Food & Wine

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America's Best New Chefs
2005

Eric Ziebold

Cityzen
Mandarin Oriental, Washington D.C., 1330 Maryland Ave. SW
Washington, D.C.
202-787-6006

1 Recipe by Eric Ziebold

Where are they now?

Ziebold has continued cooking modern American dishes like herb-roasted red snapper with marrow-enriched grits at CityZen in Washington, DC. He supports local hunger charities by cooking at benefits for Share our Strength and DC Central Kitchen.

Won Best New Chef at: CityZen; Washington, DC


2005 Best New Chef Award Profile

Why Because his tantalizing contemporary-American menu is both ambitious and accessible, with charming comfort-food touches—chips and dip with caviar, ricotta cheese dumplings, mini Parker House rolls.

Born Ames, IA; 1972.

Education The Culinary Institute of America, Hyde Park, NY.

Experience Vidalia in Washington, D.C.; Spago in Los Angeles; The French Laundry in Yountville, CA.

Toughest rite of passage "I was on the wrestling team in high school. A big part of wrestling is cutting weight. The night before a meet, I'd wander through the grocery store making a list of everything I'd buy when the weigh-in was over."

Pet peeve Chefs who tuck their kitchen towels under their arms. "When you hold your towel under your arm, you're essentially one-handed. Just tuck the towel in your apron."

Ingredient obsession Espelette, a Basque pepper. "I have a hard time with spicy food but this doesn't overwhelm me; it's perfectly balanced."

Favorite childhood snack Onion dip from Anderson Erickson Dairy, 20 minutes south of Ames.

Favorite cheap meal Pho with tripe, fatty brisket and flank steak at Pho 75, a Washington-area Vietnamese chain.


Featured Best New Chef Recipe

Artichoke and Ricotta Dumplings with Preserved-Lemon Sauce

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