‘Vagabond Chef’ Becomes W.Va. State Parks Executive Chef

Have you ever had “churched-up soup beans?” West Virginia State Parks has hired Wheeling’s Matt Welsch as its new executive chef, who has that Appalachian dish on his menu.

Have you ever had “churched-up soup beans?” West Virginia State Parks has hired Wheeling’s Matt Welsch as its new executive chef, who has that Appalachian dish on his menu.  

Known on YouTube as “The Vagabond Chef,” The owner and head chef at the Northern Panhandle’s Vagabond Kitchen spoke with Randy Yohe about his plans to enhance the dining experience at state park lodge restaurants.    

Yohe: Chef Matt, you’re the new executive chef for the West Virginia State Parks system. They’ve hired you to enhance the dining experience. What does that mean to you?

Welsch: I think it means a lot of attention to detail, and also the value of bringing in an outside perspective. Due to my history with what I’ve done, as the Vagabond Chef, having seen so many different restaurants, and being outside of the park system itself, I can bring a very experienced, fresh perspective to the operations at each of our parks.

Yohe: I understand you have made a commitment to West Virginia’s rich flavors. That’s made you a prominent figure in the industry. Is that going to play into what we see on some of the state park menus?

Welsch: Absolutely. I think one of the great things about the menus at our state parks is they offer us the chance to tell a story. And that story needs to be about who we are as West Virginians, and who each park is as its own individual entity. It’s the little things, the little nuances that we can bring our guests attention to, and I think the menu is an excellent opportunity for us to do that.

Yohe: So, will that be regionally sourced menu items? I know that my wife is always talking about how she would like to taste some smoked West Virginia trout and enjoy a good smoked trout spread? We know that up in the Williams River area of the state, they have those trout. Is that the kind of thing you’re talking about?

Welsch: Absolutely. I think championing local ingredients and heritage ingredients is 100 percent something that we need to be doing. And it’s that opportunity to share what makes West Virginia great by highlighting those heritage ingredients and heritage recipes and preparations.

Yohe: I’m taking a look at the dinner menu at the Hawks Nest State Park, for example. And it looks pretty standard. I don’t know if you’ve seen it or not, but under Greens and Things, we’ve got some salads, broccoli soup. Under Main Dishes, there’s steaks, ribs, barbecue chicken breast, it does have sauteed rainbow trout, and a couple of pasta dishes. What will you do to liven up that menu?

Welsch: I think the Hawks Nest menu should also have some beans and cornbread on there maybe as an appetizer. They’ve touched a little bit of the heritage ingredients there, and I think we can do more. But honestly, Randy, one of the first things that I did coming into this position was say ‘we need to know what our guests want’. We need to do a survey asking them what they are looking for? It’s our job to guide them towards the experience that they’re looking for. We don’t want to be too easy, and just give them exactly what they expect and exactly what they want, but we need to know what that is. We can say ‘okay, you like that, you like salmon, but have you had our trout? You really like steak, but maybe try this West Virginia aspect preparation. 

Yohe: When I took a look at the menu for your Vagabond kitchen up there in Wheeling, It’s a little eclectic. Duck Fat Fries, Duck Wings. Your Churched-Up Soup Beans, sounds interesting, and I know you served that at a couple of Farm to Table dinners as well. But, you’ve got Rabbit, you have a 12 ounce Wagyu Burger (That’s a big one). Then, assorted things for brunch like cobbler. It looks like a lot of it is freshly made, not taken out of the freezer.

Welsch: We do handcrafted food rooted in the local community at Vagabond kitchen. We turn things on their heads a little bit, and I’m the Vagabond. I’m looking to update what is Appalachian cuisine with the state parks. We’re going to stay a little bit more rooted in history. The soup beans are a great example. I absolutely love soup beans, I grew up with them, I enjoy making them and feeding them to folks. But at our Churched-Up Soup Beans at Vagabond are garnished with homemade chow-chow, or pickled jalapeno and red onion and cornbread dust and candied bacon, so it brings it into the modern day a little bit. If we were going to do that dish at a state park, we probably go more the traditional route of minced raw onion, and a side of cornbread. 

