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Macaroons at Crook's Corner.
Macaroons at Crook's Corner.

The Wandering Chef

In the famous Crook鈥檚 Corner restaurant, Chapel Hill chef Bill Smith has mashed Eastern North Carolina maritime dishes remembered from his childhood, French cooking techniques he learned in adulthood, and just about everything else he gathered in between鈥攚hich is a lot

Published: 
Macaroons at Crook's Corner.

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Bill Smith didn鈥檛 set out to be a chef. He wandered into the profession. That might sound a bit strange considering his first place of employment sits right across the street in Chapel Hill from his current restaurant, . 鈥淚 did lots of things between college and this,鈥 says the 64-year-old chef. 鈥淚 came of age in the ’60s, which should tell you a lot about me.鈥

The chef checks on his dessert. The chef checks on his dessert.
Chef Bill Smith with a slice of Atlantic Beach Pie. Chef Bill Smith with a slice of Atlantic Beach Pie.

After college, he booked bands at Cat鈥檚 Cradle, a roughly 40-year-old rock club. Then he moved to New York to dance in Off Broadway shows. His career path gets more interesting after that. 鈥淚 was also a vagrant gypsy,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was real good at that鈥攚ent across Canada once, just hitchhiking, spent three months doing that.鈥

loved to travel, a passion that often left him short on cash. In between excursions, he waited tables, washed dishes, and lived in houses with no shortage of roommates. In the summer of 1978, he was living in one such house in Chapel Hill. He was broke, but he wanted to visit some friends in Europe. One of his roommates offered an immediate solution, courtesy of the French restaurant where she waitressed. 鈥淲ell, I think they need someone to peel potatoes,鈥 she said.

Smith took the job, earned enough to travel around Europe for a bit, then returned to Chapel Hill. The restaurant, La Residence, which is just a short walk from Crook鈥檚 Corner, hired him back. He hung around the kitchen, sharpened his skills, and moved up to be the head chef by the end of the ’80s. He wasn鈥檛 exactly starting from scratch. He grew up in a coastal town called New Bern, North Carolina, in a house surrounded by well-seasoned Southern cooks: his aunts, his grandmothers, and his great grandmother. 鈥淢y whole life, we would go to her house for lunch every day,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he had a big dinner table, and a tablecloth, manners, and the whole bit.鈥

In 1993, the famous Southern chef working at Crook鈥檚 Corner, Bill Neal, passed away. The restaurant hired Smith. In the last five years, the James Beard Foundation has named him a finalist for 鈥淏est Chef Southeast鈥 twice. He鈥檚 made a name for himself by staying put for 20 years, sort of. He still travels a lot, though the destinations have changed.

Now, he mostly ventures to Mexico and Central America to visit the families of his staff. Several years ago, during one such visit, the mother of one of his cook鈥檚 gave him an Our Lady of Guadalupe necklace. When that wore out last year, another cook gave him a necklace. His mother had mailed it in an envelope when she heard Smith was without one. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a good luck charm or a blessing, and you鈥檙e supposed to wear it until it falls off,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o, I do.鈥

Smith fills his kitchen with recent immigrants. Take the pastry chef position. A woman from Tanzania occupies it now. Before that, three consecutive men from Mexico held it. Smith trained all of them in Spanish, because they didn鈥檛 speak English. Eventually they moved on鈥攕omething the chef more than understands. Since Smith spends a lot of his time writing, traveling, and cooking, it would stand to reason that he would consider the turnover of pastry chefs a negative. He flips that logic on its head. 鈥淚t is hard to keep one,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e had to train so many that I鈥檝e gotten good at it.鈥

We sat down with Smith this winter to hear more about how traveling and hiring a diverse staff have led to a more adventurous Southern cuisine.

Was there something about taking this job that appealed to you?
Well, I don鈥檛 know, I guess so. It was 1993, so it鈥檚 been a long time. I guess I still wanted to be a chef at that time, although I may not have admitted it to myself. This seemed like a good place to carry on, and, of course, I am from the South. Although my training at that point had been all French, my background was Southern and it made a good fit. This place had a good reputation already, had a good repertoire already. By now, I鈥檝e sort of put my own repertoire in place.

