Cheryl Cuzco Bangert, owner and executive chef of Cheryl's by the Bay in Rockport, combines
local ingredients with her signature presentation to give diners a true taste of Texas in this month's Table Talk.
Since many of your dishes are seafood-based, how would you rate Texas shrimp? Texas beef?
I feel badly for those who have never tasted shrimp fresh out of Texas waters. I rate Texas shrimp right up there with lobster from Maine. And, I think the cattlemen of Texas take an artisan's pride when raising their beef cattle. It definitely shows in the quality and taste, which is why I serve only Texas-raised beef.
What are your favorite Texas ingredients and why?
Besides shrimp and beef, I enjoy oysters from Aransas Bay when in season, fresh-gigged flounder, Texas 1015 sweet onions, Valley lemons, Ruby Red grapefruit, pecans, goat cheese, Texas Star potatoes, Tivoli tomatoes and TAM jalapenos. I like anything that comes from a backyard garden, including the spineless okra I grew this summer. Yum!
As a promoter of Texas wine, what would be a nice entrée/wine pairing from your menu?
I would pair a spicy Gewürztraminer from Becker Vineyards in Stonewall with any dish I serve. It is hands down a perfect pairing, as they mutually complement each other.
What or who inspired you to pursue a career in cooking?
I don't think what I do would be considered having a "career" in cooking. Since my business and creative interests are so varied, they seem to take many shapes, and as a result, I have several enterprises. For me, to cook is to play and for that I would have to give credit to my mother. She never gave the worn-out admonishment "don't play with your food" most mothers give their children. She encouraged it and was an offender herself. The act of dining at her table was all about fun and taste. My business acumen comes directly from my paternal great-grandmother, Cora L. McKinney. She owned and operated several restaurants in mining towns and cities in Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas during the Wild West days and was quite astute at seizing business opportunities. Her restaurants served the upscale clientele that came along with the money made in a boom.
Are Texas wines a preferred choice from your customers?
Texas wines are becoming more and more popular. A Malbec from Becker Vineyards is outstanding in price and quality, and I would put it head to head with a Malbec from Argentina.
What is your signature dish or standout menu item?
The signature is in the presentation. I try to incorporate the six tastes of food: salty, sweet, pungent, bitter, astringent and sour onto every plate. By doing so, one gets a completely balanced meal. Many of my regular clientele tell me they come in again and again because they begin to have an intense craving for my food. I have jokingly been accused of spiking it with addictive substances.
What is the most rewarding compliment you've received for your cooking or your restaurant?
It's the unspoken compliment that I take to heart the most-- plate that comes back to the kitchen devoid of a crumb or line of sauce, or the diner that gives you a near bull's-eye stab to the hand for presumption when removing their seemingly finished plate are both examples of great compliments.
Have you ever been so impressed with another chef's cooking that you asked for the recipe or secretly tried to recreate it?
The women behind the Pyrex or Tupperware dish of a heirloom family recipe brought to a local pot-luck meal are the ones I will saddle up to and try to get recipes from. That's how I got my cornbread salad recipe I serve. If you haven't had cornbread salad when the Tivoli tomatoes are in season, you are missing a huge slice of Americana at its best.
How would you describe the Cheryl's by the Bay dining experience?
It all depends on one's comfort zone in art, music and food. I seem to especially delight the jaded diner who thinks they have seen and eaten it all. In the words of the Greek philosopher Epicurus, "I have never wished to cater to the crowd; for what I know they do not approve, and what they approve I do not know."