From Yahoo/Parade:
“And the Winner of 'Hell's
Kitchen' Season 22 Is...”
Season 22 of Hell’s Kitchen began
with 18 chefs vying for the position as head chef at Gordon Ramsay’s Hell’s
Kitchen restaurant in Las Vegas and the $250,000 prize. On finale night, the
Top 3 were Ryan O'Sullivan, Sammi Tarantino, and Johnathan Benvenuti. Then
Sammi was eliminated in the first hour and it was down to the two men, but it
was Ryan who ended up walking through the winner’s door into a whole new life.
“Growing up, Gordon Ramsay was
always a household name in Ireland and the U.K., so I was well aware of the
shows,” Ryan tells Parade in this exclusive interview. “So, I always knew what
Hell’s Kitchen was about and I always had an idea of what it entailed to be on
the show. Finally, when I got there, I told myself, ‘Just don’t go home first.
Just don’t go home first.’ That was my strategy. It was, ‘Feel it out, see what
it’s like, see what the talent is like, play to your strengths, and whatever
you do, do not go home first.’ “Ryan’s strategy worked and he’s happy that he’s
finally able to reveal the fact that he’s the winner of season 22 of Hell’s
Kitchen because it’s been almost two years since it filmed, during which he’s
kept his job as head chef at The Country Club at Mirasol in Palm Beach Gardens,
Fla., to pay the bills while he waited for his win to be revealed.
The 30-year-old chef, who hails
from Cork City, Ireland, was bitten by the culinary bug at a young age as he
watched his father, who is also a chef, whip up meals. It was also his father
who introduced him to Gordon Ramsay via TV and cookbooks, so it’s almost as if
Ryan’s getting cast on Hell’s Kitchen was predestination. So, it was
particularly special for Ryan that the show flew in his dad from Ireland for
the taping of the finale and his father got to eat his food, because Ryan has
never cooked for his father before. “To see him there, and to see him also live
out his dream a little bit because he never before met Gordon Ramsay, so for me
to be the catalyst for him to then meet Gordon Ramsay meant a lot to me.” Ryan
says. “I wasn’t cooking exactly, but it was my menu, it was executed by me, but
just for him to see me [in action] was phenomenal. I wish my mother could have
been there as well because she’s got a bit of FOMO, but with COVID that wasn’t
possible.”
During our Zoom chat, Ryan talked
more about winning season 22 of Hell's Kitchen, how he's planning to spend his
$250,000 prize and how the friendships he made on the show are for life.
Was there a point in the
competition where you said, “I can win this. I may have this?” Honestly,
there wasn’t a single point in the competition. I knew that I was going to be a
frontrunner. From the first couple of dishes, the first couple of episodes, I
was like, “Okay, I can get up there." I never once thought, “Okay, I can
100 percent win this. I’m definitely the best here.” I never thought that once.
I did have a set belief and told myself that, “You can do this. You can do
this if you put your mind to it and if you stay away from the drama,” which is
very hard to do in Hell’s Kitchen because there’s a lot of drama. And even up
until the final, I don’t know what’s going on in anybody else’s kitchen, I
don’t know what else is going on with other people. I would just concentrate on
my own game, and if my own game was good enough then what will be will be.
MasterChef is just a cooking
competition, but Hell’s Kitchen is also a job interview. What do you think that
you brought to the table that Johnathan or Sammi didn’t that made you Gordon’s
final choice? Personally, I like to think that the kicker for it all was
the hunger. Everybody says that they want to win and they’re the hungriest
person there, no pun intended, obviously we’re all starving. But I came from
Ireland five years ago to chase my dream, that’s what I came here for. Five
years later this landed in my lap. This was destiny. I think Gordon knew that
my entire life I’ve watched him on TV, from a toddler, all the way up, reading
his books, listening to him on TV, interviews, radio shows, you name it, I’ve
seen it. And then he saw me when I was put in front of him. They say
never meet your idol, for me that was a complete opposite. I knew once I met
him and if I got in front of him, he’d know what I was about. I think the main
thing for Gordon was the loyalty I’d have for him and for the job and for the
company. I’ve worked my ass off to get where I am. Nothing ever comes cheap,
and I think what made me stand out was the passion. I felt like I had
more passion, I felt like I had more drive. I can’t say I have more skill.