When you took the job, was there a lot of pressure because legendary chef Bill Neal had been here before?
I think there was that expectation. I, however, did not rise to the pressure. I don鈥檛 do stuff like that. The main pressure on me may have been the fact that it was a whole lot busier鈥攍ike 50 times busier鈥攖han my previous restaurant. I had to learn different ropes. But as far as living up to someone else鈥檚 reputation, I didn鈥檛 worry about that.

Did the restaurant change?
It was more than a change in reputation; it was a change in the sophistication of the dining public. In the last 20 or so years, the dining public has become more willing to try something new. It used to be that people were suspicious of things they were unfamiliar with. Now they seem to seek them out. They鈥檝e been brought along slowly by a number of things. Fad and fashion played a part, as did food television and celebrity chefs. Then once people come to see that the unknown can be delicious they become adventurous on their own.

That sort of allowed me to evolve the way I was evolving anyway. Crook鈥檚 Corner had this repertoire and this reputation when I came here. I kept a lot of the stuff, and I started working with the things I grew up with, because there鈥檚 a lot of good food down there. I had traveled some, and because of my French training, I was looking forward to incorporating some things from New Orleans. In the month around Mardi Gras, we completely switch over to creole cooking here. We do gumbo, gumbo z鈥檋erbes, bananas foster, milk punch, and all that kind of food. I just love all that food so much. So I used my French background and that connection to New Orleans to bring that food in full tilt.

As the public began to accept me here鈥攖hey were pretty skeptical at first鈥攖hen I was able to try things that occurred to me. I travel a lot, when I have time, and that influences your work as much as anything. I spend a lot of time in Latin America now, because I go to see my guys when they go home. I鈥檓 in the Southern Foodways Alliance. I鈥檓 on the board. That involves traveling a lot around the South, and that is great because not only do I have colleagues like Sean Brock that I鈥檝e grown to be fond of, but I鈥檝e gotten to see all kinds of cooking influences.

And a lot of times you just come in in the morning and say, 鈥淚 got to do this.鈥 That sort of governs what I do more than anything.

What were some of the things from Eastern North Carolina that you incorporated?
Eastern North Carolina is maritime. There are lots of rivers, the sea, and the Outer Banks鈥攕o we grew up with a lot of seafood. It was important. It was a big deal. We enjoyed it. Plus, my family was Catholic, and in those days you couldn鈥檛 have meat on Fridays. You always had fish. So you had a double dose. There鈥檚 an old tradition of seafood catching and cooking down there, so that鈥檚 a big part of what I do. I do a crab stew from down there鈥攑articularly for crowds, all kinds of oysters, softshell crabs. I grew up with those things. I grew up catching fish and crabs and that kind of stuff, so it wasn鈥檛 a big deal to look to that.

We used to have barbeques down there, but we don鈥檛 do that here, because everyone else in the world does that here. But there鈥檚 other good food down there. There鈥檚 a kind of ham that we do here called a corn ham that鈥檚 specific to Eastern North Carolina. I do that at a lot of festivals and stuff because no one鈥檚 ever heard of it and it鈥檚 real good. We grew up eating black eyed peas and collard greens on New Year’s Day. A dessert I鈥檓 going to show you in a minute is a pie from Eastern North Carolina.

Where does your food come from? How often are you sourcing local ingredients?
As much as is practical. I had the good fortune to go on a chef鈥檚 field trip to Eastern Shore, Virginia, where I met a bunch of fishermen. I鈥檝e been using them a lot because they send a trunk down here once a week. That鈥檚 been great.

Around this area, I鈥檓 not sure how familiar you are with our Farmers鈥 Market, but we have an amazing system of farmers that have been here, since, well … a couple of them I鈥檝e known since the ’60s. They鈥檙e my age. They put their children through college and everything with their farms. They鈥檙e small farmers. They grow all kinds of stuff, especially for the Farmer鈥檚 Market and all of the restaurants in town. I think at first it was maybe a struggle, but now they make a decent living and there are lots of them. The market is huge and I get a lot of stuff from them.

