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View Full Version : Chef Feenie forced out of his own kitchen



mr.x
Nov 4, 2007, 10:10 PM
Feenie's kitchen nightmare
Partners forced him out of his two restaurants, celeb chef says

Mia Stainsby, Vancouver Sun
Published: Saturday, November 03, 2007

Rob Feenie, one of Canada's most celebrated chefs, says he has been forced out of his two Vancouver restaurants, Lumiere and Feenie's.

In the past few days, he says, he has been in the fight of his life in a failed bid to regain his status in the two Vancouver jewels.

Two years ago, with his restaurants facing bankruptcy, he signed over majority ownership of the restaurants to David and Manjy Sidoo. Feenie says he was in the red for $350,000 after spending $1.2 million to upgrade the Lumiere kitchen and to pay off what he owed his original partner, Ken Lei.

"I'm no longer with the company because, most importantly, my role as a chef was taken away," he said in an interview.

David Sidoo, an investment banker, says he's shocked at what has happened. He said in an interview that the sides had been trying to work out their problems.

Feenie said he had an employment contract with the Sidoos.

"It is in his [Feenie's] view that they [the Sidoos] are in breach of that employment contract," Feenie's lawyer, Randy Kaardal, said.

"They have diminished his role and responsibility as it relates to food, marketing and operation of the restaurants. He was to have the role of executive chef and the duties were defined in the agreement.

"He has now elected to no longer be associated with the restaurants as a result," Kaardal said. "He could not tolerate those circumstances."

"The parties will have to work out damages that Mr. Feenie has suffered and attempt to work out in good faith where to go from here," Kaardal said.

Sidoo confirmed Feenie has left the restaurants. "It's finished. He quit.

"He came in on Wednesday and took all his stuff. He met with the staff, had a goodbye drink, shook hands with them.

"Right now, we're in shock. We were trying to work things out the past few days.

Sidoo called Feenie "a wonderful chef . . . . He's done a lot of good things for Vancouver."

Sidoo also said he and his wife's investment in the restaurant "was substantially more" than $350,000, but would not go into details. Neither party would talk about their financial arrangements.

Asked why Feenie left, Sidoo replied: "You're going to have to ask him that."

Feenie is a star, a giant in the Vancouver culinary scene. In 2005, he became a bit of a pop culture icon by winning the Iron Chef America competition. He's written several cookbooks, he's had his own television cooking shows and hobnobs with towering international chefs such as Thomas Keller and Charlie Trotter. Under him, Lumiere was distinguished with the prestigious Relais Gourmand and Tradition et Qualité awards.

Recently, a full-page ad appeared in Vancouver Magazine's annual glossy eating and drinking guide "introducing executive chef Dale Mackay" with his photo with owners David and Manjy Sidoo's names at the bottom.

Sidoo says that was an error: "The ad was an unfortunate typo error we couldn't catch in time. With all other marketing materials, all the dinners we've done, Rob was on the menu as executive chef."

Feenie said the problems began when Mackay was hired two months ago. The 28-year-old chef, a Canadian, was previously working at uber-celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay's New York restaurant.

"As of a month ago, David Sidoo informed me the duties and title of executive chef were taken away from me. Dale was given carte blanche to do what he wants and the final approval of all food for Lumiere had to go through David and Manjy," Feenie said.

"One of the things he [David] said to me was that the reason he wanted Dale to have carte blanche is that he and Manjy wanted to see more consistency in the restaurant. He wanted us to work together."

More recently, while the partners were negotiating their way through the issues, Feenie was advised to stay away, he says.

"It's not that he wanted me out of there. He [Sidoo] wanted my face, my name," he says. "The fact is, the food in the dining room is no longer Rob Feenie. I was no longer able to make comments and criticisms. If I didn't think the food was worthy of Lumiere, it had to go through David and Manjy."

Feenie's side of the story reads like a backroom deal that occurred without his knowledge. Feenie said he interviewed Mackay in New York for a position as chef de cuisine. Feenie felt Mackay came at too high a price and had interviewed another chef from Toronto. Unknown to him, Sidoo had hired Mackay.

Sidoo disagrees with that version of events. "Rob is the executive chef. We didn't have anything to do with the food. Rob went to New York and said 'We found our guy. He's not willing to come unless we can compensate him properly.' I told Rob it's his decision. We made it work for Rob, so Dale could run the kitchen as chef de cuisine. The two of them had conversations over duties. From my understanding, Rob gave Dale complete freedom with the menu as long as the two signature items, the sablefish and the squash ravioli, stayed. Dale was hired as chef de cuisine for Lumiere."