We’re all very different, we’re all very great at what we do, we all have
different skills. They’re all fantastic, fantastic, fantastic chefs. Johnny and
Sammi are unbelievable and when all’s said and done you see how great they
really are as chefs, but I just think I had the edge because I wanted it that
little bit much more and I was willing to do anything to get it.
What made you decide to serve
the dishes that you did for your final menu? The final menu for me was an
ode to my home. It was an ode to stuff that I knew growing up. It was an ode to
different people in my life, and that’s what I wanted it to be. They say cook
from your heart, and when I cook from my heart, I think of my individual family
members like my father, my mother, my grandparents, and what they would have
eaten and what was available to me as a kid. How could I make that? I
can make the dishes familiar to you in a way that I can change it, but it can
still mean something to me. If I’m going to go through dish by dish, the
vol-au-vent that I wanted to do, a chicken and mushroom vol-au-vent is one of
the most common things you’ll find at an Irish wedding. It’s always on a
starter, it’s a classic, classic dish, a vol-au-vent. I remember chef Jason
said to me, he said, “Oh, you’re doing a vol-au-vent?” He was like, “Yeah, good
luck winning with a vol-au-vent, what is this, the ‘70s?” I looked at
him and I said, “It’s not the vol-au-vent that’s going to win it for me, it’s
the reason I want to cook the vol-au-vent, it’s how I’m going to make it my own
and tell a story through the dish.” The lobster pot-au-feu, a pot-au-feu is
just a French term of everything in a pot. That was from my mother, you know?
She was never going to outclass my dad being a chef, but she was a very, very
good home cook. When she’d come home from work or wherever she was, she would
do her best to put together a good meal if my dad was at work. She
always used to love putting a roast beef in a pot or a collar of bacon with
some beautiful vegetables and a nice sauce. So, the lobster pot-au-feu was an
ode to my mother because my mother is one of the most glamorous women I’ve ever
met in my life and the lobster is a very glamorous protein. So, I’m going to
take that pot-au-feu, use the lobster, which is glamorous, and then turn it
into a ravioli because that’s then my twist on it because I love making pasta.
All these dishes meant something to me in a certain way and I wanted to
twist them to have them make more sense to somebody that’s eating them that
wouldn’t know my story, you know?
You mentioned Jason, I was
really surprised when you picked him for your team, especially since you had
first choice. Well, honestly, it was actually chef Jason, the sous chef
Jason, that said to me, “Good luck winning with a vol-au-vent.” And that’s when
I was like, “All right, let’s see, buddy. Okay, let’s see here.” Honestly,
I picked Jason because Jason is a fantastic chef. He’s a very good chef, he’s
been around the block, he knows exactly what to do when he’s given instruction.
When he has to give the instruction, I feel like he found it a little bit more
difficult because he found it difficult for people to communicate back with him
because he had one speed, he had one voice, and that was how he knew how to
speak to people. When you’re working for your friend, there’s a lot less
stress. You know that you’re just working for your buddy, you know you’re going
to get it right, you’re not afraid to mess up because you know you won’t mess
up. Jason and I are actually very good friends, like the rest of the cast. I
picked Jason to run my meat station because I know that guy knows how to cook
meat like the back of his hand. [During the show], he just put himself in
situations where he wasn’t best for that situation. Instead of me
picking my friends, I picked people that I knew were great in a position. I
still have to run a kitchen at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter who my
friends are. I still have a job to do, I still have to run a kitchen, so I’m
going to pick the people that I know are great in those positions. So,
throughout the competition, I kept taking note who did fantastic in what
position, and when people had the opportunity, I’m like, “Well, there’s my
team.” I knew exactly where I’m going to put everybody, I know their strengths.
I’ve got to play to my strengths, and I feel like maybe Johnny picked his
friends over what their strengths were.
