Maria Hines

Maria Hines is a Seattle restaurateur and James Beard Award-winning chef. She's also the co-author of the cook book Peak Nutrition: Smart Fuel for Outdoor Adventure.

Maria Hines
EducationMesa College
Culinary career

Early life and career

Hines was raised in Bowling Green, Ohio and San Diego, California, and she earned a degree in culinary arts from Mesa College.[1][2] She worked in kitchens across the country and in Europe before becoming executive chef at Earth & Ocean in the W Hotel in Seattle.[3]

Restaurants

In 2005, she was named one of the “Top Ten Best New Chefs in America” by Food & Wine magazine, and she decided to open her own restaurant.[3] The restaurant was named Tilth, and it opened in Wallingford in 2006.[4] Hines worked with Nora Pouillon and Oregon Tilth to have the restaurant certified organic.[4] In 2008, the New York Times recognized Tilth as one of the ten best new restaurants in the country.[5] In 2009, Hines won the James Beard Award for Best Chef: Northwest.[6]

Hines opened two more restaurants: the Golden Beetle in 2011, and Agrodolce in 2012, both certified organic.[2] The Golden Beetle was not financially successful and closed in 2016.[7] In March 2019, Hines announced that she would sell Agrodolce to her executive chef, focusing her efforts on Tilth and on writing a cookbook and developing retail products.[7]

Television

In 2010, Hines won an episode of Iron Chef America, defeating Masaharu Morimoto in a battle of Pacific cod[8] She also competed on an episode of Top Chef Masters,[9] and she appeared on Martha with Martha Stewart.[10]

Activism

Hines was a founder of Seattle restaurant week and is known as a pioneer of organic and Pacific Northwest cuisine.[1] She was a notable proponent of Washington Initiative 522 which would have required labeling of genetically modified food.[11]

gollark: The body contains miniaturised fusion reactors, obviously?
gollark: It says there's lots of uneconomical-to-extract phosphorous. It would become economical if we actually ran out of easier sources probably.
gollark: Since most plants can't fix atmospheric nitrogen, since they're bad.
gollark: I'm pretty sure they're mostly nitrogen-based and something something Haber-Bosch.
gollark: What's the constraint on making fertilizer? Methane?

References

  1. Bethany Jean Clement (October 14, 2015), "Chef Maria Hines, pioneering organic cuisine in Seattle", The Seattle Times
  2. "Maria Hines". Moveable Feast. Fine Cooking. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  3. "Chef Maria Hines of Tilth - Biography". StarChefs. October 2011.
  4. Denn, Rebekah (July 11, 2006). "On Dining: New horizons await Earth & Ocean chef". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  5. Bruni, Frank (February 27, 2008). "9. Tilth". The New York Times.
  6. Leson, Nancy (May 5, 2009). "Chef at Seattle's Tilth wins James Beard award". Seattle Times.
  7. Clement, Bethany Jean (March 27, 2019). "Seattle star chef Maria Hines on the radical decision to run just one restaurant". Seattle Times.
  8. Kate Bergman (August 2, 2010), "Maria Hines victorious on Iron Chef America", My Wallingford (news blog)
  9. "Maria Hines". Top Chef Masters. Bravo TV. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  10. "Video: Butter Poached Spot Prawns with Couscous, Part 1". Martha Stewart. Archived from the original on 2016-02-07. Retrieved 2016-02-11.
  11. Leslie Kelly (November 13, 2013), Chef Maria Hines Likes to Stir Things Up, Zagat
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