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What a Great Catch!
Chef Chris Parsons
Catch Restaurant and Catch at The Terrace
Chris Parsons began learning about
the importance of just-from-the-water fish at the age of one, when he
accompanied his father (in back harness) on his first fly-fishing expedition.
He’s still angling for the freshest fish available and serving it in
preparations that blend honest, straight-forward flavors with haute-cuisine
style at Catch Restaurant in Winchester, Massachusetts and the
newly-opened Catch at The Terrace in Edgartown, on Martha’s Vineyard, in
the Relais & Châteaux hotel The Charlotte Inn.
Chris never strayed far from trout
streams or ocean waters throughout his formal education and restaurant
experiences, beginning with his studies at Johnson and Wales University, at
campuses in Providence, Rhode Island and Charleston, South Carolina. After
completing his Associate of Science in Culinary Arts in 1991, Chris followed his
fantasy of living and working in Colorado, a dining-, fishing-, and sportsman’s
paradise that long occupied his dreams. The highpoint of four years of
restaurant experience there was a two-year stint as Fish Chef and Sauté and
Grill Chef at Flagstaff House Restaurant, a four-star establishment in Boulder,
Colorado.
Despite the allure of grilling
freshly-caught Colorado trout, Chris felt the pull of home and decided to return
to Massachusetts; his family spent the academic year in Boston and summered on
Cape Cod. In 1996, he reacquainted himself with the bounty of the Atlantic
Ocean as a Sauté and Grill Chef at The Oyster Bar, a seasonal restaurant in Oak
Bluffs on Martha’s Vineyard. That autumn, he returned to the realm of haute
cuisine at Rialto, a four-star restaurant in Cambridge. There, he delved
more deeply into the world of Mediterranean cuisine, building upon the early
lessons he had with Elio. A family friend whose family ran a restaurant outside
of Rome, Elio took the culinary trade to his home in New England where Chris
first sampled the house-cured sausage, prosciutto, and
coppacolas, and as a youngster, he learned to make rabe roasted with
garlic, hot pepper, wine, and extra-virgin olive oil.
Next came three years working in New
York as sous-chef in three-star restaurants including Arizona 206 and Cena,
(alongside acclaimed Chef Normand Laprise), where Chris honed his skills in menu
development and purchasing. It was during this time that Chris participated in
The Bocuse d’Or competition. Drawing inspiration from his memories of
family meals prepared at home, Chris asked his father to serve as his assistant,
and won a coveted place as one of eight semi-finalists out of hundreds of
participants.
This experience gave Chris the
courage to return to Massachusetts, where he became the chef de cuisine
for the opening a new restaurant, Pravda, which won two-and-a-half stars from
The Boston Herald and The Boston Globe. His next step on the rung of
experience was becoming co-founder and head chef of Boston’s Flour Bakery and
Café. While in this position, Chris completed a one-week stage at Charlie
Trotter’s in Chicago and a two-day stage at The French Laundry in Napa.
All this experience culminated in the
2003 opening of his own restaurant—Catch Restaurant—an upscale seafood
establishment that won Best New Restaurant and Best Seafood Restaurant from
Boston Magazine in the first three years, Wine Spectator Award
for three consecutive years, Best Seafood Restaurant from New England Travel
& Life Magazine in 2006, and three stars from The Boston Herald.
After three years-and-a-half years,
Chris was ready for a new challenge and opened Catch at The Terrace in
Edgartown on Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts. The new restaurant is just a
short stroll from the Atlantic Ocean. Catch at The Terrace offers a prix-fixe
market menu that changes frequently, based upon each day’s offerings from
Chris’s extensive network of fisherman, oyster farms, and farmers. Fresh catches
like Maine Scallops, Roasted Cod, and Native Black Bass are the
stars on this menu, as are Italian elements of cured meats and gnocchi that pay
homage to Elio, and local produce like the kind Chris’s mother always served. At
Catch at The Terrace, Chris delivers the fruits of his education—both
formal and familial—and the bounty of New England’s water and fields to the
dinner table.
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