Subtitles section Play video
-
You know what it takes to be a cook in L.A.?
-
self-sacrifice
-
I left Virginia to come to L.A. because there's a certain energy that
-
translates to the food scene here that I haven't found anywhere else.
-
I work at Mélisse, which is a 2 Michelin star French fine-dining restaurant in Santa Monica, California,
-
and it's one of the best restaurants in L.A.
-
Working on the line in the kitchen is like composing a symphony.
-
It really is.
-
It's almost like each dish is like, one is the violins, one is the cello, one is the keyboard, and another is the drums.
-
My first job in the kitchen was when I was 16.
-
I was a dishwasher.
-
And that was before I even knew I wanted to cook.
-
I was just a kid looking for a job.
-
After I started working there and just seeing something simple as salad being plated, it kind of drew me in.
-
I'm like, I'll say this is pretty amazing.
-
As sous-chef at Mélisse, I have to go to the farmer's market first thing in the morning,
-
pick up produce, go back to the restaurant, disperse it to the staff, and then we start prepping.
-
We have to get fish deboned, tomatoes concasséd, sauces simmering.
-
All this has to ready before service at 6 o'clock.
-
Fire, menu prawns, menu truffle pasta, two menu seasonal, followed by menu duck: medium rare.
-
Yes, Chef.
-
Working in the kitchen is one of the hardest jobs I've had in my life.
-
You're under this, like, constant stress.
-
And on top of that, you're working long hours, you're on your feet all day.
-
And it's just completely physically and mentally straining.
-
And most people can't handle it.
-
But I love it.
-
See how beautiful that looks? Then we sear it off nicely.
-
It also protects halibut being so delicate.
-
It helps protect the flesh.
-
Chef Josiah Citrin is one of the most renowned and respected chefs in L.A.
-
And it was only natural that I'd wanna come work for him.
-
He's almost like the epitome of an old-school French chef relocated in the U.S.
-
He has that passion, that drive, and intensity that you come to expect from great chefs like himself.
-
One day I was in the kitchen, and I was scrambling eggs, and this memory kicked back to me, about,
-
from my grandmother, and how she taught me how to properly scramble eggs when I was a little kid.
-
And she was explaining how you use a spoon to stir it and cook it really gently so that the texture comes out nice.
-
And it's actually a classical French way of cooking and I have a Southern grandmother.
-
It was kind of weird.
-
And, it was like little moments like that, that I think back that kind of directed me to cooking that I didn't really realize until now.
-
If you wanna be a chef, you can't wait around for someone to hand it to you.
-
You almost have to take it.
-
Hosting pop-up dinners has given me and my friend Gary a chance to not only showcase our skills,
-
but to do what we were trained to do, be a chef.
-
For the oyster dish, I was thinking, right, we have those nice clear bowls.
-
We'll put the garnish in the middle and then pour the gazpacho so it comes like two thirds of the way up.
-
I brought a fish tank bubbler, and instead of making foam with the frother, let's do bubbles.
-
- And we'll just drop right that on top. - Exactly.
-
I just want to thank everyone for coming out tonight.
-
As you know, we're just cooks when it boils down to it.
-
That's our life.
-
This is what we do.
-
This is what we love to do on our free time.
-
We just spent our last few off days preparing this for you, and we had a lot of fun doing it.
-
So, cheers to the night!
-
Thank you, Chef!
-
I always have this sense of satisfaction and almost comfort in knowing that something I served pleased someone else.
-
And I think that's what most cooks thrive on.