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Larry Forgione
Larry Forgione
from Wikipedia

Forgione as chef at the River Cafe, NYC, circa 1980

Larry Forgione (born 1952) is a chef in the United States. He is known for his work at the An American Place restaurant in New York City and several notable chefs apprenticed with him (including Christina Machamer, David Shalleck, Melissa Kelly and Alexandra Guarnaschelli).[citation needed] His son, Marc Forgione, has his own restaurant and competes on Iron Chef America.

Forgione was born on Long Island, New York, in 1952. He attended the Culinary Institute of America. He received an America's Best Chef recognition from the James Beard Foundation and Chef of the Year honors from the Culinary Institute of America.

Forgione cofounded American Spoon Foods, a specialty food maker in northern Michigan. His An American Place Cookbook won the James Beard Award for Best American Cookbook.[1]

Forgione's remake of Lord & Taylor Cafés into Signature Cafés (since rebranded as Lord & Taylor Signature) was part of the department store's 2003 restructuring.

On April 18, 2019, Forgione was found guilty of involuntary vehicular manslaughter in the city of Santa Barbara, CA.[2] Forgione ran a red light and struck and killed 90-year-old Gilbert Ramirez (a World War Two vet) while Ramirez was legally crossing the street. On July 16, 2019, Forgione was sentenced to two months in jail.[3]

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from Grokipedia
Larry Forgione is an American chef known for pioneering the modern farm-to-table movement and earning the title "Godfather of American Cuisine" through his advocacy for local, seasonal, and regional American ingredients in fine dining. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Forgione trained under renowned European chefs, including Michel Bourdin at London's Connaught Hotel, before returning to the United States in 1977 and establishing himself at prominent New York venues such as the River Café. In 1983, he opened An American Place in Manhattan, a landmark restaurant that celebrated indigenous American products and regional flavors, earning three stars from The New York Times and induction into the Fine Dining Hall of Fame. His work at An American Place, along with his cookbook of the same name, helped shift perceptions of American cooking from derivative to innovative and self-assured. Forgione later expanded his influence through consulting roles, additional restaurant ventures in locations including St. Louis and Las Vegas, and educational initiatives, including co-founding the Culinary Institute of America’s Farm-to-Table curriculum. Forgione's contributions have been recognized with major honors, including the James Beard Foundation's Outstanding Chef Award in 1993 and a James Beard Award for his cookbook An American Place. As a founding trustee of the James Beard Foundation and active supporter of culinary philanthropy, he has mentored a generation of chefs, including his son, Marc Forgione, and helped shape contemporary American gastronomy.

Early life and education

Birth and family background

Larry Forgione was born in 1952 on Long Island, New York. Detailed information about his parents, family environment, or specific childhood experiences related to food is not extensively documented in available biographical sources. Forgione developed an interest in cooking from a young age, which later guided him toward formal culinary training.

Culinary training and early influences

Larry Forgione graduated from the Culinary Institute of America in 1974. He began his professional career working under chef Michel Bourdin at the Connaught Hotel in London, England, gaining exposure to classical European techniques. He returned to the United States in 1977 and transitioned to professional roles in New York City. The influence of his early training helped shape his approach to ingredients, setting the foundation for his later advocacy for American regional cuisine.

Professional career

Early career and mentorships

After graduating from the Culinary Institute of America in 1974, Larry Forgione began his professional career at the Connaught Hotel in London, where he worked under chef Michel Bourdin. This experience introduced him to the European practice of sourcing and cooking with local, regional ingredients to highlight their inherent qualities. During his time there, Forgione became the first American chef to earn a Mention of Honor from the Prix Taittinger competition. He returned to the United States in 1977 and took executive chef positions at several prominent New York establishments, including El Morocco, Regine's, and the River Café. In 1979, Forgione joined the River Café in Brooklyn, where owner Michael “Buzzy” O’Keeffe hired him to lead the kitchen and revamp the menu toward distinctly American cuisine. Initially presenting a French-influenced menu, he was directed to focus on American ingredients, prompting a shift to emphasize high-quality domestic products from small producers and farmers. Forgione gained recognition for his efforts to source superior poultry, collaborating with upstate New York farmer Paul Kaiser to raise chickens outdoors—leading him to coin the term "free range chicken" to distinguish these flavorful birds from mass-produced ones. He extended this approach to other regional ingredients, such as tiny scallops from Peconic Bay, morel mushrooms and wild huckleberries from Michigan, fresh shrimp from Key West, and Belon oysters from Maine, building direct relationships with farmers and foragers to ensure freshness and quality. During his tenure at the River Café, Forgione developed a mentorship relationship with James Beard, whose guidance reinforced his commitment to celebrating American ingredients and place. These early roles and influences shaped his emerging philosophy of ingredient-driven American cooking.

