THE NASTY BITS
Collected Varietal Cuts, Usable Trim, Scraps, and Bones
By ANTHONY BOURDAIN
BLOOMSBURY
Copyright © 2006
Anthony Bourdain
All right reserved.
ISBN: 1-58234-451-5
Contents
Preface................................................................................ix
SALTY
System D...............................................................................3
The Evildoers..........................................................................12
A Commencement Address Nobody Asked For................................................18
Food and Loathing in Las Vegas.........................................................22
Are You a Crip or a Blood?.............................................................37
Viva Mexico! Viva Ecuador!.............................................................42
Counter Culture........................................................................47
A Life of Crime........................................................................55
Advanced Courses.......................................................................64
SWEET
Name Dropping Down Under...............................................................69
My Manhattan...........................................................................75
Hard-core..............................................................................81
When the Cooking's Over (Turn Out the Lights, Turn Out the Lights).....................86
The Cook's Companions..................................................................95
China Syndrome.........................................................................102
No Shoes...............................................................................106
The Love Boat..........................................................................109
SOUR
Is Celebrity Killing the Great Chefs?..................................................125
What You Didn't Want to Know About Making Food Television..............................131
Warning Signs..........................................................................136
Madness in Crescent City...............................................................140
A View from the Fridge.................................................................143
Notes from the Road....................................................................149
The Dive...............................................................................154
BITTER
A Drinking Problem.....................................................................163
Woody Harrelson: Culinary Muse.........................................................166
Is Anybody Home?.......................................................................171
Bottoming Out..........................................................................176
Food Terrorists........................................................................179
Sleaze Gone By.........................................................................183
UMAMI
Pure and Uncut Luxury..................................................................191
The Hungry American....................................................................195
Decoding Ferrán Adrià..................................................................203
Brazilian Beach-Blanket Bingo..........................................................211
The Old, Good Stuff....................................................................224
Die, Die Must Try......................................................................231
A TASTE OF FICTION
A Chef's Christmas.....................................................................241
Commentary.............................................................................271
Chapter One
SYSTEM D
Débrouillard is what every
plongeur wants to be called. A
débrouillard is a man who, even when he is told to do the
impossible, will
se débrouiller-get it done somehow.
-George Orwell,
Down and Out in Paris and London
He was a master of the short cut, the easy way out, the System
D. D. stands for
de as in
débrouiller or
démerder-to extricate
... and to a hair (he) knew how to stay out of trouble. He was
a very skillful cook, and a very bad one.
-Nicolas Freeling,
The Kitchen
I STUMBLED ACROSS MY first reference to the mysterious and
sinister-sounding System D in Nicolas Freeling's wonderful
memoir of his years as a Grand Hotel cook in France. I knew
the word
débrouillard already, having enjoyed reading about the
concept of
se débrouiller or
se démerder in Orwell's earlier
account of his dishwashing/prep-cooking at the pseudonymous
Hotel "X" in Paris. But what sent chills down my spine and sent
me racing back to my weathered copies of both books was a
casual remark by my French sous-chef as he watched a busboy
repairing a piece of kitchen equipment with a teaspoon.
"Ahh ... Le System D!" he said with a smirk, and a warm
expression of recognition. For a moment, I thought I'd stumbled
across a secret society-a coven of warlocks, a subculture within
our subculture of chefs and cooks and restaurant lifers. I was
annoyed that what I had thought to be an ancient term from
kitchens past, a little bit of culinary arcanum, was in fact still in
use, and I felt suddenly threatened-as if my kitchen, my crew,
my team of talented throat slitters, fire starters, mercenaries, and
hooligans was secretly a hotbed of Trilateralists, Illuminati,
Snake Handlers, or Satan Worshippers. I felt left out. I asked,
"Did you say `System D'? What is `System D'?"
"Tu connais ... you know MacGyver?" replied my sous-chef
thoughtfully.
I nodded, flashing onto the idiotic detective series of years
back where the hero would regularly bust out of maximum-security
prisons and perform emergency neurosurgery using
nothing more than a paper clip and a gum wrapper.
"MacGyver!" pronounced my sous-chef, "
CA ... ca c'est
System D."
