pork loin, and then I'll do something fried,
like fried catfish or pecan chicken or
fried chicken.
The sides change but there are a few things
that people want everyday like mashed potatoes,
macaroni and cheese, green bean casserole.
I'll do a little sauté and use olive
oil for vegetables for the lighter side.
Then the salads we do in the deli case
change all the time. We'll do a fresh green
salad, a spinach salad, some type pasta
and potato, always fresh fruit and the
Waldorf. I try to satisfy everyone who
comes in because I am the kind of person
where one day I want a salad and another
day I'll want fried chicken and mashed
potatoes.
How would you describe your style?
I'd say comfortable food with a twist — with
a flair. We do Southern food but also other
home-y, really delicious foods from rustic
Italian or French countryside or Spanish.
I still want to put out a paella. We try
to stay reasonable, too, so far as pricing,
but I think I can pull it off with a nice
paella and saffron rice, a broth, chicken,
scallops, maybe some chorizo.
Which dish are you most proud
of?
The grilled pesto chicken salad is our
best selling. The almond-encrusted goat
cheese salad will be huge when we hit the
spring and summer because we are talking
about mangos and strawberries and a sun-dried
cherry vinaigrette. I think it's just a
great combination of flavors. I am most
proud of the orange-glazed mahi salad.
I like how the vinaigrette came out. It
has a bit of an Asian flair and I like
how the flavors come together with the
sweet and the citrus.
What is your creative process?
I've been doing this for more than 20 years,
so there are so many things rolling in
my head. It's almost like when a musician
comes up with a song — you think
of something and then one day it flows,
it's perfect and you know it is exactly
what someone will be looking for out
there, and then another day you get a
block. Those days where things are flowing,
you have to write them down and get in
the kitchen working on it.
What is your favorite ingredient?
My favorite ingredient is fresh basil.
I get 10 pounds of it a week. I love
to put it in the different sauces I make,
like today when I do the tomato basil
cream sauce, and I make a lot of pesto.
Any kitchen horror stories?
This is the kitchen horror story. I was
young — a kid — at the Sheraton
Hotel in Milford, Mass. My job was to
do an omelet station for a party in a
separate room. I was getting all my stuff
together and I was really nervous about
it. I had these two butane burners, and
back then when I was 20 they didn't make
butane burners like how they make them
now. I had my pots all set up and I wanted
to engage the two burners. There are
little canisters and you hold a button
down to open the valve and free the gas
and then you turn a knob to click it
on. I didn't line the canisters up correctly.
I punctured both the cans but didn't
know it.
Four minutes later I turn them on and the
whole table begins to light up because
the butane had been pouring out. Soon the
linen was catching. I started to panic.
I tried to pat it out, but it was too big,
so I ended up running out of the room yelling,
'Fire!' down the hallway. They had to break
the glass and bring the fire extinguisher
out.
What is your guilty food pleasure?
I love chocolate. I am all about it. I
was at Sam's Club to pick up some stuff,
and I don't know why I did this, but
I bought one of those big boxes of candy
bars like the ones kids sell. I usually
try and eat healthy but a candy bar — sometimes
you can't beat it.
What would your last meal be?
A New England clambake. That's lobster,
steamers, mussels.
Daily Dish
2205 Hillsboro Road
791-1255
dailydishfranklin.com
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