Victoria Blamey

A native of Santiago, Chile, Blamey was a student of history until she course-corrected into the professional kitchen, leaving university to attend the International School of Culinary Studies in Santiago. Though she came to cooking relatively late, Blamey immediately set her sights on the rarefied air of fine-dining, and was especially drawn to Michelin-lauded, tasting-menu restaurants. With that mission in mind, in 2004, Blamey took a position at the two-Michelin-star The Vineyard at Stockcross, under Chef John Campbell, then moved to Melbourne, Australia, as Chef de Partie at Interlude, the first restaurant in the country to offer a degustation menu.

In 2007, Blamey took her self-styled education to the next level, staging at one of the most acclaimed restaurants in the world, Chef Andoni Luis Adruiz’s Mugaritz, in San Sebastian, Spain. She distinguished herself at the fish station, so much so that upon completion of her stage, the restaurant offered her a full-time position. It was a galvanizing experience, igniting in Blamey a sense of creative ambition and clarity that she followed to stages at Wylie Dufresne’s WD-50 in New York City, and ABaC in Barcelona at both restaurants, she devoted most of her time to pastry, which demanded technical precision while also providing additional visual inspiration.

In 2010, she began a run of kitchen positions at some of the most exciting and lauded modern restaurants in the United States working with some of its most visionary and accomplished chefs: as Chef de Partie for Paul Liebrandt at Corton in 2010; as Sous Chef to Chef Matt Lightner (an acquaintance from Mugaritz) at Atera in 2011; then back to Corton in the prized position of Chef de Cuisine. She then shifted gears for a few years, working as both Sous Chef and Chef de Cuisine to Chef Justin Smillie at Il Buco Alimentari e Vinieri and Upland, before opening Chumley’s as Executive Chef.

At New York City’s Chumley’s where she was chef from the restaurant’s re-opening in 2016, through late 2017, she drew the attention and affirmation of some of the top critics in the United States. Esquire magazine declared the restaurant one of the best new dining destinations in the country. And the New York Times’ Wells credited Blamey with reigniting the century-old bar declaring that, “Ms. Blamey cooked tavern food never before seen in any tavern on this planet,” and dubbing her “a chef worth following.”

In 2019 Chef Blamey now leads the famed 35 year old Gotham Bar & Grill.