I go to regular distributors as well, because this food tends to be a little more expensive, so you have to balance it out. You know? I can鈥檛 pay $3 for an onion, but if I get a bag of wholesale onions for $6 then I can get homegrown mushrooms. So I have to keep the price point. I don鈥檛 want this place to get so expensive that my friends can鈥檛 come to it.

But my other source, and my best source, is all of these older ladies and gentlemen that farm around in the county. They鈥檝e been farming in their kitchen gardens since years ago. They show up and say: 鈥淒o you want this? Do you want that?鈥 So I get a lot of stuff from people that don鈥檛 go to the Farmer鈥檚 Market. They鈥檝e always had a garden and they grow more than they need. There鈥檚 a woman name Mary Andrews that I鈥檝e been buying from for easily more than 30 years. She just called me up out of the blue one day and said her flowerbeds were just full of mint, and did I want some. She鈥檇 give me 100 stems for $6. So I buy everything from her now鈥攑ecans, figs, persimmons鈥攈er sister Blanche, too, and her neighbor Walter Atwater. I get tomatoes and corn from him. A lot of stuff comes from those people, who are all in their 80s and 90s. My first loyalty is to those people. There are other people, but I always see what they have first.

It sounds like a neighborhood coalition. In a larger regional sense you have the Southern Foodways Alliance. How important is that?
It鈥檚 real important. It鈥檚 technically a part of the Southern Studies Department at Ole Miss. Ole Miss provides the premises and the funding. The organization celebrates and documents Southern culture through food. We do lots of things. We have all sorts of meetings and conventions and field trips. There are also a whole bunch of oral historians who go out and pretty much do what you鈥檙e doing, showing people that have been in the food business or the business of farming forever. Often, they are very old when they talk to them. They do video and oral histories. They also celebrate and publicize these people, give them an economic nudge. It draws attention to them, helps them make a living. They write a lot of stuff down. They collect recipes, social histories in ways that interact with food. There’s been a lot of stuff done about how people fed the civil rights movement workers when people began to object to segregation. There鈥檚 been stuff on Katrina, the aftermath of Katrina. They do other stuff that鈥檚 fun, like we have a whole film by a guy named Joe York. Joe鈥檚 great.

Why is chronicling that history important?
You need to know your history. To me it鈥檚 a no brainer. It鈥檚 interesting, but it also tells you who you are. And if you鈥檙e going to study human society at all, I think the dining room table is the place to focus your study. For one thing, people tend not to fight over dinner. They fight over politics or religion or basketball, but they won鈥檛 fight over dinner, so you get different people together in one spot.

You also write a lot. How did you get into writing?
Well, I was sort of nudged into writing the first cookbook. My boss said, 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 you write a cookbook like everybody else does?鈥 It鈥檚 very hard to fit it in around a job. I鈥檓 very busy here. I don鈥檛 have much time off. For me, some people are probably better at it than others. I need to have the laundry done and the desk clean and all of that other stuff. And my life is not like that. It was really hard at first, but once I signed the contract I had to do it, after working at night and stuff. The cookbook almost did me in. I was so sick of it when I got through鈥攋ust get this thing out of here. Now, however, I鈥檝e been persuaded to write more.

I like writing, and for a long time I had a blog, and I鈥檓 going to try and revive that now. I used it mainly when I traveled and made observations about culture and food together. It was in Canada, Mexico, and Japan. And I had too much to do and I kind of let it drop. But I enjoyed that, and I wrote a lot on that, and I learned how to write better, and I sort of developed a style and stuff. People saw that and asked me to write stuff. CNN asked me to write on immigration for their online blog, which caused a huge dustup and threats and all kinds of stuff.