Whether familiar with the term or not, I have always assigned
great value to
débrouillards, and at various times in my career,
particularly when I was a line cook, I have taken great pride in
being one. The ability to think fast, to adapt, to improvise when
in danger of falling "in the weeds" or
dans la merde, even if a
little corner-cutting is required, has been a point of pride with me
for years. My previous sous-chef, Steven, a very talented cook
with a criminal mind, was a Grandmaster Débrouillard, a
Sergeant Bilko-like character who, in addition to being a superb
saucier, was fully versed in the manly arts of scrounging,
refrigeration repair, surreptitious entry, intelligence collection,
subornation, and the effortless acquisition of objects which did
not rightly belong to him. He was a very useful person to have
around. If I ran out of calves' liver or shell steaks in the middle of
a busy Saturday night, Steven could be counted on to slip out the
kitchen door and return a few moments later with whatever I
needed. Where he got the stuff I never knew. I only knew not to
ask. System D, to work right, requires a certain level of plausible
deniability.
I am always pleased to find historical precedent for my darker
urges. And in the restaurant business, where one's moods tend to
swing from near euphoria to crushing misery and back again at
least ten times a night, it's always useful to remember that my
crew and I are part of a vast and well-documented continuum
going back centuries. Why did this particular reference hold such
magic for me, though? I had to think about that. Why this
perverse pride in finding that my lowest, sleaziest moments of
mid-rush hackwork were firmly rooted in tradition, going back
to the French masters?
It all comes down to the old dichotomy, the razor's edge of
volume versus quality. God knows, all chefs want to make
perfect food. We'd
like to make sixty-five to seventy-five
absolutely flawless meals per night, every plate a reflection
of our best efforts, all our training and experience, only the
finest, most expensive, most seasonal ingredients available-and
we'd like to make a lot of money for our masters while we
do it. But this is the real world. Most restaurants can't charge a
hundred fifty bucks a customer for food alone. Sixty-five meals
a night (at least in
my place) means we'll all be out of work-and
fast. Two hundred fifty to three hundred meals a night is
more like it when you're talking about a successful New York
City restaurant and job security for your posse of well-paid
culinarians in the same breath. When I was the executive chef,
a few years ago, of a stadium-size nightclub/supper club near
Times Square, it often meant six and seven hundred meals a
night-a logistical challenge that called for skills closer to those
of an air-traffic controller or a military ordnance officer than
to those of a classically trained chef. When you're cranking out
that kind of volume, especially during the pretheater rush,
when everybody in the room expects to wolf down three
courses and dessert and
still be out the door in time to make
curtain for
Cats, you'd better be fast. They want that food.
They want it hot, cooked the way they asked, and they want it
soon. It may feel wonderfully fulfilling, putting one's best foot
forward, sweating and fiddling and wiping and sculpting
impeccable little spires of à-la-minute food for an adoring
dining public, but there is another kind of satisfaction: the
grim pride of the journeyman professional, the cook who's got
moves, who can kick ass on the line, who can
do serious
numbers, and "get through."
"How many'd we do?" is the question frequently asked at the
end of the shift, when the cooks collapse onto flour sacks and
milk crates and piles of dirty linen, smoking their cigarettes,
drinking their shift cocktails, and contemplating what kind of
felonious activity they will soon take part in during their afterwork
leisure hours. If the number is high (say three hundred fifty
dinners), and there have been few returns or customer complaints,
if only happy diners waddled satiated out the crowded
doorway to the restaurant, squeezing painfully past the incoming
mob-well, that's a statistic we can all appreciate and
understand. Drinks and congratulations are in order. We made
it through! We didn't fall into the weeds! We ran out of nothing!
What could be better? We not only served a monstrous number
of meals without a glitch, but we served them on time and in
good order. We avoided disaster. We brought honor and riches
to our clan.
