Skip to content
Search
Subscribe to our newsletter
Cuisine Noir logo
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
Black Chefs Food & Drink

Contestant Carla Hall Says Cooking Show Gave Her Ingredients for Success

By Damon Hodge
/
August 23, 2009
       
Chef Carla Hall - Contestant on Top Chef season 5
Pictured: Carla Hall | Photo credit: Photos by NBC Universal
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

In some circles, Carla Hall was the odds-on favorite going into the finals of the fifth season of Bravo’s “Top Chef” reality cooking show. The Nashville, Tenn., native and current Washington D.C. resident won over judges with her culinary flair (described as simple yet elegant) and captured viewers with a buoyant personality that was both earnest and kooky—witness her judicious use of the phrase, “hootie hoo.”

Show Publicity and Lessons

Hall may not have won the competition (her final dish, strip steak cooked in the sous vide style lagged; Hosea Rosenberg took top honors), but she’s certainly richer for the experience—in more ways than one.

“Because of the show, I’ve received more public recognition and a good boost in business,” says Hall, who co-owns Alchemy Caterers in Washington, D.C.  “We’ve had to be careful. It’s one thing to grow gradually; it’s another to try to meet the increased demand when you don’t have the infrastructure to do it. One of the things this experience taught me is to work at my business, not in it.”

Hall often jokes about having to train for “Top Chef,” given the multitude of zany, never-in-a-real-kitchen type of challenges. But the very schizophrenic nature of the competition reinforced her passion for succeeding in food, and in life.

“The show is really about making it through,” Hall says. “In a restaurant, you put out fires every night. In catering, you might forget something. It’s all about recovery, thinking on your feet. A lot of the situations aren’t realistic, but they help you. When you get in your comfort zone, you get lazy. You grow when you’re out of your comfort zone. It was very cutthroat and I didn’t want to get into that.”

  • Herb Wilson: Fueling the Food Revolution in the West
    Executive chef Herb Wilson
  • Pierre Thiam Attempts to Create the World’s Highest Pop-Up Restaurant
    Cb9c495b17bc28a44ffb50c55572ed63 300x300

Preparation for Carla Hall Chefdom

Hall’s circuitous route to chefdom began after graduating from Howard University with a degree in accounting in 1986. She spent two years at Price Waterhouse then, completely flipping the career script, became a model, walking runways from Paris to Milan to London. Modeling, she says, “was a bridge between what I didn’t want to do and what I eventually wanted to do … and I didn’t know what that was.”

By 1991, Hall was back stateside, living in Washington D.C., tending to her ailing mother and buying cookbooks and trying out recipes. Buoyed by rave reviews for food she made for a baby shower (buttermilk biscuits with smoked turkey, chess pie and sandwiches) for a local doctor, she launched the Lunch Basket, a company targeting the Black community with beefless and porkless recipes.

Culinary training followed (L’Academie de Cuisine in Gaithersburg, Maryland), along with several stints in area restaurants: an externship at the Henley Park Hotel where she was promoted to sous chef; executive chef at The State Plaza; director/executive chef at The Washington Club, a private social club. Hall started Alchemy Caterers in 2003 with a focus on using local products and infusing her classic French culinary training into comfort food.

“To me, comfort food doesn’t necessarily mean cornbread and collard greens,” she said. “I strive for ‘oompa,’ which is something memorable about the dish. Lots of people don’t like sweet peas. I think about what ingredient can I add that will make them sing. I add lemon zest, tarragon and butter to bring out more flavor.”

RELATED: Chopped Grand Champion Danielle Sanders Cooks from the Heart

As for whether she plans on returning to the reality show cooking circuit, Hall seems uninterested (she’s also an alum of the Food Network’s “Food Fight,” a since-canceled cooking series pitting two teams of chefs against each other and the clock using regional ingredients.)

“It [“Top Chef”] was something I did, but don’t see doing another competition. It was a jumping-off point, a really great experience and a stepping stone. I wanted to be competitive and I thought was. I realized that ultimately I’m competitive with myself.”

Trending Stories

  • Collard greens in a bowl
    CookingThe Secrets of Cooking Collard Greens Without Meat
  • Homesteading - Farmer or homesteader hands carrying food
    Climate + FoodCultivating Freedom Through Homesteading: Tips to Get Started and Reconnected
  • Omowale Enoch, founder of MOE's Delicacies in Canada
    Food & Drink, West African CuisineByBlacks Restaurant Week Returns With More Restaurants in Canada Showcasing Cultural Diversity
  • Wellness entrepreneur Dreka Gates
    Food & DrinkHow a Small Family Farm Became Wellness Entrepreneur Dreka Gates’s Oasis

Subscribe

Subscribe to The Weekly Dish and get the week’s top food stories delivered to our inbox each Thursday.


    Diaspora Food Stories Podcast

    Listen to global chefs, winemakers, farmers and more tell their stories in their own words.
    Listen to the Podcast

    Support Award-Winning Journalism

    Help Cuisine Noir deliver stories that honor Black food history, culture and traditions.

    Donate
    Donate on Paypal

    Related Articles

    Loading...
    Day coffee party at Condessa Coffee in Atlanta
    Featured Food & Drink

    A Coffee Party Movement is Brewing at Black-Owned Cafes

    Whip feta dip at Lulu's Winegarden in DC
    Food & Drink Travel

    7 Restaurants in DC Expanding the City’s Dining Scene According to Marcus Christon of Chow & Company

    Yes, Chef! contestants Julia Chebotar, Zain Ismail, Torrece 'Chef T' Gregoire, Petrina Peart
    Black Chefs Food & Drink

    Yes Chef! Contestants Reflect on Cooking Show Serving a Side of Self Help

    Cuisine Noir is an award-winning lifestyle media outlet dedicated to providing culturally-rich and factually reported stories that connect the African diaspora through food, drink and travel and celebrate Black food cultures.

    Facebook Instagram Pinterest Youtube

    About

    Our History
    Our Team
    Content Integrity
    Advertise with Us
    Photography Use
    Affiliate Links
    Donate to Our Work
    Privacy

    Subscribe

    Subscribe to The Weekly Dish to have award-winning food journalism delivered to your inbox each Thursday.


      Copyright© 2025 Cuisine Noir and The Global Food and Drink Initiative.
      Site by ACS Digital