Two days ago, Feenie told The Sun he had investors in place to make Sidoo a buyout offer. "I'm trying to buy it back. If he rejects the deal, it's then personal and if he wants to make it personal, I do have the ability to take it to that level," Feenie said. "I will not let these restaurants go. I've worked too hard."

The offer, he said, is what Sidoo wanted and "more than what the restaurant's worth."

But on Friday, Feenie was officially out.

Sidoo says he's always approached with offers. "I did have interest from outside parties. Those discussions were terminated several days ago. They are confidential discussions. The terms were not satisfactory so we moved on. I don't know if Rob was attached to them."

Regarding the partnership, Feenie says: "It was one of my biggest mistakes. In doing that, it's put me in the situation I'm in now. What can I tell you. I've made big mistakes in my career but this was the biggest I've ever made. At this point, it's a fatal error. In January '06, he [David] said we've got three choices," Feenie said. "He said 'We can close down. We can find someone to buy us out. Or we [the Sidoos] can take over. Not only will we take over, we'll try and make it so that you're still a partner.' "

Asked what brought him to the point of bankruptcy two years ago, Feenie said: "I'm a chef. I'm not an accountant or bookkeeper. It's not my thing. I put the wrong people in the wrong places to be accountable. I'm disappointed for my clients, for everyone. It's been 12 really fabulous years."

The relationship with the Sidoos wasn't always conflicted, Feenie says. "They [gave] me the opportunity four years ago to open Feenie's and that's something I have to thank them for -- coming in when I needed help and they were always there when the restaurant needed help. I never felt they ever had bad intentions."

As for Mackay, Feenie says: "He's the luckiest guy on the planet. He gets a Relais Gourmand and Tradition Qualité restaurant."

Sidoo said his priority has to be with the team at the restaurant.

mstainsby@png.canwest.com

CHEF'S CAREER TRAJECTORY

ROB FEENIE'S RED LETTER DATES:

1992-1994: Watershed years, building skills at Le Crocodile in Vancouver

1995: Opened Lumiere

1997: Restaurant of the Year, Vancouver Magazine restaurant award

2000: Opened Lumiere Tasting Bar at Lumiere; won Relais Gourmand award

2003: Opened Feenie's; won Tradition et Qualité award

2005: First Canadian chef to win Iron Chef title

1998-2004: Hosts New Classics with Chef Rob Feenie on Food Network Canada

2007: Exits Lumiere and Feenie's

bils
Nov 4, 2007, 11:18 PM
i'm sure it'll be no time before rob feenie opens up his own restaurant that kicks ass over lumiere.

i'm assuming 'feenies' will have to change its name....

hollywoodnorth
Nov 5, 2007, 10:01 AM
I am thinking Lumiere will start to tank now.....and Feenies is DONE. Good news....die Sidoo's die.

204
Nov 6, 2007, 9:38 PM
Recently, a full-page ad appeared in Vancouver Magazine's annual glossy eating and drinking guide "introducing executive chef Dale Mackay" with his photo with owners David and Manjy Sidoo's names at the bottom.

Sidoo says that was an error: "The ad was an unfortunate typo error we couldn't catch in time. With all other marketing materials, all the dinners we've done, Rob was on the menu as executive chef."

What BS.

These people sound like amateurs.

officedweller
Nov 8, 2007, 10:46 PM
Good read from the Vancouver Courier:

Feeniegate

Vancouver Courier
Published: Wednesday, November 07, 2007

By now you've probably heard the news trickling through the media like bacon soy vinaigrette over a roasted duck confit salad: Vancouver's culinary kingpin Rob Feenie has severed ties with his two restaurants Lumiere and Feenie's. He claims he was forced out by majority owners David and Manjy Sidoo, who had allegedly "diminished his role and responsibility as it relates to the food, marketing and operation of the restaurants." To add insult to injury, a recent full-page ad appeared in Vancouver Magazine's eating and drinking guide introducing executive chef David Mackay, except that Feenie was still technically the executive chef. Oops. The Sidoos have since said the ad was "an unfortunate typo error we couldn't catch in time." Yes, and that foie gras parfait with pan-seared hummingbird placenta we scarfed down last night was an unfortunate error, too.