Founding and operation of An American Place

Larry Forgione opened An American Place in 1983 on Manhattan's Upper East Side, establishing it as a pioneering venue for New American cuisine. Named at the suggestion of his mentor James Beard, the restaurant aimed to celebrate and rediscover the diverse bounty of American ingredients and flavors. Forgione focused on sourcing regional products from small producers across the United States, emphasizing seasonal and local elements in a manner that helped pioneer farm-to-table practices in fine dining. The menu blended French culinary techniques with traditional American recipes and ingredients, featuring signature dishes such as pan-seared buffalo steaks, terrine of three American caviars, and old-fashioned banana betty. This approach highlighted indigenous products like game, seafood, and produce while moving away from European-dominated fine dining norms of the era. In 1989, Forgione relocated An American Place to larger quarters on Park Avenue at 32nd Street, allowing for expanded operations and continued emphasis on his sourcing philosophy. The restaurant garnered substantial critical acclaim during its run, contributing to Forgione's recognition as America's Best Chef by the James Beard Foundation in 1993 for his work there. It served as Forgione's flagship establishment, showcasing his dedication to elevating American cuisine. In 1998, he parted ways with partner Ark Restaurants while retaining ownership of the An American Place name and recipes. The restaurant later closed in 2005.

Subsequent restaurants and business ventures

In the late 1990s, Forgione expanded his restaurant operations in Manhattan beyond his flagship establishment. By mid-1999, following another relocation of An American Place to the Benjamin Hotel on Lexington Avenue, he oversaw a three-restaurant group that included Rosehill, a seafood restaurant and oyster bar opened in the former Park Avenue space previously occupied by An American Place, and the Coach House in Murray Hill. The Coach House and An American Place shared a similar culinary approach and menu items, such as fried Ipswich clams, cedar-planked salmon, and pan roasts of razor clams. Later in his career, Forgione pursued ventures outside direct restaurant ownership. In 2011, he co-founded the Conservatory for American Food Studies at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa, California. He went on to serve as culinary director for the Foley Family Wineries. Now semi-retired, he occasionally consults on new restaurant projects and assists his son Marc Forgione with his restaurants.

Development of New American cuisine philosophy

Larry Forgione is widely regarded as the “Godfather of American Cuisine” for his foundational contributions to the philosophy of New American cuisine, which prioritizes seasonal, regional, and domestically sourced ingredients over imported or mass-produced alternatives. He was among the first chefs to champion the virtues of national cuisine by insisting on farm-fresh, local produce and proteins that reflected America's diverse regional bounty. Central to Forgione's philosophy was a commitment to using only domestic ingredients, which he secured by forging direct partnerships with small farmers, producers, and foragers who supplied superior regional products. He advocated that the finest cooking ingredients were already available within the United States—often in one's own region—and drew inspiration from childhood experiences on his grandmother's farm, where he encountered flavorful, naturally raised foods. This approach helped initiate the farm-to-table movement, as he emphasized seasonal availability and traceability, including crediting ingredients with their farm, ranch, or geographical origins on menus. Forgione's work, alongside contemporaries such as Alice Waters and under the influence of James Beard, advanced the regional food movement by celebrating America's heritage through specialties like wild rice, venison, and native oysters. He later reinforced these principles through educational initiatives, co-founding farm-to-table programs at the Culinary Institute of America that taught respect for growers, seed-to-plate awareness, and the practice of letting high-quality ingredients speak for themselves.

Awards and honors

Television and media appearances

Personal life

Legacy and influence

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