What?
Well, if you ever want hate mail, just stand up for human rights. Amazing, actually. I wrote for their blog, Five at Five. You can find it online. But read the comments, not me. Because of that, I got known as a spokesman for humane treatment of immigrants, and so I鈥檝e been asked to do several pieces for the Southern Foodways Alliance. For The Last Cornbread Nation I have a piece about going down there to a pork rind factory. I鈥檓 sort of associated with that sort of thing now. And I鈥檓 writing a new cookbook for UNC press. They鈥檙e doing a series on Southern ingredients. I鈥檒l be doing crabs and oysters. It will be out in a year or so. And then, I can鈥檛 believe I鈥檓 saying this, but I鈥檓 sort of thinking it鈥檚 time for volume two of my cookbook. Then I鈥檓 also working on a kitchen memoir with an immigrant slant, but that鈥檚 taking me forever, and I really just need an editor to come in and take it. Then I have a piece coming out in our state magazine. I鈥檓 supposed to turn it in on the 28th of this month. It鈥檚 on church picnics. We鈥檒l see. I haven鈥檛 had time to work on it. I hope it鈥檚 good.

Wow. You have a ton of stuff.
Well, I鈥檓 getting old. I can鈥檛 stand at these stoves much longer. I need to get a second source of income.

Is there something about desserts that you like? I know that you do everything from sorbets to pastries to….
Pretty much every single thing. It鈥檚 funny. When I go out to eat鈥攚hich is pretty much all the time that I鈥檓 not working here, because I don鈥檛 cook at home鈥擨 almost never get dessert. But I like making them. And I like seeing people eat them.

When you鈥檙e making a new dessert, is there anything you鈥檙e looking to do?
For some, I try to use up things that would otherwise go to waste. On the bread pudding I鈥檓 making, I was trying to reference New Orleans. I actually like bread pudding, so I wanted to make sure it was good. Also, I like it to be pretty. Desserts need to be pretty. It鈥檚 the last thing people see when they come to dinner. If it鈥檚 not pretty, it at least needs to be imposing, giant, silencing.

Why do you think desserts are important?
It鈥檚 the last thing people have. We send a lot of desserts out to people when they come to eat here and even when they don鈥檛 order them. It鈥檚 a real treat. People see it as sort of naughty, that you shouldn鈥檛 be eating all that sugar and butter, but they will if we put it in front of them. That鈥檚 why. It gives people permission to misbehave.

Do you have a favorite story about any one recipe?
Well, the most notorious is the honey suckle sorbet. That pretty much says it all. It took a long time to do that. There was a huge honeysuckle bush out back and it would just knock you over it was so strong. People kept saying: 鈥淲ell, gosh, can鈥檛 you make something to eat out of that? Wouldn鈥檛 it be wonderful?鈥

But I didn鈥檛 have an idea of what to do and my limited experience with flowers had not been very successful. A lot of things that smell nice actually don鈥檛 taste very good. And, of course, in the South, I grew up sucking on honeysuckle. So I knew they tasted good, but of course there鈥檚 only one little speck in each one. It鈥檚 just a drop. I was like, 鈥淚 ain鈥檛 squeezing that out.鈥

So, just by accident, I came upon a recipe in a Sicilian cookbook that mentioned an old Saracin recipe for Jasmine ice. Actually, it didn鈥檛 give the recipe鈥攊t just mentioned that the flowers were allowed to sit in water overnight. I was always trying to cook 鈥榚m. It wrecks 鈥榚m. It didn鈥檛 work. So we left the honeysuckle in water overnight and we mixed that with sugar syrup, and we were like, 鈥淥h my God.鈥

So that鈥檚 probably the most extenuated, exotic example of coming up with some other stuff. You have something to go on. You have something in mind. You see that someone else has done something. That was completely out of left field, but it was amazingly delicious. It was so good you can鈥檛 believe it. It started a riot the first few years. We would run out and people would get really mad. They鈥檇 threaten you.

Really? Over a dessert?
Yeah. They鈥檇 get real mad. 鈥淵ou said it was going to be here,鈥 they said.

鈥淲ell, some people got here before you did. I don鈥檛 know,鈥 I said.

After my book came out, I put the recipe in there. A lot of people make it themselves now, which is sort of neat. I can鈥檛 tell you how many people have come up and said, 鈥淥h, I took my grandchildren out to pick honeysuckle and we made your sorbet.鈥

They only do it once a year, but it鈥檚 sort of neat to think about that. They make it for themselves.

You could have kept that recipe to yourself.
Oh, I don鈥檛 believe in that. I consider it flattering if somebody wants a recipe.

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