“I would call my cooking New American cuisine,” Maho says. “I like touching on different cultures and flavors from around the world, from places I’ve visited and experienced with my better half and taste tester Peggy Gilday … It’s interesting for chefs to be able to try new things — to combine flavors and styles and use the ingredients that are in season. Customers enjoy that variety too.”
After culinary school, Maho ended up back in New York City working in restaurants and for a caterer.
Then, he landed a job as the executive chef for an investment firm’s dining operation.
“It was unbelievably rewarding as a chef,” Maho says. “I worked five days a week. I had weekends and holidays off. I still had time to enjoy life.”
But, like many New Yorkers, Maho’s world changed abruptly after Sept. 11, 2001. He had two young sons at the time of the attacks, and suddenly, New York felt like a scary, inhospitable place to raise a family. A friend had been telling Maho to come to Jackson for years, and after a two-week vacation in the Tetons, Maho made up his mind. One year after the attacks, Maho moved his family west and started his business, Maho Catering.
Fast forward 20 years and Maho Catering is a Jackson favorite that’s routinely recognized by the annual Best of Jackson Hole awards. And for good reason — Maho’s cooking style is adventurous and his daily visits to the market with his grandmother set the groundwork for a habit he continues today. He likes to see what is available from local farmers and ranchers or visit regional farmers markets, and then come up with ideas of what to cook.
This reliance on fresh food results in a frequently changing menu and a penchant for combining flavors in unusual ways. A sophisticated palate may detect flavors from China, Italy, and the Middle East in his creations, but often people don’t notice the specific influences he’s incorporated into a particular dish, so perfectly does Maho blend flavors into something uniquely his own.
Maho’s sense of adventure in the kitchen spills into his lifestyle — he’s a skier who likes to race in local downhill events, and, like most people in Jackson, he loves being outside and pushing himself as hard as he can. One of his sons, Henry, has followed in his footsteps and is pursuing ski racing in college. The other, Lucas, has a knack for the arts like his grandparents and is studying theater.
For the Hakoshimas, it’s all in the family.