Yohe: You’ll do a survey that will find out what’s of interest at all of our state parks. There’s different things that go on, say at Cacapon State Park over there in the Eastern Panhandle, or up north where you are, or down at Chief Logan State Park, I imagine there might be some different tastes at those different areas.

Welsch: Yes, you’re 100 percent correct. I think it’s important to look at the state parks as a whole, and as a singular entity of what we want to offer to folks. But also, to honor those little variations and discrepancies based upon region. And the demographic that’s being attracted to each individual Park is going to be a little different.

Yohe: Do you have a timetable on when you’re going to make these changes, or is this something that’s going to morph over time,

Welsch: It’s going to morph over time, I think it’s very important to go into all these different kitchens. We have 10 Food and Beverage programs across the 37 parks in our state. And it’s very important that I enter these kitchens, humbly with my hat in my hand and say, ‘Hey, I’m here to help, I’m here to add to, I’m not here to take over. I’m not here to say I know things that no one else knows. I’m here as a resource. And we’re going to figure these things out together, and we’re going to take it to the next level. Right now I’m very much getting the lay of the land. I’m drawing a map and seeing where we are. That way we’ll be able to decide how to get to where we want to go.

Yohe: I noticed that at the bottom of your menu at the Vagabond it says you can buy the kitchen a round of drinks for $6 each. Tell me about that?

Welsch: I think it’s important I grew up in the kitchen, I started out as a dishwasher. And I worked my way up to where I am now. It’s really weird these days that this celebrity chef gig exists. And that people actually want to hear what the people who cook your food have to say. It’s a very interesting and weird time for us to have that status. For years, the kitchen is what we called ‘the back of the house’, in kitchen restaurant lingo, and it was very much kept out of view. You didn’t see what happened  and a lot of times you didn’t know what happened back there. A lot of times the kitchen staff were largely ignored. Coming up that way, being a cook myself. I wanted the opportunity that when people really enjoyed their meal, they also had the opportunity to say thank you to the people who prepare their food. And when there’s a lot of skill going into that, a lot of intention, the customers that I’ve had have been very excited to have that opportunity to say ‘yeah, let’s get those guys a drink’, when they’re done with their work, they can enjoy the fruits of their labors as well.

W.Va. Food Ambassador Chef Named James Beard Award Semifinalist

ul Smith is one of two West Virginia chefs in the running for one of the most prestigious awards in the culinary world. Reporter Randy Yohe spoke with Smith, who said it’s a humbling honor just to be nominated.

Charleston Chef Paul Smith is one of two West Virginia chefs in the running for one of the most prestigious awards in the culinary world.

Reporter Randy Yohe spoke with Smith, who said it’s a humbling honor just to be nominated. 

Yohe: Chef Paul, you’re a semifinalist for the 2023 James Beard Award. What does that recognize?

Smith: This is for the best chef of the southeast. The James Beard Foundation recognizes culinary expertise in numerous different areas, not only in the country, but also in different facets of the business. So this is Best Chef. It is South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. So it is a huge honor for us, as you know, my family of restaurants. So 1010 Bridge, The Pitch, Barcadas, Ellen’s Ice Cream. This is a win for all of us. It’s really a team effort. I get to be the window dressing for it, but it really is a huge honor for all of us.

Yohe: This award is selective and prestigious, isn’t it?

Smith: It absolutely is. I would say it’s the equivalent of the Academy Awards to the chef community. So for me, the nomination is the win. James Beard nominated chef, is basically saying Oscar nominated actor or Academy Award nominated actor. So for me and for our team, it’s great for the city. It’s great for the state. You know, I’ve already won as far as I’m concerned.

Yohe: There’s more to being a chef than just working at a cutting board, a stove or a grill, right?

Smith: Oh, absolutely. I usually go to the gym at about 5:30 in the morning. I’m at one of the restaurants, probably between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. It’s about setting yourself up for success. It’s about everything in place. It’s about not only your physical, but also your mental needs. It started when I was standing on the milk crate with my grandfather, probably about the same time I learned to walk – to stir in the Sunday gravy with him. That really has culminated in operating in these restaurants. 