Luckily, Feenie has plenty of friends in his au jus slathered corner, namely the Vancouver Sun, whose front page story last Saturday came with the completely neutral headline "Feenie's Kitchen Nightmare." To further balance out its coverage, the Sun ran another front page story on Monday where an intrepid reporter daringly returned to Lumiere post Feenie and concluded that her meal, although "very, very good," didn't possess any "oh-my-God!" moments. To be honest, we've found that food in general doesn't taste quite the same. Not only that, but the nights seem longer, the days feel shorter... wait, that's because of daylight savings. Never mind.

What we do know, however, is now that Feenie is a free agent and on the prowl, he's finally able to do some guilt-free slutting around--you know, the kind of stuff you can never do when you're in a committed relationship, like indiscriminately banging the occasional White Spot commercial, or making bedroom eyes from the back of city buses with blown-up photos of your goateed kisser. Wait a second...

So what's Feenie's next move? Where will the former Iron Chef pop up next? After a long night of gazpacho shots and brawling with bus boys who wouldn't know an arctic char if it bit them in the ass, K&K's esteemed and slightly glazed team of food experts has compiled the following possibilities.

- The Vancouver Sun will hire Feenie to write completely unbiased reviews of Lumiere and Feenie's. He will conclude that although his meals were very, very good, there were no "oh-my-God!" moments, perhaps because of the taste of bile in his mouth.

- Feenie will get hired on as the resident chef for the Van Halen reunion tour, write a subsequent book about cooking with Jack Daniels and penicillin, and record an album of rock songs that marry the intricate guitar solos of Eddie Van Halen with lyrics about creating the perfect reduction sauce. "Gravy Train" will reach number 39 on the Billboard charts.

- In a new White Spot commercial, Feenie will silently mouth the secret ingredients of the Triple O Sauce, costing the restaurant chain thousands of lip-reading customers who would have preferred to live in ignorance of the fact they were eating Thousand Island Dressing and relish. White Spot executive chef Chuck Currie will accuse Feenie of sabotaging his career. This will send Feenie reeling. It will be truly an "oh-my-God!" moment, and he'll beg Currie's forgiveness. The two will then start up a powerhouse restaurant together ironically named Sidoo's. The Vancouver Sun will love it. The hamster saliva- infused squab will be "to die for." The caramelized mealworms will be a "breath of fresh air." The slow-cooked Fraser River silt-encrusted elk larynx will take elk larynx in an entirely new culinary direction. Food in general will begin to possess flavour again. The nights will get shorter, the days will get longer... or maybe that's just because of daylight savings.

© Vancouver Courier 2007

From the Globe & Mail:

Feenie fights from the fringes
The Iron Chef looks to ensure future independent ventures

ALEXANDRA GILL
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
November 7, 2007 at 11:30 AM EST

VANCOUVER — Rob Feenie is out of a job, but not down for the count.

Last week, Canada's Iron Chef terminated his relationship with Lumière and Feenie's restaurants, citing breaches of his employment contract by the majority owners, David and Manjy Sidoo.

Next week, he will face off against his Lumière successor, chef de cuisine Dale MacKay, at a culinary competition in Vancouver.

Mr. Feenie says he will be competing as an independent chef at the Gold Medal Plates Canadian Culinary Championships, a fundraising event in support of Olympic and Paralympic athletes.

Mr. MacKay, the Gordon Ramsay protégé who was hired last August, will be representing Lumière at the event, to be held at The Westin Bayshore hotel on Wednesday.

In the meantime, Mr. Feenie and his lawyer are planning to contest a non-compete clause in his employment contract that could limit his ability to open a new restaurant.

"Mr. Sidoo had indicated that he intends to enforce any such provisions," said Mr. Feenie's lawyer, Randy Kaardal.

"In our view, the clauses are unenforceable because they are overly broad and contrary to public policy. People are entitled to work and pursue their calling. Obviously, Mr. Feenie needs to earn a living."

Mr. Feenie, who is still a minority shareholder of Lumière, said he can continue to consult and cater.

"I'm on my way to do a private party right now," he said on Monday.

Mr. Sidoo, meanwhile, says he is not at liberty to discuss the details of Mr. Feenie's employment contract and he has not decided if he will re-brand Feenie's.

"This is so new to [Mr. Sidoo and his wife], we haven't thought that far ahead," he said yesterday, adding he was "disappointed" with how Mr. Feenie has decided to play out their troubles in the media.

"We were trying to stay quiet about it. It's certainly not in our interest to terminate Rob after investing several million dollars in him," Mr. Sidoo said.

