Kitchen Love Stories
By
Ann Limpert
Romance can be tough when you're a chef.
How do you keep love alive when you work long hours and come home smelling like garlic? In honor of Valentine's Day--one of the busiest nights in restaurant kitchens--we talked to married couples who cook together. Aaron Zimmer, sous chef, and Jewel Zimmer, pastry chef, at CityZen in DC's Mandarin Oriental hotel. How did you meet? Aaron: We were working at La Folie in San Francisco. I was a cook; Jewel did the pastries. Jewel: I got deported back to Canada. Aaron sold everything he owned, and we moved to Italy for a year--cooking in a little town in Tuscany. We got engaged there. What was your wedding like? Aaron: We had a small wedding in St. Helena, California, at a friend's restaurant, Tra Vigne. A classic Italian wedding feast. Our friend brought white truffles. The sommelier gave us free range of the wine cellar. My family owns a fish company and sent a kilo of their best caviar--split among 14 people. Your honeymoon? Jewel: We went to Thailand. We took cooking classes. What's it like working together? Aaron: There's a flow between us. I don't get angry when Jewel's in a bad mood. She might not be very nice, but I know she's stressed. It's the same the other way around. The first time we'd ever worked apart--that was the hardest two years. Jewel: We come as a pair. Otherwise we wouldn't have a relationship for sure. Susan Scheffler and Louis Nickell, co-owners and chefs at Nickell's & Scheffler in Old Town Alexandria. When did you meet? Susan: A friend introduced us at the Culinary Institute of America. We're both career changers, so we're older than the typical people starting out at CIA. Louis: We were both focused on school. Nothing happened until we ended up working at the Marriott in Bethesda. I was in the kitchen and Susan was wearing a black tuxedo as a management trainee. Where was your first date? Susan: The Iwo Jima memorial. I asked him. Louis: We sat down and four hours later we'd told each other our life stories. We walked and walked and ended up at an Ethiopian restaurant. Susan: When the guy walked through with the roses, he got me a rose. What's your favorite romantic spot? Susan: We love Euro Bistro in Herndon--the chef is Louie's mentor. When we were courting we loved Bistro 123 in Vienna. And 1789, in front of the fireplace. The challenges of working with your spouse? Susan: It's hard to have two chefs in the kitchen. Louie, having grown up in Hawaii, likes to go in an Asian way. I like to go in a French or Southern way. Louis: It tends to lead to some good ideas. Susan: I wanted to work with Louie. I waited a long time to get married. I'm making up for all the years I wasn't married to him--compressing it.
|
|
Robust gyros, kebabs, and other Greek specialties.
more
For this week's edition of Attack on the Street, we wanted to know: What special talent do you have?
more
|