Yohe: They serve a wide variety of food at your restaurants to a variety of customers, tell me about that.

Smith: 1010 Bridge is mostly, we say, Appalachian cuisine with a little bit of a low country flair, but kind of nouveau Appalachia. It’s taking indigenous ingredients from this area and elevating it to a point where it’s fine dining, but it’s also approachable fine dining. We don’t have white tablecloths. The service and the drinks and the cocktails and the mixology and how we play it is all fine dining, but you can wear jeans and a T-shirt. 

The Pitch is thoughtful Bar food. We source our ingredients locally from our area farmers. It’s still pizza, burgers, wings and fun appetizers, but it’s just done with that fine dining attention to detail. Barcadas is a Filipino restaurant. So you know that Filipino flavor profiles, the vinegars, the soy sauce, the ginger, the garlic, the scallions, but also making it approachable.

Chef Paul Smith giving a culinary arts demonstration at Charleston’s Capital Market. Courtesy Paul Smith

We’re in West Virginia, so we have to make it a little bit of something for everybody. So we’ve got burgers and wings, and kind of one of our favorite dishes is our Fili Cheesesteak, you know, Filipino. It’s got soy and a little bit of garlic and ginger, and calamansi, and it just kind of elevates it a little. 

Ellen’s was a staple here in Charleston for 25 years, and she trusted us to keep the brand going. With all of our ice cream flavors, we’re thoughtful about it. We source locally, and we support local. I think it’s all about supporting the local community. If someone asks me what kind of chef I am, I say I really support the community and I’m the community chef. I’m not really farm to table, I’m not fine dining. I don’t have a specific genre of food that I like to cook. It’s about creating the experience for the guests.

Yohe: You’re known as a chef ambassador for West Virginia. I’m told that’s also something you take great pride in.

Smith: So this is the inaugural for that designation. The governor and the West Virginia Department of Tourism announced the Chef Ambassador program. I represent the Metro Valley. It’s a huge, huge honor to work really closely with the governor’s office, the Department of Tourism, the West Virginia Department of Agriculture, to really spread the word and to utilize local but to really get the word out. We have some of the best culinarians in West Virginia. We have some of the best restaurants that I’ve ever been to in West Virginia, and to be able to showcase that and be a part of the fraternity of chefs and represent West Virginia to the best of my ability is huge.

Yohe: What have you learned, and where have you traveled, to know how to please a palate, if you will?

Smith: I started my culinary journey way back with my grandfather on Fridays at the Glen Ferris Inn helping him with the Italian nights. I think that’s where I got my start. I worked at Dutchess Bakery through high school, baking bread and honing my baking and pastry skills. I went to culinary school at the CIA in Hyde Park, New York – the Culinary Institute of America – for two years and then I continued my education in Napa Valley, studying pastry and wine and really getting, you know, immersing myself in the hospitality culture that is Napa. That’s kind of where everything clicked. 

I was classically French trained. But everything was farm to table and all the resources were there, the fresh produce, the viticulture, the hospitality culture. It was just awesome. Then I was recruited as the pastry chef for the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina. So I was a pastry chef at the Biltmore and went to work at the Ritz Carlton in Naples, Florida, which was one of the most valuable experiences. Their culinary team was second to none. At that time, it was the best hotel in North America. 

I learned a ton there and went to the Windsor Club in Vero Beach, Florida, which was huge. It’s a very small, but very prestigious club, so that was a valuable experience. Then, I went straight to the opposite. Not really the opposite as far as cuisine goes, but the opposite as far as paying attention to the food costs. I was the executive chef back home at the University of Charleston for three years. That allowed me to really learn the business side of it and pay attention to food costs and utilizing not just the rib eye, and the tenderloin and the strip, but the other cuts where you have to get very creative in what you’re doing.

