| A Bite of Baltimore |
| An interview series with Baltimore area chefs and restaurant owners |
Edward
"Sonny"
Sweetman
III
Owner/Chef
-
Abacrombie
For Chef
Sonny
Sweetman,
an after
school
job 19
years
ago at
the
Harryman
House
Restaurant
in his
hometown
of
Reisterstown,
Maryland,
marked
the
beginning
of his
lifelong
love of
food and
the
culinary
arts.
Chef
Sonny’s
passion
for
cooking
flourished
during
his
stint at
Rudy's
2900 in
Finksburg,
Maryland,
and in
2003, he
was
ready to
open his
own
establishment.
Abacrombie
Fine
Food and
Accommodations
is an
inn with
12
beautifully
appointed
rooms
and a
very
charming
and
elegant
restaurant
on the
ground
level.
As
described
in
numerous
glowing
reviews,
Abacrombie
and its
unique
menu
provide
a truly
unforgettable
dining
experience.
What and
where
did you
eat last
night?
Rainforest
Café. A
burger.
What
food
reminds
you of
childhood?
Peanut
butter.
Do
you have
a
favorite
snack
food?
Granola
bars.
What’s
your
favorite
comfort
food?
Mashed
potatoes.
What
food
makes
you
think of
holidays?
Turkey.
What is
your
favorite
foreign
cuisine?
Thai.
Iced tea
or
coffee?
Coffee.
Scrapple:
love it
or hate
it?
Love
it.
Who’s
your
favorite
TV chef?
Alton
Brown.
What
would
you have
for your
final
meal?
As many
courses
as I
could
get.
Favorite
indulgence?
Cooking.
What’s
the most
memorable
meal
you’ve
ever
had?
Pig’s
Trotter
at The
Oak
Room,
Marco
Pierre
White,
Hotel
Meridien,
London.
What is
your
most
used
cookbook?
The
Professional
Chef
by
Culinary
Institute
of
America.
How do
you
think
the
Baltimore
restaurant
scene
has
changed?
It is
getting
more
commercial.
Where do
you see
the
Baltimore
restaurant
scene
headed?
Toward a
sea of
brand
names.
When you
opened
your
restaurant,
what do
you
think it
offered
Baltimoreans
that
they
didn’t
already
have?
An
option
to let
me cook
for
them, no
menu.
I’ll
cook as
many
courses
as the
guest
wants.
It may
sound
strange
at
first,
but try
it. It
is like
having a
romantic
meal or
dinner
party,
but we
clean up
the
mess.
What
ingredients
are you
using a
lot of
right
now?
Vegetables
and
meats.
Are
there
any
ingredients
that you
tend to
avoid?
None.
Do
you cook
often at
home?
No.
What
foods/ingredients
could
you not
live
without?
Water,
flour,
soybeans.
Where do
you eat
in
Baltimore?
Corks,
Bicycle,
Paper
Moon.
When it
comes to
food,
what do
you
think
makes
Baltimore
special?
The food
in
Baltimore
is not
special.
It’s
what
happens
to the
food
when you
handle
it
properly
and mix
it with
some
great
guests,
service,
and
atmosphere
that can
make
Baltimore
food
special.
It’s the
memories.
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