"Our main concern right now is with the staff and making sure we keep pushing the same high standards at both restaurants," said Mr. Sidoo, who will be attending an important International Relais & Châteaux conference in Washington at the end of this month.

Relais & Châteaux is a global group of individually owned and operated luxury hotels and restaurants known for its extremely strict admission standards. Membership is expensive, but inspections are conducted anonymously.

In 2000, Lumière became Canada's first freestanding restaurant to receive the Relais Gourmand designation. An ongoing association could be crucial to Lumière's continued success.

Bill Bennett, the association's Canadian president, says a change of ownership or chef does not automatically mean a member loses its status.

"We have inspections that go on all the time," he said. "If the establishment maintains the standards we expect, then the relationship continues."

He points to Blackberry Farm in Tennessee and Woodlands Resort & Inn in South Carolina as two examples of members that have recently gone through equally monumental changes yet retained their memberships.

Still, Mr. Bennett says he is concerned about the situation at Lumière.

"Are you concerned when your friends go through a divorce? Of course you are. You're concerned for both sides."

Also go to the link and read the comments:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20071107.wlfeenie07/BNStory/lifeFoodWine/home

deasine
Nov 9, 2007, 2:34 AM
i heard from a friend that he went on sat. and it was not full... usually you need two-week reservations....

mr.x
Nov 9, 2007, 3:01 AM
^ obviously, it was Feenie's intention to ruin his former partners by breaking this news to the press.

deasine
Nov 9, 2007, 3:22 AM
i would have done that =P

hollywoodnorth
Nov 9, 2007, 4:13 AM
i heard from a friend that he went on sat. and it was not full... usually you need two-week reservations....

good news

98fb
Nov 10, 2007, 9:54 PM
^ obviously, it was Feenie's intention to ruin his former partners by breaking this news to the press.

exactly Feenie's a clown. He has no business sense at all. He should be happy that they helped him out of the red otherwise he would be no where.

Holden West
Nov 21, 2007, 5:02 PM
Side dish

ALEXANDRA GILL
Globe & Mail

November 21, 2007

Changes afoot at Feenie's

The world turns again on West Broadway. Feenie's chef de cuisine Jasmin Porcic resigned this week, adding yet another twist to the ownership dispute between David Sidoo and Rob Feenie at sister restaurant Lumière. John Corsi, formerly of Le Sélect Bistro in Toronto and most recently sous chef at Cioppino's Mediterranean Grill, has been hired as Mr. Porcic's replacement.

bils
Feb 5, 2008, 7:15 PM
from vancouversun.com

Former Iron Chef Rob Feenie to announce future plans today
Vancouver Sun
Published: Tuesday, February 05, 2008

VANCOUVER Vancouver's high-profile celebrity chef Rob Feenie, who left the restaurant named after him and the upscale Lumiere last year, will be making an announcement on his future plans at a press conference at 1 p.m. today. Check the Vancouver Sun web site at 1 p.m. today for the latest development on the former Iron Chef's story.

Yume-sama
Feb 5, 2008, 8:14 PM
It's the first I've actually heard of this, but I can honestly say I didn't enjoy the food at Lumiere, I'm just not the "fancy food" type of person. :haha:

Stingray2004
Feb 5, 2008, 10:22 PM
Feenie takes on new position at Cactus Restaurants

Feb, 05 2008 - 2:10 PM

VANCOUVER/CKNW(AM980) - Vancouver's “Iron Chef” has gone from running one of the most celebrated restaurants in the city to developing new dishes for restaurant chain “Cactus Club”.

Cactus Restaurants has announced Chef Rob Feenie will be the chain's new "food concept architect," which means he will create new menu items and help train new chefs.

Feenie used to be the executive chef of Lumiere and Feenie's restaurants, but he signed over majority ownership to David and Manjy Sidoo over two years ago.

In November, Feenie said the Sidoo's took away his role as head chef.

SpongeG
Feb 10, 2008, 3:28 AM
he needs to check his ego

at least cactus club is a step down - haha

Rusty Gull
Feb 10, 2008, 4:41 AM
Was Feenie in fact an "Iron Chef" as recognized in Japan, or was he only an Iron Chef North America? There's a significant difference.

At any rate, I'm not sure Cactus Club needs his help. Their food is already pretty good! Perhaps a fledgling chain like Knight and Day would benefit more from his culinary prowess.

