From Gail's blog: "And then there’s Hung. Headstrong, resolute, defiant, provocative. Call him what you will but you cannot deny his talent in the kitchen. More than anyone on the show, Hung has been consistent and the most sophisticated in his cooking from the first day on set. Our finale meal at the top of Aspen Mountain proved this more than ever. We ate so well that night and were thrilled with the performances from all our finalists, but while Dale and Casey served us a roller coaster of flavors and ideas (some delicious, some questionable), Hung took us for a smooth, yet exhilarating ride."
This says it all. Hung is consistent. Almost always in the top half (save for Latin food and even then not really at the bottom), able to shift gears between crowd pleasers and whimsy, and, probably most importantly, always with a clear sense of purpose. I know many here have cooked in professional kitchens. I have and I can say that of the final 3 I would, based solely on TC, line up to work for Hung and neither of the others, though I'm guessing Dale is a good leader given a normal environment. He never would have been pegged for Trio otherwise. Look at the contrast in what is shown of the three contestants in the prep time. Hung was the only one with a clear and confident plan, proper personnel deployment, and better skills than those around him. Think of what you may have read about prepairing for dinner service by the likes of Bourdain... you are repairing for battle, gathering ammo, and digging fox holes. Do you want the lieutenant that is thinking possibly a grenade here will be nice but oh wait we have a bazooka!? Or do you want the one that says, "Soldier, here is where we attack, these are the supplies you all need...follow me!"?
I have read a lot of folks saying that Hung still did not present his flavors. First off, none of us tasted it so we don't know for sure. However, given the (relatively limited) knowledge I have about cooking, I sure saw a picture of a chef in that dinner based on choice and technique alone. Even if you take the questionable stance that he should cook "ethnic" food somehow and that should define his "flavor", it sure looked to me like he incorporated elements of his culinary ethnicity into his dishes. The cooking of Vietnam tends to be light and vibrant. Hung did not and should not have had to drop off a big bowl of pho or the like to show his flavor. He incorporated the
spirit of his ethnic cuisine in his dishes. No big and heavy proteins, no overwrought plates, and no conflicting elements.
Ultimately it comes back to two things. First, the chef does not (and probably should not) be the cooks best friend. He has to be their leader and their boss. He is the person with the plan. Also, to those who say the things like knife skills and such aren't important if what you are mostly doing is menu planning, purchasing, and scheduling, I say you are just wrong. No line cook will respect any up and coming chef if they can work faster and cleaner than they guy they are supposed to follow. An old established chef, sure... they made their bones... but not the folks on TC. Simple fact is that being chef entitles you to fire some one but it does not entitle you to respect. In a professional kitchen butting out two clean and spot on plates in the time it takes the guy next to you to put out one? That is respect.
Secondly and finally I'll go back to what Gail mentioned in her blog... it is all about consistency. I worked for a very successful chef in Connecticut that, on every new hire's first day asked them, "Why is McDonald's successful? The food is not very good yet they are a billion dollar company." The answer of course is consistency. You know what you are going to get. I don't much eat a McDonald's but you know that, in a pinch, you won't starve or get sick and that is enough for many people. In high end cuisine, the formula is not very different. Food is a business. Despite all the emotion and sense appeal you still need to make a profit. People talk about a single bad dish far more that 5 good ones. I think we all know that. If it were your dollars do you want the guy that has some spectacular dishes and some terrible ones or the guy that does very good dishes all the time and an occasional great one? Those who think of of the other folks should have one, would you put your cash on the line with them? If it were my $100K, it would go to Hung in a second.