WORKING -- Carlito Jocson
-- Susan McCormack
HE IS
Creating a new California cuisine.
FROM SCIENCE TO THE SKILLET
Carlito Jocson is executive chef at The Yard House, which opens at
Triangle Square on Monday. He said he found his calling while studying
biochemistry at UCLA, but it was not academia or medicine.
While working as head chef at Fullerton’s Chez Panache, a 19-year-old
Jocson met a Los Angeles Times restaurant critic who encouraged him to
pursue a career in food.
“He said, ‘Carlito, why are you going to school?”’ Jocson recalled. “I
said, ‘Because I like helping people.’ He said, ‘You know what? You’ll
make a lot more people happy feeding them rather than healing them.”’
Jocson, now 32, said he was persuaded after calculating the cost and time
involved in medical school.
MOVING UP THE FOOD CHAIN
Jocson quickly moved up from his first job at a frozen yogurt shop to
head chef at Chez Panache to jobs at Prego Ristorante in Irvine,
Antonello Ristorante in Santa Ana and Zov’s Bistro in Tustin.
Now Jocson is overseeing operations and updating menus for Tequila Jack’s
in Shoreline Village and The Yard House restaurants in Long Beach and
Costa Mesa.
FOOD IN THE VEINS
Jocson said despite his success, he’s never had formal training as a
chef. His mother ran a catering business while he was growing up, so he
got hands-on experience -- starting with chopping onions and peeling
garlic, then progressing to baking pies.
“We grew up with food. Everything was food.” Jocson said. “Mom was like
... ‘we’re not going to buy you nice clothes, but you will have nice food
to eat.”’
Jocson said, unlike his mother, he usually does not take his work home to
his four children.
“My wife is the greatest woman,” he said. “She cooks all the meals at
home, except on special occasions.”
SETTING CULINARY TRENDS
With a keen sense for culinary trends, Jocson has updated the menus of
several restaurants in the ICON Restaurant Group, his employer. The Yard
House’s menu now boasts not only 250 varieties of draft beer, but
Cal-Asian delights such as salmon spring rolls with roasted seaweed salad
and ginger dressing.
Jocson said a trend is emerging that has nothing to do with the talents
of the chef.
“A lot of chefs are focusing on the quality of ingredients used,” Jocson
explained. “In Orange County ... the population is very well educated on
food. If you’re going to serve, say, a Cobb salad, it better be with very
good turkey.”
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