SpongeG
Feb 10, 2008, 4:52 AM
i think it was Iron Chef America

he wears that title like a tie - so lame

deasine
Feb 10, 2008, 7:02 AM
Yeah Iron Chef America, according to Wikipedia:

Episode IA1A03
February 20, 2003
IC: Masaharu Morimoto
C: Rob Feenie
Cusine: French-Asian
Ingre:Crabs (various)
Winner: Rob Feenie

giallo
Feb 10, 2008, 7:13 AM
Was Feenie in fact an "Iron Chef" as recognized in Japan, or was he only an Iron Chef North America? There's a significant difference.

At any rate, I'm not sure Cactus Club needs his help. Their food is already pretty good! Perhaps a fledgling chain like Knight and Day would benefit more from his culinary prowess.

I'm sure Cactus Club is paying him a fortune.

SFUVancouver
Feb 10, 2008, 8:05 AM
Well good on him for finding something, anything, to keep himself afloat. You've gotta do what you gotta do sometimes.

Plus for Cactus Club this might help them move a little further up-market and let them charge even more for average food prepared by average cooks.

deasine
Feb 10, 2008, 9:02 AM
That's all part of their plan.

dreambrother808
Feb 10, 2008, 7:20 PM
Well good on him for finding something, anything, to keep himself afloat. You've gotta do what you gotta do sometimes.

I doubt that his circumstances were that dire. As someone who went to culinary school and spent many years working in kitchens, I find this all so funny, such a cliched clashing of egos in that world. It takes a pretty strong constitution to put up with all the drama and bs that goes on in the average kitchen. There's something almost medieval about it all, as if restauranteurs are still working for kings and queens who will behead them for a substandard repas. The chef in turn mimics the behaviour of royalty within his domain.

Rusty Gull
Feb 11, 2008, 12:40 AM
Well, if Cactus Club is getting Feenie, I wonder if Milestones or Earl's will strike back with high-profile celebrity chef signings of their own. Are Tojo or Vij available?

Yume-sama
Feb 11, 2008, 12:50 AM
Well, if Cactus Club is getting Feenie, I wonder if Milestones or Earl's will strike back with high-profile celebrity chef signings of their own. Are Tojo or Vij available?

Earl's could use all the help it can get :yuck:

Honestly, I find it funny he's ended up at Cactus Club. Oh, how the mighty have fallen...

Mike K.
Feb 11, 2008, 1:16 AM
Certainly a step above White Spot, no?

Yume-sama
Feb 11, 2008, 1:26 AM
Certainly a step above White Spot, no?

They could use help, too. Need to come up with a secret ingredient other than a jar of mayo on every item.

SpongeG
Feb 11, 2008, 2:09 AM
feenie had a thing with white spot not too long ago... he used to be in their commercials

Mike K.
Feb 11, 2008, 5:28 PM
And still is. I'm pretty sure I just saw a new one the other day.

officedweller
Jun 3, 2008, 7:39 PM
That's it, that's all for Lumiere
Sunday, June 01 - 09:42:16 PM

Claudia Kwan
VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) - The famous Vancouver restaurant will close its doors Sunday, to get ready for renovations. It wasn't supposed to close until June 20, but the owner says they got their permits more quickly than expected. Twenty staff members were reportedly only told about the change several days ago. The fine dining establishment is expected to reopen in the fall, with noted chef Daniel Boulud designing the menu.

SpongeG
Jun 3, 2008, 9:28 PM
i thought it had closed already - went past about two weeks ago and it looked dead - usually it had a few people mulling about outside

SpongeG
Jun 24, 2008, 11:26 PM
Rob Feenie's brave new world

VANCOUVER - When we last left Rob Feenie - renowned Iron Chef, founder of Vancouver's acclaimed Lumiere restaurant and Feenie's bistro, cookbook author, Food Network star and, arguably, the most famous chef this town has produced - he had just been ignominiously turfed from Lumiere in the wake of an ugly brouhaha with his partners and had taken up with, gasp, a middle-class restaurant chain.

The Cactus Club, to be exact, the sports bar cum steak and burger joint that is home to big-screen TVs, peach schnapps bellinis and a menu featuring the kind of eclectic, casual rib-sticking fare that surely defines antipathy for a high-brow Food Concept Architect.

Which is the title Cactus Club president and CEO Richard Jaffray gave Feenie when he announced last February that Feenie was joining his senior team to help "shape the restaurants' growth and product development, creating innovative new dishes and continuously improving long-time favourites."