You and Johnathan seemed to be
very tight on the show. Have you stayed friends since then? Me and Johnny
are best friends. We talk on the phone every day. I talk to Johnny more than I
talk to my wife I’d say, and he’d say the same thing. No, me and Johnny have
been best friends since the second we met each other, we just clicked from the
get-go because of the way we talk about food and what our goals are. We both
got a five on the first day, and then we happened to be roommates, and when Tad
and Mattias went home really early in the competition, it was just me and
Johnny in that room. Every night once we’d take off our mics and get
into bed and the lights went off, me and Johnny could stay up for an hour or
two talking about the day or what’s going to happen next. We bonded from the
get-go and the bond is as strong as it’s ever been, you know? It’s very strange
for me to meet somebody and within three weeks feel like I’ve known him my
whole entire life. Our friendship is a very, very special friendship. And if I
never met Johnny through the show and I met him on the street, regardless, I
think we’d still have the exact same friendship because that’s just who we are.
What’s the long-term dream?
After you do your service in Las Vegas, where do you see your career going from
there? After the term, I would love to stay in TV. I would love to have an
opportunity to cook and talk. As you well know, I’m well able to talk and well
able to cook, so I’d like to put the two of those together and stay on TV
hopefully. I haven’t found my niche just yet; I have a lot of ideas. I’m
talking to a lot of people. I think if I just get my foot in the door
somewhere, somebody gives me one opportunity, I think I’ll knock it out of the
park. With the cooking world so saturated, especially with TV, you need
something a little bit different. You can’t have continuous cooking
competitions or somebody just cooking some stuff, there has to be a want for
it, there has to be a demand for it. Without going into too much detail, TV is
where I’d love to stay. And then eventually down the road, I’ll open up a
couple of restaurants, but not right now, not in the climate that we’re at with
the cost of everything and staff, and the world is screaming out for staff.
It’s not a great time to open up a restaurant. I’m only 30 years of age, I
still have a lot of time on my side, but TV is where I’d like to stay.
You said on the show you had
never cooked for your father before. Why is that? Christmas dinners and
occasions like that growing up, he’s the chef of the house, so he would always
cook all of them. No matter what he’d done, he’d come home, he’d cook all the
food. He always would. Never really had time, not time to sit down like, “Dad,
I’m going to cook a meal for you today,” because we’d always end up doing it
together or something. Now, I think the most he might have ever gotten off me
was a bowl of cereal, but that’s about it, you know? Down the line, I
think I’ll get a lot more opportunities to cook for my mother and father. I’ve
never really cooked for my mom either, she was always the feeder of the house.
An Irish mammy would always feed us no matter what. There’s always something on
the stove, there’s always something in the oven, she was always cooking.
Any thoughts on how you want
to spend the $250,000 prize money? Is there something you want to invest in or
do something special for your wife Jennifer? The first thing I’m going to
do is just look at it. I’m going to look at it for about three months and just
see it. I’m not going to touch a penny of it, I’m just going to look at it and
enjoy the hard work that it took to get it. A lot of people say, “Easy come,
easy go,” there was nothing easy about how I obtained this, and I definitely
won’t be wasting it. I’m glad that I got it at 30 years of age instead of 25,
because I would have done something stupid with it. Definitely, there’s
a long vacation involved for my wife, I’ll maybe take my family on a nice
cruise, all be together and celebrate. And then, hopefully, I’ll put some money
towards a house and see what happens. I haven’t really thought that far yet.
I’m still very busy in my day-to-day job. I think time will tell, but I think
definitely a long vacation and maybe the thoughts of a house would be in the
cards for.
What was the best part of the
Hell’s Kitchen experience? Hand on my heart, I mean this the most, the
whole thing for me, forget about winning, forget about everything else, the
most beautiful thing for me about this whole thing is that I got to watch
myself become friends with these people all over again. We’ve all been friends
for two years [since the series filmed] and then to watch [on TV] us all become
friends again is the best thing for me. I’m not an emotional man but
watching myself with these people and the relationships we bonded brings a tear
to my eye every time I see it. Because we’re all just trying to make it in this
world and we’re all rooting for the same thing, we’re all on the same bus. I’d
be lost without these people and I’m glad that we have these friendships that
we made because it’s phenomenal.
^ This Season was really good and
it was great to see Ryan win. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/winner-hells-kitchen-season-22-030329883.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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