fbpx
Blog PostLocal Chef Spotlight

Chefs of Indian River County with Michael Glatz

Join me for this new video series where I sit down with local chefs from Indian River County Florida and ask them my Top “ATE” Questions to learn more about them! In this episode, we sit down with my 2020 Golden Fork Awards Top 10 Best Dishes winner, Chef Michael Glatz!

sacred-grounds-wide
chive-wide
riverside-banner
Counter-Culture-Wide
tipsy-gypsy-wide
american-icon-wide-2
rosie-malloys-wide
island-pig-and-fish-wide
tcfb-wide
armanis-banner
21st-amendment-wide
green-marlin-wide
celebration-grove-wide
sean-ryan-pub-wide

Click the play button below to watch the video!

Click the button below to subscribe to our YouTube channel for more content like this!

Q&A with Chef Michael Glatz

Michael GlatzI’m a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, NY, the country’s greatest cooking school, maybe even in the world many, many years ago. But really, you get your experience in the industry. The school gives you like any school, Ii gives you the basics, the knowledge, it’s what you do with this, what you feel inside, what you go out and do in the experiences that you have and those experiences for me came from the different places throughout the country that I’ve lived in and that’s where truly you gain the most amount of experience.

Michael GlatzThe most important thing that I learned when I was at the CIA really was the art of the kitchen, that a restaurant is really like an orchestra, and there has to be somebody in charge, and there has to be all the musicians all lined up and everybody’s got to be in tune doing all the right things and more than a specific dish or a specific technique, I learned that’s how a restaurant runs and that’s something that I’ve carried with me forever. The food portion of it is easy, ’cause that’s in here, and of course in culinary school, you learn the techniques as a young person of grilling, and sautéing, and how to use a knife, and so on, but my biggest takeaway was the art of the symphony.

Michael GlatzI started in the industry at a very young age, an uncle, you know, once or twice removed by blood, owned a hotel in New Britain, CT and I was very young and he knew that I wanted to go to culinary school one day and through my grandmother I had this great interest in cooking and he gave me a shot by letting me be a dishwasher, which is how most great chefs start in the kitchen, but I didn’t wash dishes for very long because again, when you have that passion, and that desire for more. I found myself, I don’t remember 14 years old, maybe, quickly peeling shrimp and cleaning lettuce and and the chef kind of putting his arm around me showing me the routine and encouraging me to go to culinary school to learn more. So that was my real springboard to my career, for sure. 

rosie-malloys-wide
green-marlin-wide
island-pig-and-fish-wide
chive-wide
Counter-Culture-Wide
riverside-banner
sacred-grounds-wide
tcfb-wide
armanis-banner
american-icon-wide-2
celebration-grove-wide
21st-amendment-wide
tipsy-gypsy-wide
sean-ryan-pub-wide

Michael GlatzGosh, you know, I’ve tried to leave the restaurant business several times throughout 40 years and it never worked because I think it’s in your blood. I got into the wine business for a while, that was OK, but really, I think it’s the hospitality, something the loving of food and not because I don’t think you should do anything if you don’t have the passion. I’ve often times thought to that myself if I didn’t do this, what would I be doing? I love playing with numbers, so I think accounting which is just the total opposite end of the rainbow being a chef because it’s not creative or anything it’s very black and white, but i also think that that’s helped me as a restaurateur cause i understand numbers and i love to make column A match column B and everything work out fine, so i suspect if i wasn’t doing this I’d be in accounting.

Michael GlatzThe thing that I love most about being a chef is hospitality, because being a chef for me is like welcoming you into my home, it’s like a grand dinner party, whether it’s a big hotel like I’ve worked in the past, or my great little coffee shop here in Vero Beach, welcome to my home, I’m going to cook for you I’m going to feed you and make you feel good, and that to me is is my most favorite part of being a chef.

Michael GlatzSo favorite ingredient you know, I get asked as a chef, oftentimes you know what do you like to cook, or if this was your last meal, what would it be, or what’s your favorite wine? And gosh, I’m so noncommittal, because it depends on what inspires me that day, or at that moment. My favorite ingredient today might not be my favorite ingredient tomorrow. In a restaurant, coffee shop, you know you have your menu that’s an expression of yourself and that works well with the restaurant, but in terms of as a chef might be my favorite ingredient, I find my inspiration in different places. I might have been to a restaurant last night and I liked what they did, or sometimes I didn’t like what they did, but I like the idea of what they were trying to do and it makes me go out and be inspired to create the dish, I’m cooking for myself, from having friends for dinner. Sometimes I just go to the market, the farmers market, grocery store, whatever, and I see what’s there, and boom, the idea pops and that’s where the inspiration comes. So just like my favorite meal, there isn’t one. My favorite ingredient, there really isn’t one, it’s the ingredient of the moment, or the meal of the day.

