Chef Katsuya Fukushima
As head chef of Café Atlántico, Chef Katsuya Fukushima’s charming, playful, and highly personal style of cuisine has surprised and delighted the palate of Washingtonians. With boundless curiosity and a refusal to let conventions about... [more]
As head chef of Café Atlántico, Chef Katsuya Fukushima’s charming, playful, and highly personal style of cuisine has surprised and delighted the palate of Washingtonians.
With boundless curiosity and a refusal to let conventions about food be an impediment to creativity, Fukushima has managed to turn his kitchen into one of the most inventive in the country, churning out unexpected delights. Diners can find Fukushima’s philosophy in action in the form of the foie gras truffle served at minibar which asks “why does candy have to be sweet?” Or in the innovative “ravioli” his kitchen produces using paper thin slices of pineapple, jicama and mango in the place of conventional pasta.
Fukushima was named chef of Café Atlántico in 2002 after a stint at Verbena in New York and after working for a season at the famed el Bulli in Roses, Spain. There Fukushima came under the influence of Master Chef Ferran Adria. This relationship was spotlighted in a special section on Spanish chefs and their American protégés that ran in a number of food magazines including Gourmet. In addition, Fukushima has worked at Jaleo, Kaz Sushi Bistro and Cashion’s Eat Place.
During his career, Fukushima has had the opportunity to cook for some of the most influential chefs in the world including Adria, Thomas Keller and David Bouley. He has had opportunity to work alongside some of the best in the business including Adria, Andrés, founder of Nuevo Latino cooking Douglas Rodriguez and Sergi Arola of La Broche in Madrid and was part of the team that cooked with Rick Tramonto for a celebration marking TRU’s 5th anniversary. Fukushima has also cooked for a number of dinners at the James Beard House in New York.
In 2006, Fukushima presented at Madrid Fusion with noted food science expert Harold McGee. Fukushima has also appeared at Lo Mejor de la Gastronomia, StarChefs, Spain’s 10 and other professional conferences.
Fukushima was recently named Rising Star by StarChefs. He has also been nominated several times as Rising Star by the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington.
Recently, Fukushima appeared in an episode of “Gourmet’s Diary of a Foodie”, cooked in Kitchen Stadium for an episode of “Iron Chef” and will appear in a segment on Sugar Rush in early 2007. In addition, he has appeared in a variety of media outlets including the Washington Post, Washingtonian, Wine Spectator, Food Arts, and was featured in several episodes of the “Fretz Kitchen”. Smithsonian Resident Associates also featured Fukushima in their popular “Meet the Chef” series.
Fukushima received his formal culinary training at L’Academie de Cuisine where he now teaches a few classes every term. Before deciding on a career in the kitchen, Fukushima attended the University of Maryland where he studied mathematics and art.
Fukushima lives in Washington, DC.
Links
|
History of the Mediterranean Diet
Mediterranean diets emphasize healthy fats, fruits and vegetables.
|
|
|
I'd stop eating chocolate, but I'm NO quitter!
Yummy, chewy chocolate cherry cookies.
|
|
|
South Beach Diet Tips
With 23 million South Beach diet books sold, someone has to be losing weight.
|















