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Crude Conversations

Chatter Marks EP 126 Cooking Alaska with Kevin Lane

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

4.9152 Ratings

🗓️ 26 January 2026

⏱️ 89 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kevin Lane is the executive chef and co-owner of The Cookery and The Lone Chicharron Taqueria in Seward, and he was recently named as a James Beard Award semifinalist. Reflecting on that recognition, he says it wouldn’t have been possible without his team at The Cookery, or the kitchens and crews from his past that shaped the way he cooks today. Those roots stretch back to California’s Sacramento area, where he was raised on crockpot meals, black-eyed peas, and lentil stew, before he found his way into kitchens in San Diego. Around nineteen, he was eating street tacos, shucking oysters, and learning the pace of restaurant life — first on the cold oyster bar, then on the hotline, where teamwork and discipline took root. Those early experiences still show up in his food today — the steady presence of Mexican influence, the belief that cooking is ultimately about making people happy, and he’s still shucking oysters.  He was still early in his career when he moved to Juneau to work as a Sous Chef. There, and later in Sitka, he recognized the realities of Alaska’s food system, how kitchens relied heavily on frozen and canned goods because they were dependable. Orders had to be placed seven to ten days out, and even then, fresh vegetables and herbs might arrive frozen and mushy. It was a lot different from working in California, where you could order produce in the morning and expect it that afternoon. The learning curve was steep, but learning to adapt is what good cooks do. So, given Alaska’s abundance of fresh seafood, he adjusted his cooking and learned to let fish become the focus. And now that there’s more access to farm-fresh produce than ever before, the constraints that once defined cooking in Alaska have eased, expanding what’s possible on a menu.

Transcript

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0:00.0

When someone says, you know, what kind of restaurant do you have?

0:15.5

It's like, ah, well, what kind of restaurant do we have?

0:18.1

Like, it's an oyster bar.

0:21.0

We have an oyster bar and we're a seafood restaurant,

0:23.4

but a lot of times people, you think a seafood restaurant,

0:26.7

they think of like fish and chips.

0:28.7

They think of grilled salmon and stuff like that.

0:32.3

But, you know, are we a Mexican restaurant?

0:37.0

Are we a type of cuisine?

0:39.7

New American, I guess, or like you had said, New Alaskan, can we call ourselves that?

0:43.8

I don't know.

0:44.8

And do we want to pigeonhole herself into something?

0:47.5

So I think that's one of the struggles I have a lot is kind of, okay, where are we going?

0:53.5

What's our focus? What are we doing we serve great

0:56.0

wines we have a fun wine menu like is that where we want to go is you know wine pairings and all

1:00.4

of that um and then you try to balance that of like okay i want to be focused on this one particular

1:06.4

thing but is that going to appeal to a broad enough customer base to pay the bills to bring enough

1:12.9

people in to pay the bills?

1:14.4

Because now, you know, it's a full service restaurant and a pretty good size one.

1:19.8

You need to bring enough butts into the seats to pay the bills.

1:24.8

That was chef Kevin Lane.

1:27.9

He's the executive chef and co-owner of the cookery and the lone Cheecherone Toccaria in Seward.

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