And if it was a particularly brutal night, if the specter of
meltdown loomed near, if we just narrowly avoided the kind of
horror that occurs when the kitchen "loses it," if we managed to
just squeak through without taking major casualties-then all
the better. Picture the worst-case scenario: The saucier is getting
hit all night long. Everything ordered is coming off his station
instead of being spread around between broiler, middle, and
appetizer stations. The poor bastard is being pounded, constantly
in danger of falling behind, running out of
mise en place,
losing his mind. Nothing is worse in a situation like this than that
terrible moment when a line cook looks up at the board, scans
the long line of fluttering dinner orders, and sees only incomprehensible
cuneiform, Sanskrit-like chicken scratches that to his
shriveled, dehydrated, poached, and abused brain mean nothing
at all. He's "lost it" ... he's
dans la merde now ... and because
kitchen work requires a great deal of coordination and teamwork,
he could take the whole line down with him.
But if you're lucky enough to have a well-oiled machine
working for you-a bunch of hardcore, ass-kicking, name-taking
dérouillards on the payroll-the chances of catastrophe
are slim in the extreme. Old-school
cholos, assasinos,
vato locos,
veterans of many kitchens like my cooks, they know what to do
when there's no space left on the stove for
another sauté pan.
They know how to bump closed a broiler or shut a refrigerator
door when their hands are full. They know when to step into
another cook's station-and, more importantly,
how to do it-without
that station becoming a rugby match of crushed toes
and sharp elbows. They know how to sling dirty pots twenty-five
feet across the kitchen so that they drop neatly into the pot
sink without disfiguring the dishwasher.
It's when the orders are pouring in and the supplies are
running low and the tempers are growing thin that one sees
System D practiced at its highest level. Hot water heater explodes?
No sweat. Just push the rillettes over and start boiling
water,
carnale. Run out of those nice square dinner plates for the
lobster spring rolls? No problem. Dummy up a new presentation
and serve on the round plates. We know what to do. Meat
grinder broken? It's steak tartare cut by hand,
papi. Few things
are more beautiful to me than a bunch of thuggish, heavily-tattooed
line cooks moving around each other like ballerinas on
a busy Saturday night. Seeing two guys who'd just as soon cut
each other's throats in their off hours moving in unison with
grace and ease can be as uplifting as any chemical stimulant or
organized religion.
At times like these, under fire, in battlefield conditions, the
kitchen reverts to what it has always been since Escoffier's time:
a
brigade, a paramilitary unit, in which everyone knows what
they have to do, and how to do it. Officers make fast and
necessarily irrevocable decisions, and damn the torpedoes if it
isn't the best decision. There's no time to dither, to waffle, to
ponder, to empathize when there's incoming fire threatening to
bring the whole kitchen and dining room crashing down. Move
forward! Take that hill! Forced out of expediency to lose that
cute herbal garnish on the Saddle of Lamb en Crépinette? It's a
shame-but we'll cry about it later, at the after-action reporting,
when we're all comfortably sucking down late-night sushi
together and drinking iced sake or vodka shots at some chef-friendly
joint. Right now it's System D time, bro'-and there's
no time for that bouquet of herbs. There's the fish to contend
with, and one of the runners just fell down the stairs and broke
his ankle, and they need forks on table number seven, and that
twelve-top arrived late and is eating up half the dining room
while they linger over cognacs, and the customers waiting by the
bar and shivering in the street are starting to get that angry,
haunted look you see in lynch mobs and Liberian militia who've
spent too much time in the jungle. Running out of arugula?
Substitute mâche for Chrissakes! Fluff it out with spinach,
watercress ...
anything green!
At times like these, even one heroic practitioner of System D
can save the day, step in and turn the tide. One guy can make the
difference between another successful Saturday night and total
chaos. We can go home laughing about all we endured, feeling
good about ourselves, talking about the bus that
didn't hit us
instead of slinking out the door quietly, mulling over
la puta
vida, muttering half-formed recriminations.
Now, I've heard and seen some very fine chefs sneer at The
System. "I would
never do that," they say, when told of some
culinary outrage performed in another kitchen. "Never!" they
insist, with all the assurance of an officer on the prewar Maginot
Line. But when the Hun starts pouring over the wall, and there's
no fire support, and the rear guard is in full retreat-these same
chefs are often the first guys to commit food crimes that even the
most pragmatic practitioner of System D would never (okay,
almost never) do.
