Chicago Sun-Times

Olympic skater Brian Boitano building community through shared culinary ventures

- BY SONJA CHEN

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Brian Boitano is an Olympic gold medalist, a two-time world champion and the winner of four national titles.

He also has a flair for food and bringing people together.

Among his long list of lofty achievemen­ts, Boitano makes a mean cocktail, too — and he credits the same attention to detail that made him an elite skater with helping him thrive in his culinary ventures.

“The same layers that go into creating a program, with music, costume, lighting, practice — all those layers of the onion are the same thing that go into food,” he said. “How it looks, how it smells, the glass it’s in, is it over ice? All those elements, how it tastes — just everything. It’s those layers that are really similar to skating.”

Boitano’s passion for food has taken many forms: first a Food Network show (“What Would Brian Boitano Make?”), then a cookbook of the same name and most recently, a restaurant.

Boitano’s Lounge opened in 2019 in Lincoln, Nebraska, and the Hall of Fame skater brought the experience to the SAP Center in San Jose for a special activation during the U.S. Figure Skating Championsh­ips. Boitano, who grew up in nearby Sunnyvale, designed a menu for the event that included creative cocktails and a spread of appetizers.

It wasn’t until Boitano’s competitiv­e career ended that his love for food truly blossomed.

“I was on such a strict diet, and I think that that was the other thing that made me love hospitalit­y and food and cocktails,” he said. “I just didn’t have any of that in my life because it was so restrictiv­e . ... I did that for so many years that when I could branch out, I was like, ‘Oh, this is fun. I really like this.’ ”

Following Boitano’s retirement, he hosted parties where he and his friends would all cook together. That sparked a passion and changed his relationsh­ip with food.

“It turned into one of the things that is one of the best memories, for me, of food,” he said. “It’s communal, it’s family, it’s extended family. It’s sharing the moment and enjoying food and drink.”

That’s the same idea behind Boitano’s Lounge.

Since the first pop-up installmen­t was a success, Boitano, 59, hopes to bring it back to future nationals as a means of bringing people together beyond what’s happening on center ice.

To him, food is best when it builds community.

“I just thought it would be a great place for all the figure skating fans to come and mingle, take a moment, get a breather,” Boitano said. “You sort of feel like you’re not really in the arena anymore, but still being connected.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Brian Boitano performs in 2016 during “An Evening with Scott Hamilton and Friends” to Benefit Scott Hamilton Cares Foundation at the Bridgeston­e Arena in Nashville, Tennessee.
GETTY IMAGES Brian Boitano performs in 2016 during “An Evening with Scott Hamilton and Friends” to Benefit Scott Hamilton Cares Foundation at the Bridgeston­e Arena in Nashville, Tennessee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States