Chef Matt Martinez
Matt’s
No Place, TX
A
True Texas Culinary Legend
If
Matt Martinez’s grandfather had not escaped
his own hanging, we would not be sitting here
today telling the tale of how Delfino Martinez
got to be the legendary chef of the west. A
Mexican soldier in Pancho Villa’s army,
Delfino Martinez was captured by the Federales
in the Mexican Revolutionary War and sentenced
to hang. The young and vigorous Delfino had
the good grace to escape, crossing over the
Mexican border and settling down in Texas with
his wife, Maria.
You
need to picture the pleasure that Matt gets
in telling this story — his feet propped
up, drink in his hand and a grin on his face.
“What I do know is that his new lease
on life either gave him an appetite for cooking
or he had it all along.” Matt tells this
and the many other stories, punctuated with
laughter. We are being entertained by one of
America’s grand personalities. Matt is
wearing a custom-made brown cowboy hat, Margarita
in hand, and has in five minutes welcomed us
like we’ve known him since childhood.
“Get out of here,” you hear Matt
exclaiming to one of our own stories. Matt’s
food is fearless and tasty, using rich wonderful
ingredients, a roaring wood flame, and plenty
of Tex Mex personality. Matt, like Texas, is
bigger in person than his reputation.
“Howdy,
little Matt!” is how President Lyndon
Baines Johnson used to greet Matt when he came
to Matt’s daddy’s place. Out of
the 4 children that they raised, Matt Jr. was
the one that caught the bug, as he stood knee
high to President Lyndon Baines Johnson, listening
to him rave more than once that this was the
best food under the Texas prairie sky. He ain’t
little Matt no more.
Today,
Matt enjoys his status as one of Texas’
legends. His original Tex-Mex style, that has
also been referred to as “prairie/range”
style, is the embodiment of high quality culinary
ingredients, live fire, and tried and true seasoning
rubs he has developed over the years.
Culinary
Background
• 4th generation
Tex-Mex Chef
•
Matt’s father was President Lyndon Baines
Johnson’s favorite barbecue chef
•
Restaurant Owner of : Matt’s in Jefferson,
Matt’s No Place, Matt’s Rancho Martinez,
and Matt’s No Place.
•
Author of Matt Martinez’s Culinary Frontiers,
and Matt Makes a Run for the Border
•
Serves on the board of Texas Restaurant Association,
focusing on the free trade agreements with Mexico.
•
Voted “Best Kept Secret in Dallas”
by Money Magazine, along with many other awards
•
Inducted into the Texas Restaurant Hall of Honor
in June, 2000.
“This
is the way cooking was done under the prairie
sky, and how it’s supposed to be. We’re
merely perfecting what was done right in the
first place.”—
Matt Martinez, Author of Matt Martinez’s
Culinary Frontier
Chef
Recipes:
Matt’s
Simple Barbecue Sauce
Las
Casas Famous White Wings™
Smoked
Brisket
Texas
Sprinkle
Other
Related Links:
Great
Chefs in the Great State of Texas