Fast well-done steak? I've watched French grads of three-star
kitchens squeeze the blood out of filet mignons with their full
body weight, turning a medium to well in seconds. I've watched
in horror as chefs have hurled beautiful chateaubriands into the
deep-fat fryer, microwaved veal chops, thinned sauce with the
brackish greasy water in the steam table. And when it gets busy?
Everything that falls on the floor, amazingly, falls "right on the
napkin." Let me tell you-that's one mighty big napkin.
System D, arguably, reached its heyday in the Victorian-era
railway hotels, where the menus were huge and it was not
unusual for an extra two hundred guests to show up wanting,
say, the Fricassee of Lobster Thermidor-for which only fifty
portions were ever available. Suddenly, Thermidor for fifty was
transformed into Thermidor for two hundred. Don't ask how.
You don't want to know. It is possible that the system began
with the ever-changing requirements of volume cookery, only to
be perpetuated by subsequent generations as the golden age of
mammoth hotels began to wane and the enormous dining halls
and banquet facilities of days past were faced with the necessity
of serving grande luxe-style meals and bloated menus with ever-shrinking
staffs and more stringent economizing. I suspect that
some of the classic dishes of that era reflect System D philosophy,
particularly the efforts to get more bang from limited
ingredients. Potage Mongole, for instance, allowed a chef to
take a little pea soup and a little tomato soup, combine them,
and come up with a third menu selection. New York's fabled
Delmonico's offered, at one time, a staggering array of soups,
numbering over a hundred. One can only assume that not all of
those were made individually and from scratch every day.
Parsimonious and forward-thinking Frenchmen-already inclined
to make the most of humble (read
cheap) ingredients,
utilized every scrap of stock meat, hoof, snout, tongue, organs,
creating dishes that are now popular stand-alone and frequently
expensive favorites, ordered on their own merits, rather than
served as cleverly disguised by-products.
The traditional bistros that grew up around Les Halles, Paris's
central marketplace, were fertile ground for hotel-trained cooks
and chefs to take System D to even more extreme lengths. They
had limited space to work with, most had limited capital, and the
markets-whence came their clientele-generated huge amounts
of what might have been considered unpalatable foodstuffs. If
you're stocking your larder from a place proudly named The
Tripe Pavillion, you tend to develop a cuisine heavy on
boudins,
tête de porc, confit of ears, stomach lining, shanks, pâtés, and
galantines. Don't take my word for it. Read Orwell, or Freeling,
or Zola's masterful
Belly of Paris; nothing I've said here or will
ever say approaches the terrifying accounts of mishandled food,
criminally misrepresented menu items, marginal sanitation practices,
and dubious sources of supply in these classic accounts.
Orwell describes working ankle deep in garbage and outgoing
dinners in one such establishment-and this was by no means a
slophouse. Even today, French veterans of bistro cooking are
masters of System D, inured as they are to working in tiny
kitchens with dollhouse-size ranges, producing ten or twelve
menu items despite access to only minimal storage, refrigeration,
and work area, with a
plongeur bumping them from behind.
Work with some of these folks, even in the relatively roomy
kitchens of Manhattan, and you're likely to see a number of
practices they definitely do
not teach at culinary school.
Of course, expediency is one thing. Laziness is another. I hate,
for instance, to see a cook "sear, slice, and flash," where instead
of searing, say, a gigot, then finishing to proper doneness in the
oven, he'll sear the outside of the mat, slice it nearly raw, then
color the slices under the salamander. I've seen jammed-up
cooks searing lamb, beef, and duck simultaneously-all in the
same pan. I hate that too. And instead of reducing and mounting
sauces to order, in a clean pot each time, some cooks keep a
veritable petri dish of reducing sauce festering on a back burner,
adding unreduced sauce as needed until the pot is a crusty,
horrible abomination of oversalted, scorched, and bitter swill.
Not for me, thanks-and not in my kitchen. The microwave was
a blessing to full-time System D experts. I've seen veterans of
three-star kitchens throw absolutely raw, unseared
côte de boeuf
for two into a microwave oven, presumably to "warm it up" to
cut cooking time!
(Continues...)
Excerpted from THE NASTY BITS
by ANTHONY BOURDAIN
Copyright © 2006 by Anthony Bourdain.
Excerpted by permission.
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