Born in Brooklyn NY and raised in Hazlet, New Jersey, Burke is a graduate of the
Culinary Institute of America and a student at
Culinary Institute Lenôtre in
Plaisir, France. Burke has worked with lchefs in France and New York such as
Pierre Troisgros,
George Blanc,
Marc Meneau,
Daniel Boulud,
Charlie Palmer and
Waldy Malouf. When Burke was 26, he received 3 stars from the New York Times at
River Café. Burke was then chosen by his peers to represent the US at The International Culinary Competition, where he won France's Meilleurs Ouvriers de France Diplome d’Honneur. Burke also won the Nippon Award for Excellence from the government of Japan, for overall skill and technique. Burke remained at The River Café until 1992.
Career
In 1992, Burke opened the Park Avenue Café with
Smith & Wollensky CEO Alan Stillman, becoming vice president of culinary development for the Smith & Wollensky Restaurant Group four years later. In 2003, Burke branched out on his own to start his first proprietary restaurant, davidburke & donatella. Since then, he has set up establishments in Chicago, Foxwoods Casino (CT), Las Vegas and in Rumson, NJ, as well as New York City.
As the principal of David Burke Hospitality Management, he operates or oversees the culinary direction of 17 restaurants in New York, New Jersey, North Carolina, Rhode Island and in Saudi Arabia. In May 2022 Burke purchased the Dixie Lee Bakery in
Keansburg, NJ.[2][3]
Burke has appeared on television, including two seasons of Top Chef Masters, a guest spot on the Every Day with
Rachael Ray show, NBC's
TODAY Show and
Bloomberg's small-business television series "The Mentor". He has published two cookbooks, Cooking With David Burke (1999) and David Burke's New American Classics (2006) co-written by Judith Choate.
Burke also competed on Top Chef Masters Season 5. He was eliminated on Episode 9 in the Teacher Tribute challenge with his Bittersweet Chocolate
Soufflé with Orange Peel & Raspberry Sauce.
BLT Prime by David Burke, Trump International Hotel (Washington D.C.)[25]
Awards
Burke has received Japan's Nippon Award of Excellence,[26] the Robert Mondavi Award of Excellence and the CIA's August Escoffier Award.[27] Nation's Restaurant News named Burke one of the 50 Top R&D Culinarians and Time Out New York named him the "Best Culinary Prankster" in 2003.[28] In May 2009, the James Beard Foundation inducted Burke into the "Who's Who of Food & Beverage in America" and Nation's Restaurant News presented him with the Menu Masters award. In February 2012, Burke was honored by the culinary school at Johnson & Wales University with the Distinguished Visiting Chef Award. In November 2012, he was named Restaurateur of the Year by the New Jersey Restaurant Association. In the same month, he was honored with a Concierge Choice Award, celebrating the elite in New York City hospitality, winning the best chef award. And in 2013, the David Burke Group was described by Restaurant Hospitality magazine as having one of the "Coolest Multiconcept Companies in the Land".
Other awards include:
1991 Chefs in America - "Chef of the Year"
1995 Culinary Institute of America - "Auggie Award"
1996 & 1997 Robert Mondavi - "Culinary Award of Experience"
1998 The Vatel Club - "Chef of the Year"
1998 Chef Magazine - "Chef of the Year"
2023 Honorary Doctorate from Johnson & Wales
Products
Burke is also responsible for the creation of several innovations and new techniques used by not only himself, but other restaurants. A few of those include Pastrami Salmon in 1988,[29] flavored oils and tuna tartare and GourmetPops,[30] ready-to-serve cheesecake lollipops. Additionally, Burke is involved with culinology, an approach to food that blends the culinary arts and food technology. In 2011, Burke received a United States patent for a process which uses pink Himalayan salt to dry-age steaks.[31] Burke is also responsible for Burke Flavor Spray and Flavor Magic.[32]