Picture this: a dollop of tartar sauce atop three golden
triangular Dungeness crab cakes. And nestled between those is a
crisp, fin-shape tuile flavored with chili and black bean. And all
of this atop a thin spread of black bean puree and drizzled with a
creamy corn sauce.
The dish, created by 17-year-old Dustin Buchholz, also tastes
pretty good too.
So said a panel of judges from the Washington State Chefs
Association.
Buchholz, who bested a group of college-age culinary students,
was the youngest competitor in the Association’s annual Best of the
Pacific Northwest last month.
Buchholz, a South Kitsap High senior and culinary arts student
at West Sound Technical Skill Center, has been interested in
cooking since taking a course in high school.
Well, that course wasn’t the first kind of cooking he’d done. He
started by making breakfasts with his grandfather.
“We do hashbrowns, eggs, toast and bacon,” a favorite thing to
do, he said. And he claims to be pretty good at it, too.
He now works as a dishwasher and prep cook in the Clubhouse at
McCormick Woods.
Initially, he hadn’t even planned to enter the competition.
But his boss, Clubhouse Executive Chef Bruce Bonholzer, had
regularly pushed Buchholz to push him to learn more and believed
Buchholz could do well in the competition and paid his $35 entry
fee into the student category.
Once entered, Buchholz had to develop a recipe and decide how to
plate it.
“You just kind of make them and start adding different things,”
he said. He toyed with recipes from work, got ideas from his boss
and his skills center instructor and crafted a recipe all his
own.
Aside from taste, the dish has to look good.
“You want it to have a variety of colors and be eye-appealing to
whoever is judging it,” he said.
The morning of the competition, Buchholz and assistant Alex
Radovich went to the skills center, putting together all that they
could of their Mexican-themed dish ahead of the competition.
From there, they took the mostly prepared crab cakes to Le
Cordon Bleu School in Tukwilla, where they breaded, cooked and set
all the parts on glazed, green plates, chosen specially for the
competition. They made extra for other attendees to taste.
Buchholz was confident as he prepared the dish. That was, until
he finished and got a chance to see and taste other students’
dishes.
“I was actually doubting myself toward the end,” he said.
One girl created a layered crab cake that looked almost like a
wedding cake. Others had beautiful tasting dishes and “really neat
flavors.”
But come decision time, the judges loved most of the dish and
suggested he sell the tuile. They didn’t care for the large amount
of tartar sauce, though, and suggested he use more cream of
corn.
He received a first-place plaque and a $350 prize.
For Buchholz, a career in culinary arts may depend less upon
whether this honor can launch it and more upon the U.S. Navy, where
he hopes to follow in his grandfather’s wake.
“I’ve always wanted to go and serve my country,” he said.
And with a fleet of ships’ messes, he may just get that
chance.
So what is the recipe for these award-winning crab cakes?
“I’m going to keep that one to myself,” Buchholz said.