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Media Coverage

Dishing With Sir Elton
At the rock star's Oscar parties, famished A-listers will chow
down on comfort food with a twist
By Randye Hoder, Randye Hoder has written for The Times and Wall
Street Journal.
March 5, 2006
Wayne Elias is happy to discuss the dishes he'll be serving at
Elton John's Oscar party. But he's far more circumspect when it
comes to providing any dish on Sir Elton and his celebrity guests.
"I have no gossip on Elton," he says. "Sorry."
That Elias prefers to keep his head down is no surprise. He's got
1,100 mouths to feed tonight, many of which are sure to be starving
after all the pre-Oscar primping, red-carpet preening and, in some
cases, acceptance speechmaking. By the time the stars enter the
massive tent on the grounds of the Pacific Design Center, "they're
famished," says Elias, owner and chef of Mark's Restaurant
in West Hollywood and its offshoot, Crumble Catering. "At last
year's event, when it was all said and done, there wasn't a drop
of food left. They ate it all."
It takes eight weeks of planning—and a cast of 150 servers,
kitchen staff and bartenders—to fill those A-list bellies.
In all, Elias is responsible for overseeing a reception; a four-course,
$2,500-per-person dinner (with proceeds going to the Elton John
AIDS Foundation); and the highlight of the night: the Academy Awards
after-party. Elias himself will cook for the reception and the after-party.
Italian chef Renato Piccolotto, of the Hotel Cipriani in Venice,
is being flown in especially to prepare the dinner.
The key to success, Elias says, is attention to detail. He'll personally
make sure that Elton John's dressing room is stocked with the protein
bars and seasonal vegetables with artichoke dip that he likes to
munch before performing at the after-party. As the guests enter
the tent, meanwhile, they'll be treated to a flute of 1998 Perrier
Jouet Fleur de Champagne. And when their glasses run dry, they can
refill them at the champagne bar, where the bubbly will be served
with edible violets and tiny baby blue geraniums floating on top.
"I guarantee you won't see anything like them at any other
Oscar party," says Chris Diamond, Elias' business partner.
Maybe. But with Nicole Kidman, Paul McCartney, Tom Hanks, Natalie
Cole and other big names on the guest list, Elias points out, this
is "a hard crowd to wow."
So for this Oscar night, he'll stick to comfort food—with
a twist. That means grilled cheese sandwiches, but with raisin bread,
Gorgonzola, mascarpone and pears. Mini-burger sliders will be adorned
with caramelized onions and ginger ketchup. And a not-so-traditional
quesadilla will include Maine lobster, goat cheese and caviar.
"Not everything has to be five-star haute cuisine," the
47-year-old Elias says. "Sometimes even celebrities want a
little grease."
Yet they don't want it dripping on their five-figure Valentino,
Chanel and Prada evening gowns. At the after-party, it's all small
bites.
"People are dancing, eating and drinking, and some are even
clutching statuettes," Elias says. "You don't want them
spilling and making a mess all over themselves."
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