And then I was a corporate chef at Buzz Food Service. I will say that Dickinson and Angela Gould really gave me the platform to really be who I am today. That’s when people really started calling me Chef Paul. And that’s when I represented Buzz, to the best of my ability, and helped them to get to that next level. I got to work with so many great chefs around the great state of West Virginia, and learn and teach and consult. And I was always preaching this rising tide. We all need to work together to raise all of our ships.

It’s just been a wild and fantastic journey, doing some consulting on a couple of different projects in Lewisburg and my philosophy is helping. So we’ve got to help each other. I’ve been fortunate enough to travel and learn and learn from some of the best chefs in the country. Now my job is to teach and help everybody to get to the level that they want to get to.

Yohe: The James Beard award finalists are announced next Wednesday. Then what happens?

Smith: They select five, and again, I’m not really under any delusion that I’m going to be going to Chicago to the gala. It would be exactly like the Oscars of the chef world. You get dressed up, there’s an award ceremony, and I get to rub elbows with the best chefs in the country, which just blows my mind. I mean, it’s funny when I was talking to friends, and to my wife, and people in the restaurant, and I’m naming off the chefs, the 20 chefs that are on the list, and I’ve been to a couple of their restaurants. I’m like, man, these guys are a big deal. And they’re like, dude, you’re on the list. You’re a big deal. I don’t really look at myself that way. I have to stay humble. Now is when the real hard work starts. You have got to bring your A game every day.

When people come to 1010, or they come to The Pitch, or Barcadas, or Ellen’s, they’re going to expect a higher level than they already did just because my name is attached to it. I just want to make sure that everybody knows that my teams in all of these restaurants and my partners and all of these ventures, they’re the ones that are doing all the heavy lifting, I get to be nominated as Best Chef in the Southeast, but it’s a huge team effort. West Virginia went from just an absolutely wonderful place to live to a food destination overnight. I’m honored to just be in the same sentence with some of these chefs around the country. I mean, it’s a huge, huge honor.

——

Ramin Mirzakhani of Laury’s Restaurant in Charleston is also a James Beard Award semifinalist.

Local Foods Featured at State Park Dinners

A series of nine Farm-to-Table dinners are being planned at state parks across West Virginia. The series of events, planned between June 15 and September 12, is aimed to source more ingredients from local farmers.

Several state agencies and organizations are collaborating on the series, including the West Virginia Department of Agriculture, the Department of Natural Resources, and the West Virginia Farmers Market Association.

This is the second year the series of Farm to Table dinners will take place.

The dinners will take place at state park restaurants, putting locally grown foods and products on the menu from June to September.

Several of the events will have themes such as “Hoedown on the Hill” at the Chief Logan State Park and “Pickin-Pull” at the Pipestem park in an effort to teach people about their local foods.

Full list of Farm-to-Table events:

How Vacant Lots in Charleston Are Transforming Into a School for Farmer-Entrepreneurs

On a sultry summer evening, three women are killing harlequin beetles in an effort to save the greens at the SAGE micro-farm on Rebecca Street that they landscaped themselves.

Last year, Kathy Moore, Jenny Totten and Meg Reishman completed 18 agriculture and business classes through SAGE, which stands for Sustainable Agricultural Entrepreneurs. Kathy says she loves getting to take home an unlimited supply of fresh vegetables each week.

“Oh my goodness, the green zebra tomatoes were absolutely my favorite. They are just absolutely luscious!” says Kathy, who works a day job, like most of the other growers, outside the SAGE micro-farm. She and the other SAGE growers also earn a few hundred dollars apiece at the end of the year based on the group’s produce sales. 

The food is grown on Charleston’s West Side, in a high-crime area with many vacant lots. Over the past two years, the SAGE program has transformed two of these lots into working micro-farms.

New this year is the Rebecca St. garden, with its unusual swirling starburst shape. At the center of the beds of squash, kale and tomatoes is a bright circle of sunflowers, zinnias, basil and cilantro. Kathy is surprised that the garden’s design has been so successful.

“I had no idea that it would be so inviting. So, yeah. It’s a really nice design, and people are excited just to come and look at it.”

