Kitchen Collaborative: Colin Mills

Chef Christian Hallowell finds that thoughtful, nuanced ingredient decisions keep the flavor scales in perfect balance.

Photo Credit: Carlos Garcia 

Kitchen Collaborative: Christian Hallowell

Understanding the sweet-spot intersection of flavor depth without dominance

chef name

Christian Hallowell
Corporate Executive Chef | Sr. Dir. of R&D
Bloomin’ Brands

Kitchen Collaborative is a recipe-development initiative formed by Summit F&B and Flavor & The Menu. To fuel flavor innovation, a group of talented chefs partnered with sponsor brands and commodity boards to create recipes that showcase the passion and potential of our industry.

“One unforgettable taste experience that will always stay with me is from my childhood on the black sand beaches of Montserrat in the Caribbean,” remembers Christian Hallowell, Corporate Executive Chef and Senior Director of Research and Development for Bloomin’ Brands. “Local boys brought freshly caught fish from their nets, and we cooked them right on the beach, over an open fire. After roasting the fish, we waded back into the waves, scraping off the charred skin and seasoning the tender flesh with a sprinkle of sea water. Standing in the warm Caribbean waters, eating freshly roasted fish out of our hands with friends, is a memory etched into my taste buds forever.”

Hallowell may not be in active pursuit of replicating this particular flavor remembrance, but it represents a host of ingrained experiences that drive so many chefs to the culinary arts, where they seek to reconstruct someone else’s cherished memory. Flavor drives the story, and Hallowell has created three flavor-forward dishes for Kitchen Collaborative that are sure to be a part of a future guest’s reminiscences: Latin-Roasted Pork Flatbreads with Rum-Soaked Pineapple and Black Garlic Butter; Vegan Cauliflower and Cucumber Aguachile; and Fontina, Apple and Walnut Piadina with Thyme.

Latin-Roasted Pork Flatbreads

Photo: Carlos Garcia // Food Styling: Peg Blackley

Once introduced to the Latin Style Citrus Chili Sauce from Custom Culinary, Hallowell gravitated toward its dynamic flavor profile—and its versatility. “It had great color and delivered layers of flavor,” he attests. “I was thinking of using it as both a marinade and a finishing sauce.” Practicality also played a role in his ideation. While the marinade would infuse meat with its rich flavors, the chef wanted to build a component that could be efficiently produced in high quantities and used with other dishes. The culinary offering, Latin-Roasted Pork Flatbreads with Rum-Soaked Pineapple and Black Garlic Butter, “is a light, appealing shareable, seamlessly blending taste and accessibility,” he says.

The dish is a flavor bomb of savory, sweet and tangy elements. “The pork is tender and flavorful, infused with the savory richness and subtle sweetness of the Custom Culinary sauce in the adobo marinade. The flatbread provides a neutral base to slather the earthy sweetness of the black garlic butter, complementing but not overpowering the other components,” says Hallowell. “The pineapple adds bright freshness, with its acidity and additional sweetness balancing the richness of the meat.

“Latin-roasted” and “rum-soaked” menu descriptions certainly convey the promise of craveability. But “black garlic butter” is the mic drop. “While developing this recipe, I was refining another dish that featured black garlic butter, and I recognized the harmonious interplay of flavors that it could have with the pork,” he recounts. “I saw an opportunity to elevate the dish with an even greater infusion of global tastes and the trending popularity of black garlic.”

The marinade combines the Latin Style Citrus Chili Sauce with orange juice, vinegar, peppercorns, cumin and allspice. Plus, it can be produced in large quantities for other uses. Hallowell ticks off the many options that would benefit from the Latin-inflected flavor boost of his marinade recipe: grilled chicken, seafood, vegetable skewers and tofu or tempeh. “It could also work as the sauce for stir-fried dishes, when added toward the end of cooking to coat everything in its flavorful goodness,” he notes. “Or, thin out the marinade with a bit of oil and vinegar for a dressing that can be drizzled over mixed greens, grilled vegetables or a grain-based salad.” The zesty blend of Latin flavors could also be incorporated into a classic Cuban pressed sandwich (“Tampa style, of course,” he clarifies) or any pork-based recipe.

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Vegan Cauliflower and Cucumber Aguachile

Photo: Carlos Garcia // Food Styling: Peg Blackley

Robust flavor is an imperative for vegan dishes, especially when restaurants seek to appeal to flexitarian patrons. But the resulting taste experience must be a careful balance between flavors that are assertive but not overpowering. Hallowell threads that needle with assurance, making the Jalapeño Pesto (aka S’chug) from SupHerb Farms a key player in a sauce that confidently lifts the flavors of this Vegan Cauliflower and Cucumber Aguachile.

The chef found the paste boasted a fresh flavor, great heat and a salty profile that integrated seamlessly into the aguachile. “I set out to craft a cold dish that retained the fresh, vibrant essence of the S’chug without subjecting it to heat, offering a vegan twist on a traditionally protein-centric dish,” he explains. “I selected cauliflower and cucumber for their subtle profiles, ensuring they could soak up the pesto’s essence without dilution.”

Each bite offers a vibrant blend of flavors, he says. “The pesto provides a bold kick of heat and freshness, complemented by the subtle nuttiness of the cauliflower and crunch of cucumber.” A touch of cilantro contributes a bright note. “This combination achieves a harmonious balance of spicy, savory and cooling sensations, making it an irresistibly craveable dish that won’t leave you longing for the traditional seafood component.”

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Fontina, Apple and Walnut Piadina with Thyme

Photo: Carlos Garcia // Food Styling: Peg Blackley

“Banana bread was a frequent flier in my house growing up, and it holds that magical property of taking me back to a specific time and place,” says Mills. As a chef, he relishes opportunities to tap into the power of nostalgia in culinary applications. “I love taking old recipes and reimagining how different forms, flavors and experiences can bring new life to classic dishes.” Presented with Ghirardelli® Dark Chocolate Coating Wafers for his recipe ideation, Mills developed a next-level iteration of his childhood favorite in his inventive Walnut-Crusted Chocolate Banana Bread Cake Pops.

Some might be surprised that cake pops have endured beyond a short-term novelty. Mills attributes their ongoing popularity largely to the elemental appeal of “food on a stick,” which can be found in almost every cuisine, he notes. “I think it’s just something fundamental to being human.” Plus, cake pops offer inherent portability and merchandising advantages that still carry value.

After preparing the banana bread and forming it into small balls, Mills melts the Coating Wafers and uses the melted chocolate to cover the banana bread balls, gently shaking off any chocolate before rolling in them in finely chopped walnuts. The Wafers offer chefs the ability to create dips and coatings without needing to temper the chocolate. This would be a huge benefit to high-volume commercial operations, Mills affirms. The result is a textural explosion—doughy interior, chocolate coating, crunchy nuts—while still carrying flavor forward. “I always try to match flavor with function when it comes to creating the perfect texture for dishes,” he explains. “For example, the pops could be rolled in panko bread crumbs for texture, but that wouldn’t deliver the flavor that complements the chocolate and the banana like walnuts do.”

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