Background
Scott Peacock was born and grew up in Hartford, Alabama.
Scott Peacock was born and grew up in Hartford, Alabama.
Southern Cooking and Gulf Coast seafood were his earliest culinary influences. Food was picked, cooked, and eaten fresh. He also developed a love for French cooking through Julia Child"s popular television series and decided to pursue a career as a chef.
Peacock began his career as pastry chef at Tallahassee’s The Golden Pheasant.
From there he moved to the Georgia governor’s mansion where he worked for two governors over four years. Shortly thereafter, a national magazine planned to feature one of his menus, and he sought the advice of the doyenne of Southern cooking, Edna Lewis, an African-American chef who moved to New York from Virginia and had become a legend in culinary circles.
Mission Lewis advised Peacock to cook something Southern. Thus began not only a successful redefinition of Southern cuisine, but a lasting friendship and collaboration.
Following his years at the governor’s mansion, Scott Peacock became the founding chef of Atlanta’s Horseradish Grill.
From there he moved to Watershed restaurant, also in Atlanta, which was co-owned by Emily Saliers of the Indigo Girls, and others He left Watershed in 2010 to devote his time to writing and documentary film. Collaboration with Edna Lewis Scott Peacock and Edna Lewis first met in the late 1980s.
Their mutual devotion to and appreciation of Southern cooking led to a deep bond.
Together they wrote The Gift of Southern Cooking (Knopf, 2003). Lewis spent the last six years of her life living at Peacock’s Decatur, Georgia home.
As Peacock remarked, “She’s my best friend. The least of what I’ve learned from her has to do with cooking.”.