
Jason Eckerson, chef and co-owner at Fish & Whistle and his wife, Kate Hamm, were semifinalists for a James Beard Foundation award this year, but they and the other eight Maine nominees have all been left out of the final round. Ben McCanna/Portland Press Herald
None of Maine’s nine James Beard Award semifinalists moved on to the next round of the competition — the first time in 11 years the state has been blanked in finalist nominations.
In January, nine Maine restaurants and bars, or the food professionals behind them, were named semifinalists for the prestigious awards.
They were:
• Havana, in Bar Harbor, for Outstanding Restaurant.
• Jason Eckerson and Kate Hamm, of Biddeford’s Fish & Whistle, for Emerging Chef.
• Brant Dadaleares, of Gross Confection Bar, for Outstanding Pastry Chef or Baker.
• Taj Indian Cuisine, for Outstanding Hospitality.
• The Abbey, in Brunswick, for Best New Bar.
• Mary Allen Lindemann, of Coffee By Design, for Outstanding Professional in Beverage Service.
• Nathaniel Meiklejohn, of The Jewel Box, for Outstanding Professional in Cocktail Service.
• And Jordan Rubin of Mr. Tuna and Jake Stevens of Leeward, both for Best Chef: Northeast.
Chef Lee Frank was initially nominated for Lee Frank’s in South Berwick, though the James Beard Foundation later changed the listing to connect him with Otis Restaurant in Exeter, New Hampshire, instead. He, too, did not make the finalist round.
In 2014, none of the state’s five semifinalists moved on to the next round. Three Maine chefs — Masa Miyake of Miyake, Brian Hill of Francine Bistro in Camden and Ravin Nakjaroen of Long Grain in Camden — had been named semifinalists for Best Chef: Northeast, while Fore Street and Primo in Rockland were semifinalists for Outstanding Restaurant.
James Beard Award winners will be announced at the awards ceremony on June 16 in Chicago.
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