Kevin Davis
Chef-owner, Steelhead Diner and Blueacre Seafood
Seattle, Washington
The steelhead trout is called “the fish of ten thousand casts.”
According to chef Kevin Davis, who named his first restaurant the
Steelhead Diner, to catch steelhead “you have to be out by
yourself in nature. You have to know where to be and how to be
there and how to present yourself to the fish.”
In other words, it takes a certain amount of intensity to do it
right. And intense is the word I’d use to describe Davis’s food at
both Steelhead and his newer restaurant, Blueacre Seafood. The
flavors are big and bold and bright; the three dishes we prepare
together are all cooked over very intense heat. Flames shoot out of
the pans, they’re so hot. As I said: it’s intense.
Davis himself comes from a family of intense cooks in New
Orleans. Family ritual dictated that each family member had his or
her own dish and that they and only they could make it. “My
grandmother made chicken stew or okra gumbo, and no one else
would make it.” His uncle David’s signature dish—Pompano
David—is one of the dishes we cook, renamed Trout David.
When he was eleven, Davis’s mother died. His dad decided that
Davis, his brother, and his sister would each cook dinner two
nights every week. “It turned out,” says Davis, “that by the time I