![]() | CavsWITNESS: If the Indians or Browns would ever come available, there's a good chance Gilbert would make a bid: link. about 55 minutes ago |
![]() | Irisheyz77: @jennsbookshelf Mine is red, named Anne Shirley. @tiffanyschmidt's is Silver (or was it blue?) and named Gilbert Blythe about 2 hours ago |
![]() | Osciamella: Dear Houlihans in Lake Geneva, hire new chefs or go out of business. You should be embarrassed. Awful dinner. Ordered pizza when I got home. about 23 hours ago |
| lakegenevadave: Lake Geneva open house tomorrow. Not sure whether it'll be at Summer Haven for $449k or Bayshore Villas for $469k. I can't lose either way. about 1 day ago |
![]() | NorthEndJustin: I'm wandering around the house looking for "Gilbert". It's bedtime and my daughter can't find or hid her stuffed cat. about 1 day ago |
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Gilbert's is a AAA Four Diamond restaurant in Lake Geneva. |
| By Kyle Cherek Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Kyle Cherek |
| Published Jan. 30, 2009 at 4:10 p.m. |
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Foodies stretch limits. It is part of our inner creed. Molecular gastronomy, haute cuisine, small plate -- everything. We are always leaning with one part of our palate to the new and inventive, which is why I was thrilled to meet a true maverick traditionalist. (Kind of contradictory, I know...)
However, Ken Hnilo, owner and executive chef of Gilbert's, a AAA Four Diamond restaurant in Lake Geneva, is a graduate of the prestigious Kendall Culinary School.
And, to quote the restaurant's Web site, "Ken will not serve anything that has been genetically modified or treated with pesticides or herbicides." In other words, he only cooks with what everyone for centuries used to just call "food."
Moreover, he is truly dedicated to sourcing his ingredients from Wisconsin. Again, a unique distinction these days, but for most of our history, this was the norm.
What intrigued me was how Ken, in such good spirits, invited "Wisconsin Foodie" to visit and dine at Gilbert's in the depths of a Wisconsin winter. Organic, fresh, and -10 degrees-plus wind chill ... these rarely pair well. I obviously had a great deal to learn.
Before the trek to Lake Geneva, I met Ken at Outpost Natural Foods in Milwaukee, where he found more organic, Wisconsin-grown and just pulled-from-the-ground ingredients than I could have ever imagined would have been available at the inception of August.
Doing the market rounds with great chefs is such a learning experience. The other element Ken stressed is relationships. He shops Outpost once a week. He knows the staff, the guy at the fish counter, and the woman who keeps the produce stocked. That human element, for most foodies, is as much a part of the finished meal as the flavors inherent to it.
From Outpost, we made our way, car heat on full tilt, to Gilbert's. Even in the winter,
Gilbert's is picturesque and perfectly placed along the Lake Geneva shoreline. Long ago, it was the mini Côte d'Azur for 19th century Chicago wealth (Gilbert's address is on Wrigley Drive. Need I say more?).
Ken has taken an 1885 Victorian mansion and brought it to its new splendor for his restaurant -- a solid cherry stairway, expansive views of Lake Geneva and some nice wines to boot.
The dish he prepared was a great expression of just how much you can do to remain local and organic even in our challenging winter harvest season. You will simply have to watch the show on Saturday to see what was served. I promise you will be impressed and inspired.
I'll take my meals, winter or otherwise, at Gilbert's anytime.
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3 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by rkerhin on Feb. 1, 2009 at 4:39 p.m. (report)
Sorry, I meant Panda Express. The point is that smugness or not, many people, myself included, know the meaning of haute cuisine. It isn't very hard to figure out, by the way. Hmmm, let's see, haute, French feminine for high and cuisine, French for cooking. Haute cuisine - literally high cooking or fine food prepared artfully. This term, incidentally, has been in common usage now for about a decade. You apparently haven't read an article on cooking or chefs or seen a TV show about food in the last ten years, am I right? The next time you bash someone for their smugness, why don't you at least TRY to learn something from them instead. I will agree with you that Kyle can come off a little pompous sometimes, but so can the rest of us.
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Posted by rkerhin on Feb. 1, 2009 at 4:29 p.m. (report)
Natemarc- Orange chicken from Orient Express is not good.
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Posted by Natemarq on Jan. 31, 2009 at 8:19 a.m. (report)
Your smugness is hurting my soul. We get it dude, you like food, guess what? So do 99 percent of all the people on the planet!!! O yea, you might want to go pick up those "Insider terms' that you dropped!! "Haute Cuisine" what the heck is Haute Cuisine. Give me a plate of orange chicken from Panda Express and tell me that is not good!!!
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