21st-amendment-wide
green-marlin-wide
armanis-banner
Counter-Culture-Wide
celebration-grove-wide
american-icon-wide-2
sacred-grounds-wide
sean-ryan-pub-wide
tcfb-wide
riverside-banner
rosie-malloys-wide
tipsy-gypsy-wide
island-pig-and-fish-wide
chive-wide

Michael GlatzMy favorite kitchen tool. I think it’s just a knife, because I could do anything with a knife and I’m not even fussy about that knife. When I was a young apprentice in California, I remember my chef of the places I was apprenticing, he was teaching me how to turn a tornay mushrooms and that’s when you take a big mushroom cap, and you take a little paring knife and he kept flipping it and make like a little flower of it’s kind of cool. Well, he then went and did that same thing with a giant French knife, and then he pulled out his cleaver, like whittling a stick and a couple of seconds he did that, and it made me realize that you know it was a certain knife for each job no matter what you’re doing, but sometimes you only have one knife to work with, and maybe it’s your favorite, or maybe that’s all there is, your cooking at a friends house, or you’re doing somebody a favor and you open up the drawer and there you go. You pull that out and I could do anything with any knife. So I have to say that the knife, which seems almost very obvious, might be my favorite tool. Very simple, right? We have all these mechanical and electrical things nowadays, but really, from the beginning of time, just think about it, a knife. It makes sense. That’s my favorite tool.

Michael GlatzMy inspiration in the beginning to be a young chef was a combination of my mother and my grandmother who both loved to cook. My mother was a very simple basic home cook for a family of seven, but my grandmother was a restaurant chef and actually not mine, she wasn’t my mother’s mother, that my father’s mother and she was a restaurant chef and every time you walk into her kitchen at home, it has flour dripping off the walls and pots bubbling on the stove, she was always something cooking, so as a very young boy, that was my true inspiration. And then I don’t even remember when I saw my first Julia Child television show, but that did it for me that that was it. And since then I love all things Julia. When I was younger, and really in learning mode, before the Internet, right, we worked with books, that’s how we learn things. And of all the books that I collected and worked with through the years, so many formulas didn’t work, but Julia’s formulas always worked, and she was an entertainer, and she practiced hospitality. Funny funny gal, and so she, and in conjunction with my mother and my grandmother are my greatest inspirations to be a chef.

sacred-grounds-wide
tcfb-wide
island-pig-and-fish-wide
celebration-grove-wide
armanis-banner
Counter-Culture-Wide
tipsy-gypsy-wide
riverside-banner
green-marlin-wide
chive-wide
sean-ryan-pub-wide
21st-amendment-wide
american-icon-wide-2
rosie-malloys-wide

Coffee House 1420
Address: 2001 14th Ave, Vero Beach, FL 32960
Phone: (772) 925-1572
https://coffeehouse1420.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/coffeehouse1420vero
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/coffeehouse1420/

armanis-banner
rosie-malloys-wide
21st-amendment-wide
island-pig-and-fish-wide
tipsy-gypsy-wide
chive-wide
sacred-grounds-wide
american-icon-wide-2
green-marlin-wide
Counter-Culture-Wide
riverside-banner
sean-ryan-pub-wide
celebration-grove-wide
tcfb-wide

Thomas Miller

Thomas Miller, known as “The Treasure Coast Foodie” and “The Foodie Guy,” is a celebrated food blogger, owner, and Editor in Chief of The Treasure Coast Foodie Blog, as well as the host and producer of Holy Grail Eats, where he spotlights one-of-a-kind restaurants and exceptional “Holy Grail” dishes. With ten years of experience, he has reviewed over 300 local restaurants, and his food photography captures the appetites of tens of thousands of followers each month. As the Official Foodie Insider for Visit Indian River County, Thomas champions local dining culture, sharing his insights with a loyal following of over 125,000. His expertise has also been featured in the luxe publication Coastal Drive Magazine. A Google Maps Level 8 Local Guide, Thomas has shared more than 4,000 photos, viewed over 100 million times, and his Foodie dining events rank among the Treasure Coast’s top culinary experiences.

Related Articles

Back to top button