By Jim Garamone DoD News Features, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, August 24, 2015 — Say "military cook"
to most Americans, and they will conjure a picture of Cookie in the Beetle
Bailey comic strip.
They certainly wouldn’t conjure a picture of Navy Senior
Chief Petty Officer Derrick D. Davenport, an executive chef with the Joint
Staff and the 2015 American Culinary Federation’s Chef of the Year.
The Chef of the Year is the highest award presented by the
federation, and Davenport is the first military chef to earn it since the award
was established in 1963. He competed for the award at the ACF’s annual
convention in Orlando, Florida, earlier this month.
Unlike Cookie who is forever pictured in a stained T-shirt
stirring sauce or slopping chipped beef on a tray, Davenport is a slim and trim
culinary specialist who is the executive chef/senior enlisted aid to Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey.
Growing Up in the Kitchen
Davenport said he got his start watching his father and
grandmothers cook in Detroit.
“My dad is the family cook, and one of my grandmothers is a
professional cook, and the other is just a good Southern cook,” Davenport said
during an interview. “I always hung around the kitchen with all three of them.
Early on, my grandmother said I’d watch episodes of PBS’s Julia Child just as
much as Sesame Street. I always gravitated to the kitchen and cooking.”
He went to a culinary school in Livonia, Michigan, and then
worked at restaurants and country clubs in and around Detroit for a few years
before joining the Navy in 2000.
“I always wanted to serve my country,” he said. “One of the
master chefs I worked for was in the Navy back in the Vietnam era, and he’d
always regale his class with sea stories and all the great times he had.”
Davenport remembered that when he was looking for his next
challenge. His recruiter told him the Navy was the only branch that worked for
presidential food service, “and that kind of became my goal.”
Career on Land, at Sea
First, though, he served aboard the fast attack submarine
USS Annapolis out of Groton, Connecticut, for five years, and then served as an
instructor at Great Lakes Naval Training Center located near Chicago.
Davenport served 14 months in Herat, Afghanistan, in 2006
and 2007. He was able to get out of the forward operating base and see some of
the western Afghanistan city.
“We built a couple of schools and I worked with the Afghan
National Army,” he said. “I would walk to the Afghan DFAC to train the Afghan
cooks how to cook.”
The instruction was to teach the Afghans the hygienic way to
cook, Davenport said.
“We would make sure they handled stuff that they butchered
correctly -- no cross-contamination. We made sure they cooked to the proper
temperature. I learned a lot from their style of cooking, as well,” he said.
Culinary Talent
Davenport was selected for the chairman’s staff because they
needed a chief who could both cook and lead. The test was they gave him a
basket of food and said he had 30 minutes to craft a menu and make a
three-course meal.
“I did seared tuna with an Asian slaw, chicken breast
risotto and a Grand Marnier mousse for dessert,” he said. “I was hired on the
spot.”
Davenport worked for former Joint Chiefs Chairman Navy Adm.
Mike Mullen for three years and stayed when Dempsey became chairman.
Davenport uses fresh in-season produce and fruit when he
cooks. He said the Dempseys give him a lot of latitude.
“They give us full creativity to do what we want within the
dietary restrictions of the guests,” he said. “We cook healthy foods and try
not to overdo it on the calories.”
Competing Around the Country
For the Chef of the Year competition, Davenport first had to
compete regionally. He won that competition in Buffalo, New York, in January.
The secret ingredient he had to cook was rabbit.
In Orlando, the secret ingredient was squab and frog. That
competition was like Iron Chef in front of an audience of chefs. The rules are
four courses in one hour with no advance prep.
“I tried to keep everything summery and light because hey,
it’s July in Orlando with 100 percent humidity,” he said.
The first course was tomato consomme with tomato compote and
a frog fritter on top of that.
“The second course was a smoked squab breast … and a small
salad and some pickled fruits with citrus vinaigrette and a goat cheese
soufflé,” he said. “The third course I sort of paid homage to my Dad and
grandmothers -- those good Southern cooks -- so I was thinking shrimp and
grits, but I couldn’t use shrimp so I substituted frog legs.”
The fourth course was squab with the dark meat made into a
sort of sausage and the breast meat in the center. Davenport had two apprentice
chefs helping, but they could not touch the secret ingredient.
And he won.
“The judges said we had the cleanest and most organized
kitchen. They loved the way we worked in the kitchen before they even got to
the food,” he said. “There was no gear adrift, as we say in the Navy, and the
tables and cutting surfaces were always wiped down. It’s from my Navy training
to keep it clean because if you’ve got a food-borne illness on a ship, you are
killing the mission because everybody is down for the count.”
The senior chief will stay with the chairman until he
retires next month, and then the chef of the year will move to the White House
Mess for his next assignment.
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