Credit Roxy Todd
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Rainbow chard and collard greens have been some of SAGE’s best sellers this year
Credit Roxy Todd
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SAGE sells edible flowers to a local restaurant in Charleston called Mission Savvy. The flower and herbs are grown in a circle at the center of the Rebecca Street garden.
Credit Roxy Todd
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The SAGE program teaches growers like Meg Reischman how to make a business plan and how to choose the most profitable types of produce.

“I was having a difficult time sitting down and figuring out what my break even price was, and whether it was worth growing it or not, making a plan,” Meg says.

Many of the students struggle with these questions, says SAGE instructor Dr. Dee Sing-Knights, Assistant Professor of Agricultural Economics with West Virginia University’s extension services. She teaches the SAGE growers how to manage small businesses and how to market their produce. She tells the growers to make sure the public knows that SAGE’s organic produce might cost a little more than supermarket vegetables, which often come from larger, more mechanized farms.

“I always tell them, you have to tell your customers that listen, the reason this costs more is I squashed my bugs by hand!” says Dr. Singh-Knights. The SAGE growers are also learning to educate more potential customers about the value of spending money inside the community, versus sending the money out of state by buying food at a chain store.

Even if the 18 SAGE graduates never become full time farmers, this morning for breakfast they are probably all making food using at least one ingredient they grew themselves.

This year, the group has seen an increase in the sales of produce and flowers at their local Saturday markets, as more customers are enjoying the fruits of their labor, too.

 

 

 

 

State moving toward locally grown food in schools

Up a small set of stairs and to the left sits the cafeteria at McKinley Middle School, but you don’t need the secretary’s directions to find it. At lunch time, you can hear the chatter of students as soon as you walk in the school’s front door.

McKinley houses about 350 6-8 graders who, in 20 minute shifts of about 50 or so, file into the small cafeteria, fill their trays and sit down at tables to eat.

“I’m usually scared of the school food,” said eighth-grader Mickala Wilkinson.

Reviews that are not so uncommon from your average middle school student about what’s being served in their cafeterias, but this lunch was slightly different.

“I like the apples. They actually have flavor to them,” Mickala said about halfway through her lunch.

“Oh, it’s wonderful,” said sixth-grader Chase Casto. “It’s kind of nice to have freshly grown stuff from around St. Albans.”

Chase sat with his classmates and enjoyed a cheeseburger on a whole wheat bun- wheat that was grown in Preston County, along with apples from Berkeley County, lettuce from Putnam, ice cream from Kanawha and brussel sprouts from Upshur County.

Students at McKinley Middle weren’t just eating their normal Wednesday afternoon lunch. They were eating a lunch prepared from scratch with West Virginia products as a part of the state Department of Education’s Farm to School program.

“We started this initiative about three years ago,” said Executive Director of the Office of Child Nutrition Richard Goff, “where we showcase local growers, local producers and today’s menu highlighted just locally sourced food grown here in West Virginia.”

The program is similar to the Farm to Table movement becoming popular across the country. It’s about supporting local producers and providing them a stable market to sell their products, and county school systems are a very stable market.

In the last school year, more than $350,000 was spent on local products used in schools in 30 counties across the state.
Diane Miller, the child nutrition director for Kanawha County Schools and organizer of the McKinley event, said the goal is to get that number to grow.

“Farm to School for me is not just a one time event,” Miller said. “What I want to do is find longevity of the program so that I can say every single day at every single school in Kanawha, we’re going to have something fresh from a local farmer, but I have to find other farmers to be able to bring that quantity into Kanawha County.”

Finding the farmers seems to be the biggest challenge, but Miller said there’s an even bigger reward. Outside of the help the school systems can bring to the local economy, students are eating fresher, healthier foods and, perhaps most importantly, liking them.

 “The amount of work was amazing, but today you reap the benefits of it. To see these kids’ trays and to see these kids happy and just kind of excited about their lunch,” Miller said.

As for Chase, he likes the idea of tasting new foods.

Potato salad and all, Chase and the kids of McKinley Middle seemed satisfied as they emptied their trays and returned to class, as Diane Miller said, with bellies fed and ready to learn.
 

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