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JB: Your show, “Notes on Creativity,” draws inspiration from several disciplines. Outside of food, what inspires you?
FA: Everything. It depends on the moment. What you’re looking for. What you’re not looking for. You could be walking around an airport and get an idea. We all get ideas. e point is whether you bring them to fruition. And whether it has any important consequences or not, whether it has in uence.
JB: What surprises you about American food?
FA: In 2002, I was one of the rst saying that American food was going to be very important, but no one in Europe was thinking it then. It’s logical that the richest country in the world would one day have a very important cuisine. What’s di erent here is that it wasn’t where an old civilization started. at makes it very di erent than other places. It’s a mix of civilizations. When you’re in Spain there’s a mix also, but there are certain things that are part of an old civilization. America is de ning itself as it goes along, relative to cooking. It’s almost easier to understand contemporary American cooking than it is to understand traditional American cooking.
JB: What advice would you give a home cook?
FA: Cook logically. ey should do what they can do and not try to do more than that. Simple things. ere are lots of wonderful things that are simple. Use the healthy products that are available and ready made. You don’t have to obsess about making every single component for yourself at home. Within your budget and what you can a ord to buy, buy the best quality products.
JB: Do you have time to cook at home and if so, what do you like to cook?
FA: Chefs are always cooking at restaurant kitchens. ey are never cooking at home. Cooking at home is to do it every day. Really having to cook at home. One or two days a month perhaps you make something clever, but you’re not usually cooking at home.
JB: Do you ever eat anything bad, like go to McDonalds?
FA: Food on airplanes is sometimes just as bad as McDonalds. Not to demonize all of it. Sometimes at the end of the day it depends on everyone’s nancial resources and what they have. If you have two McDonalds hamburgers a month, it’s not a bad thing. Two or three a day is a di erent situation. But sometimes people don’t have the resources to eat better quality. If an amazing quality hamburger costs a dollar, everybody would be choosing that. You have to be careful with these topics because you don’t want to fall into condemning populist food. e truth is you can go to a market and get good quality and cook it at home and can a ord it.
JB: What is essential to teach children about cooking?
FA: ey should cook what they can’t buy. ere are things that are not that good when you buy them. You can buy a good quality tomato sauce because there are good ones, but not all industrial food is good because for some things, technology has not been able to produce a good quality version of it. A stew, for example. Meat for example, you can buy one prepared in small production, but sh that’s been cooked, that’s hard to get one that is good. It has to be freshly made.
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