Food-loving eyebrows shot up all over town.

What's a Food Concept Architect?

How will the maverick Feenie deal with so many cooks in so many kitchens?

Will the Jack Daniels ribs with garlic mashed potatoes be replaced by a dainty lamb chop and a sprig of arugula?

And what, exactly, is arugula?

But here we are, nearly five months later, and Feenie and his boss Jaffray are chatting amiably in a cushy booth at the new Cactus Club in the Bentall complex at Burrard and Dunsmuir.

The $6.5-million restaurant, which opened June 6, takes up the entire downtown corner and is stunningly chic for a Cactus Club, two storeys of soaring glass and open concept dining, with burgundy leather banquettes, satin walnut trim, shiny modern fittings, exposed wine racks, an upstairs deejay station and custom chandeliers covered in what look like opaque spiderwebs.

There is an elevator to the second floor, and a washroom waiting area furnished with a funky lounge chair and a floor-to-ceiling video screen spooling runway fashion shows.

It's so hip you could blink and be in New York.

But then Jaffray is a sophisticated man, finely tailored and a collector of art - decorating his new restaurant are a Jim Schwartz marble sculpture, three pieces by Jean-Michel Basquiat, a Louis Poulsen artichoke light fixture over the bar, three original Andy Warhols and a striking oil painting by actor Anthony Hopkins.

Jaffray oversees the 20-year-old firm's 19 operations in B.C. and Alberta, and he is clearly chuffed to have snagged a culinary work of art like Rob Feenie.

"He's just the best," says Jaffray. "If I had to pick a chef that I was to work with, it's him. We've been friends for a long time. I, of course, would go to Lumiere . . . and he was curious about the Cactus Club."

For the past few months, Feenie has been busy in the chain's Ash Street test kitchen, whipping up nine new additions to the Cactus Club menu (see sidebar for details).

He and Jaffray had taken a hard look at the Club's trendy and diverse menu - from appetizers to entrees to desserts - and saw that much was good.

But they did see room for change, or evolution as they call it, which is not unusual but can be tricky when you already have a successful operation with a loyal clientele that likes the menu the way it is.

"We didn't want to completely change the menu," says Feenie.

"It's a real challenge in a way for me. I just want to put the right dish out there."

They agreed, for instance, that "we need to work on sandwiches," says Feenie.

So the BBQ Duck Clubhouse was born, stuffed with duck, chicken and prosciutto, and served on pecan fruit bread.

Not exactly a BLT but, he says, "it worked out really well."

And then there was Feenie's new Spinach Salad, also made with prosciutto, and balsamic figs.

"I thought it was a little adventurous, too different," Jaffray says of the salad. "I was 100-per-cent wrong."

The pair intends to work slowly through the menu, keeping old favourites like the pesto quesadilla, which was taken off the menu for awhile but is now back, and focusing on that "evolution" thing.

"Maybe we'll add some more entrees. Maybe some appies. Maybe desserts," says Feenie.

"The thing I've learned is that you look at the clients. In the next few years, you'll see an evolution, but I can guarantee you'll still have your favourites."

Feenie, who is 43, married and father of two (number three is due any day) says his new job is a perfect fit.

"I'm so proud of this place. The excitement level when I got here was there from day one, and now it's huge.

"I believe firmly that we're the best in our field in this country."

All of which drives his legendary creative urge, which has him in the Cactus Club kitchens from early morning until late evening.

"I'm the gas pedal," he laughs. "Richard is the brake."

Says Jaffray: "He's bringing knowledge like you wouldn't believe. He's just so passionate and works so hard."

As for his previous life in the heady world of haute cuisine, Feenie clearly is a man who doesn't look back, who doesn't waste time on regrets.

"I don't miss anything about where I'm not."

He's also happy to take a mentor role, working directly with the Cactus Clubs' many young motivated chefs, including Bentall's 30-year-old regional chef Eric Foskett and his kitchen staff of 40.

"I've achieved everything in my career that I could ever want. Whatever I can pass on to them . . . that's my role here," says Feenie.

"I just want to continually raise the bar here, day after day, month after month, year after year.

"Ask me where I'm going to be at 60?

"Right here."

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/westcoastlife/story.html?id=63abcb03-dc85-4154-9409-a4faa26c198b

quobobo
Jun 24, 2008, 11:41 PM
They could use help, too. Need to come up with a secret ingredient other than a jar of mayo on every item.

Don't mess with perfection.



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