Monday, May 20, 2013
By Meredith Goad mgoad@mainetoday.com
Staff Writer
SCARBOROUGH – You could say the competition was heated, if by heated you're referring to succulent lobster tail poached slowly in butter, or handmade lobster sausages sauteed in a hot pan and served over champagne kraut.

Chef and Maine native Chris Gould prepares his dish during the Shucks Maine Lobster Chef “World Series” on Wednesday at the home of a fellow competitor, chef Steve Corry of Scarborough. Gould, who recently worked at Uni Sashimi Bar in Boston, beat out Corry and chefs from Germany and Hong Kong to win the coveted “Golden Buoy” trophy.
Shawn Patrick Ouellette / Staff Photographer

German chef Gerd Kastenmeier prepares sausage for his dish, a Maine lobster trio of lobster tartare topped with a fried quail egg, Maine lobster tail sausage over champagne kraut, and scrambled egg with lobster knuckles topped with caviar.
Shawn Patrick Ouellette / Staff Photographer
THE JUDGES AT A GLANCE
• Luke Holden and Ben Conniff of Luke’s Lobster in New York and Washington, D.C.
• Annie Tselikis, education coordinator for the Maine Lobstermen’s Association
• Dez Bartelt, food and travel writer
The intimate atmosphere at the Shucks Maine Lobster Chef "World Series" Wednesday was hushed at critical moments, except for occasional exclamations of gastronomic delight from a handful of hungry onlookers.
"Oh, yes!" groaned judge Luke Holden in a "When Harry Met Sally" moment, watching a chef spoon a rich, buttery, lobster-infused sauce over a finished dish.
In the end, it was chef Chris Gould, the U.S. champion, who edged out chefs from Germany, Hong Kong and Maine to win the $5,000 prize and Shucks' "Golden Buoy" trophy, which was presented by Portland Mayor Michael Brennan at City Hall.
Gould is a native of Bethel, but until last week he worked for renowned chef Ken Oringer at Uni Sashimi Bar in Boston. He said he plans to open his own restaurant in Portland next spring that will feature "internationally inspired small plates."
Gould's winning dish was a butter-poached lobster with ragout of sauteed lobster knuckles, roasted fingerling potatoes, cinnamon-roasted carrots, roasted corn and sweet miso puree, and piquillo pepper.
It was not the same dish he made to get into the finals. Gould likes "playing around" in the kitchen and rarely repeats himself, even when he's working in a restaurant.
"I don't like to do the same thing -- ever," he told the judges. "I get bored very quickly."
The competition -- which by delicious coincidence fell on Julia Child's 100th birthday -- was a year in the making.
The sponsor of the contest, Shucks Maine Lobster, is a seafood processor in Richmond that uses high pressure to loosen raw lobster meat from its shell. Chefs like raw lobster because it doesn't overcook and they don't have to deal with the shipping issues that come with live lobsters.
Caitlin Hathaway of Shucks Maine held preliminary competitions to find lobster chef champions in Europe and Asia, then brought all of the finalists to Maine so they could learn more about the lobster industry and the Shucks Maine product. The chefs spent Monday and Tuesday hauling traps on a lobster boat in Stonington and touring the Shucks facility. Tuesday night, they had oysters at J's and ate dinner at Fore Street.
"I tell you, the Maine lobster is incredible," said German chef Gerd Kastenmeier of Kastenmeier Restaurant in Dresden.
He said he's been using Shucks' raw lobster to make the same dish in his restaurant that he competed with on Wednesday: A Maine lobster trio of lobster tartare topped with a fried quail egg, Maine lobster tail sausage over champagne kraut, and scrambled egg with lobster knuckles topped with caviar.
"It's amazing," he said. "People go crazy."
Kastenmeier, who also has a catering company and his own line of all-natural soups and sauces in German supermarkets, fell in love with Maine oysters, too, while he was here. He said he plans to try to import them when he returns to Germany.
Patrick Goubier, a French chef from Chez Patrick in Hong Kong, said he didn't realize until he was flying over the ocean and islands on his way to Stonington how beautiful Maine is. "I was surprised by the nature," Goubier said. "I think I will come back here for my holiday."
Goubier's dish featured lobster, goat cheese, red beet soup and Chinese black beans.
"I believe fresh goat cheese goes so well with lobster," Goubier said.
Wednesday's cooking championship was held at the Scarborough home of Steve and Michelle Corry, the owners of Five Fifty-Five and Petite Jacqueline in Portland.
(Continued on page 2)
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Steve Corry, of Scarborough and Five Fifty Five restaurant in Portland, prepares a dish called “Lobster and Friends,” which includes fused lobster tails over crispy fried kelp, lobster claw poached in olive oil, sauteed striped bass over sea beans, “sea foam,” lobster and chicken of the woods mushrooms, and “sand” of crisped brioche crumbs. Shawn Patrick Ouellette / Staff Photographer |
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Patrick Goubier, the chef from Chez Patrick in Hong Kong, serves his dish – lobster, goat cheese, red beet soup and Chinese black beans – to judges during the final heat in the Shucks Maine Lobster Chef World Series on Wednesday in Scarborough. Shawn Patrick Ouellette / Staff Photographer |
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The competition’s winner, a Maine native who recently worked at Uni Sashimi Bar in Boston, prepares a dish that included butter-poached lobster with ragout of sauteed knuckles, roasted fingerling potatoes, cinnamon-roasted carrots, roasted corn and sweet miso puree, and piquillo pepper. Gould said he plans to open his own restaurant in Portland next spring that will feature “internationally inspired small plates.” Shawn Patrick Ouellette / Staff Photographer |
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Shawn Patrick Ouellette / Staff Photographer |
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