Daily dispatches on the Washington, DC area's food, restaurant and dining scene.
|
How Anthony Bourdain Cures a Hangover—and Other Scraps of Wisdom
By
Ann Limpert
Published Friday, November 09, 2007
“I’m sorry to say I might be in love with you,” a woman says, leaning into the microphone. She’s the second (seemingly) rational person in ten minutes to publicly declare her affections to Anthony Bourdain, the silver-haired chef with the hips of a 13-year-old girl and the mouth of Keith Richards.
Despite his undying hatred of celebrity-chef culture, Bourdain, still affiliated with French bistro chainlet Les Halles, has reached Emeril-like levels of popularity. Tickets to what was essentially a book-promo talk on Wednesday night sold for $28 a pop, and most of the 1,490 seats at Lisner Auditorium were full. Known best for Kitchen Confidential, his best-selling 2001 exposé on the knife-flinging, drug-addled subculture of restaurant kitchens, Bourdain now eats his way around the world for Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations, his show on the Travel Channel. (A picture-heavy book based on the series was just released.)
Though Bourdain has long given up heroin (“the most interesting thing about me”), recently kicked his chain-smoking habit (“Pardon me," he hacked. "My lungs are for s---”), and just became a new husband and dad (sorry, gals), he’s still a culinary badass who can coax whooping cheers from a roomful of buttoned-down foodies with proclamations like this: “Who is Cat Cora?! Did they grow her in a petri dish?” Read on for more of his musings.
On the Washington food scene: “It’s getting good, clearly. Michel Richard is one of the great chefs in the country, far and away. José [Andrés] is a giant. And Scott Bryan popping up in Virginia and Eric Ripert sneaking into town—that’s good.”
On Ben’s Chili Bowl: I didn’t make it to Ben’s last night [after the Capital Food Fight], but I’m a fan of any ground meats of indeterminate substance. . . . It’s happy food for me.”
On dealing with his child’s inevitable cravings for McDonald’s: “If you wrap liver or broccoli in a McDonald’s wrapper, your kid will like it more. I’m thinking chocolate-dipped steel wool. I look forward to issuing that propaganda. Have I mentioned the Colonel? They found some kids in his basement freezer.”
Food trend he’d most like to see go away: “Molecular gastronomy. So serious and painful. If you’re using laser beams and printing edible menus, get over yourself. Unless you’re Ferran [Adria].”
His sure-fire hangover cure: “Roll a really good joint and huff that before you get out of bed. Then have a cold Coca-Cola. Then have something like cold Kung Pao chicken or some very spicy leftovers. The trilogy of opulence.”
On the inner workings of Top Chef, on which he was a judge: “Judges are totally isolated from the chefs. They’re really careful. Those guys live in a gulag—no TV, no Internet, no cookbooks. The worst food of the week gets you kicked off. It’s not ‘She’s blond with a nice rack—good for ratings.’ It doesn’t work that way.
On the outcome of the last season of Top Chef: “Hung richly deserved to win. Not even close. Who cares that he didn’t help clean up the truffle oil? How many nice-guy chefs do you know?”
On the Barefoot Contessa, Ina Garten: “She knows how to cook. Her mashed potatoes are dead-on professional. I can’t believe she’s still on [the Food Network].”
On Nigella Lawson: “I love Nigella, tearing off hunks of fatty pork. I was at dinner with Nigella and a bunch of guys, and we were all trying to out-macho each other, like ‘I’ve eaten a live cobra heart!’ Nigella has been rubbing her lips and says, ‘When I was in Spain, they aborted a pig for me and roasted the fetus. Soooo good.”
On Sandra Lee: “Charles Manson and Betty Crocker’s love child. She gets that glassy Squeaky Fromme look when she’s talking about her tablescapes. I want to call security.”
His favorite food-movie moment: “ The Ratatouille epiphany scene. It’s the best food movie ever made. It’s amazing that it took an animated rat to get chefs right.”
His advice to vegetarians: “Try bacon. It’s the gateway protein.”
His advice to a poor, Pop-Tart- and Cocoa Puff- eating GW student: “Smoke less weed, man.”
|
Comments
No one tells it like it is in a real professional kitchen- no one but Tony. And no one could do it so eloquently. His books made me realize after cooking for ten years that I could be a writer and a chef; that I didn’t have to pick between the two.
Posted by: bexter, Dec 10, 2009 10:01:25 PM
Tony,
You have shown me that there can be a life without opiates. I have been clean for six months. Your show and books have inspired me to live the life I live now.
Thank you.
Posted by: tcolorado, Jun 15, 2009 05:23:48 PM
Does anyone know when the show about DC will be shown?
Thanks.
Posted by: Lily, Jan 08, 2009 06:32:19 AM
Where do I start. I listened to the Santa Cruz Sentinel Podcast today. The degree of extreme articulation that AB expresses his dream life leaves me awestruck. He is truly living the life I wish I had. My only regret is that the Beirut show was not discussed. I realize it may be old news, but for me, that was the most phenom thing I’d ever seen done by AB.
Ellen
Posted by: Ellen, Nov 17, 2007 05:22:39 PM
Love the comments Bourdain made, most of them are dead on. I too can not stand Sandra Lee. Keep on truckin Tony.
Posted by: Chef Scott Wallett Jr., Nov 15, 2007 04:54:14 PM
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR JUST BEING YOU, I LOVE YA MAN FROM THE BOTTOM OF MY HEART. I DON’T MISS YOUR SHOW FOR ANYTHING
Posted by: OLIVIA MARTINEZ, Nov 14, 2007 11:26:33 AM
You missed Tony’s awesome comeback to the girl you referenced in the lede: "Your affections are misplaced."
Posted by: Arjewtino, Nov 09, 2007 01:40:06 PM
|
Post a comment
Feel free to leave a comment or ask a question. Because of the prevalence of spam, we ask that you fill out the code in the image below to help us eliminate spam comments. By posting here, you affirm that you are 13 years of age or older. Washingtonian.com reserves the right to remove or edit content once posted.
|
|
Who needs a stinkin’ significant other anyway? Here’s a list of parties where all the single ladies (and gentlemen) can party this Valentine’s Day weekend—and where you might even find your next soulmate.
more
|