Catching Up With… Top Chef’s Kevin Gillespie
The Top Chef Season Six finale airs tonight on Bravo. The finalists include a pair of temperamental brothers from Maryland and Georgia chef Kevin Gillespie, who captured our hearts when he jumped into a swimming pool with a silly grin on his face during the second challenge. At 27 years old, Gillespie is executive chef and partner at acclaimed Atlanta restaurant Woodfire Grill. Throughout the Top Chef season, he’s cooked consistently solid and straightforward food, and he’s won more elimination challenges than any of the other chefs. Clearly the fan favorite, he’s said nary a harsh word about his fellow contestants. His beard even has its own Facebook page. Paste caught up with Gillespie to talk about last week’s episode, the Voltaggio brothers, his Atlanta restaurant Woodfire Grill and his mysterious pig tattoo.
Paste: Did you watch last week’s episode? What did you think?
Kevin Gillespie: I watched it at about two o’clock in the morning. I enjoyed watching it. It was fun. It was hard at the end because I didn’t know how emotional Jennifer got about the whole thing. That was really hard to watch because I care about her, and I know how stressful it is to go through the whole thing. So that was the really hard part.
Paste: Were you sad to see anyone else go?
Gillespie: When Eli left, that was hard. But maybe it wasn’t as hard because we were all ready to leave and come back home, so it was a little bit easier to deal with. Honestly, I tried really hard to stay sort of removed from everything as the show went on, because I didn’t want it to be really hard when people got sent home. I tried to sort of keep my distance. But by the time we’d made it to the last little part here, we’d all become so close to one another that it was a much more challenging role to fill.
Paste: Do the contestants taste each other’s dishes?
Gillespie: Rarely do we ever taste each other’s dishes. More often than not we’re so busy we really can’t, and then by the time the challenge is over, it’s over, and we don’t have the opportunity to go back and taste each other’s food.
Paste: You get a little flack for cooking simply. Michael Voltaggio said something like, “That’s the kind of stuff I cook on my day off.” What’s your reaction to that?
Gillespie: Honestly, it doesn’t really bother me that much. I know I get flack for cooking things that are simple, but I think [last week’s] episode really summed up a very critical point in that. Tom made the point that you really have to have a lot of guts and confidence in yourself to be able make things that have three components and stand behind them and be like, “Yep, that’s exactly how it needs to be,” and that’s what my cooking has always been reflective of. When people make comments like that, more often than not I assume that they either don’t understand because it’s just not their way of looking at food, or with Michael last night, more often than not I think that with his situation, what he was saying was sort of a long explanation of his frustrations in general. Because it’s hard when you’re not winning, or when you want so badly to be able to take the whole thing, and you have no real place to vent those frustrations. I think that was one of those times when he needed to say something. He needed to feel a little bit better about what he was doing, keep your confidence level up so that you can perform well every day.
Paste: Do you feel that you’ve been portrayed accurately?
Gillespie: I’ve been happy with it so far. I think I have been portrayed accurately. I think the reason I’ve had a good response from so many people who’ve come to my restaurant or seen me on the street and tell me how much they like watching me is because I am a real person, and throughout the show I’ve made it a point to make sure you can see the real person there. I wasn’t playing up anything, I wasn’t acting, I wasn’t trying to ensure that I looked one way or the other. And I think that made it easy for them in the editing room when they saw that they didn’t need to manipulate anything—they could show me exactly how I was.
Paste: How about the other contestants? Do you think they were portrayed fairly, or did the editing shape anyone’s character?
Gillespie: You could argue both. One thing I like to keep in mind is that they definitely don’t put words in people’s mouths. So if you see somebody saying something, they said that. Now whether it’s taken out of context slightly or if it’s a snippet of a larger conversation, it’s hard to say. But at the end of the day if you’re upset because, “Oh my god I can’t believe they showed me saying that,” you have to remember that you were the one who said it, and that’s something that you just have to live with—the good and the bad. There are times that I say something on the show and I’m like, “I probably should have said that,” but I don’t get upset about it, because it was accurate to that particular moment. I don’t think they’ve shaped any particular characters. Some people would argue to the contrary. They’d say, “Well what about this person seems to look like this all the time?” And I would say, I think that if they look like that all the time, there’s some sort of legitimacy to why that is the case.
Paste: The Voltaggio brother rivalry is a big theme of the show right now. Is that as prevalent behind the scenes as it is on TV?
Gillespie: You know how when you’re in a situation long enough you sort of become deaf to the way the surroundings are? They could very well have been squabbling the whole time, and I began to tune it out. But on the other hand, what you see on the show is concentrated. You see it multiple times within a one-hour television show, where I may have seen it multiple times throughout a 24-hour day. It’s played up on TV, but it’s also not that it’s not happening. It’s just a matter of context of their life. They have that brother interaction all the time, and sometimes it’s very caring and gracious, and other times they’re trying to ruffle each other’s feathers. That’s just the way that they operate with one another.
Paste: Which chefs do you most respect?
Gillespie: I really respect what Brian does, because as a fellow business owner I know how challenging it can be to want to uphold a certain standard in practices and the products that you buy and so on and so forth, but also to try and make a profitable business. And he’s done that very well while making very engaging and creative food. I think that Michael is someone who is never afraid of pushing his and everyone else’s envelope all the time. He doesn’t concern with taking someone out of their comfort zone, and I respect that as well. And Jennifer, for me, I think that we share a sense, a certain quality about food that’s closer than me and anyone else on the show, so I respect her on that level—that understanding of food level.
Paste: Which chefs do you keep in touch with?
Gillespie: I still talk to everyone, honestly. I talk to Eli constantly. He and I are friends; we’re here in the same city. I spoke to Brian yesterday, and I spoke to Michael the day before. Michael and Brian and Mike Isabella and Jennifer and Eli and myself all [went to a Falcons game last Sunday]. We don’t spend a great deal of time with one another in public, but we do send an e-mail here, a phone call there, to keep in touch and see what’s going on.
Paste: Walk me through a day of filming. How long do the judges take, and how much time does Tom spend giving feedback?
Gillespie: The days are very long. They are extremely long, and I think that’s probably very typical for television. We wake up in the early morning and get ready at the house before we head off to do whatever we’re going to do that day. There’s a lot of time gearing up and getting ready. Once you’ve completed whatever it is, whether it be a Quickfire or grocery shopping or prepping, there is obviously downtime between things. The complicated thing is you’re trying to get a whole lot of people together to accomplish one task. When Tom comes into the kitchen for his walk-through, it’s certainly much longer than the little tiny snippet you see on TV. Because he does ask a lot of questions, and imagine you’re having a conversation with him. It’s meant to approximate when you’re in a restaurant and the chef is walking around to see how everyone is doing. Sometimes it’s a one-minute conversation, and sometimes it’s two or three minutes. The part that’s most challenging is that once everything is done, once the challenge is completed and you go back to the room, that can be a pretty long amount of time. Standing at judges table seems like an eternity. That’s the only thing I dislike sometimes when I’m watching, that I know that it can’t be any longer, that they obviously can’t show you any more of judges table because the show would run on forever, but it’s so challenging to stand there that entire time listening to everyone’s, including your own, critiques. So that’s kind of a day in the life of Top Chef.