“He said, ‘Marco, you can cook as well as anybody.” He said, ‘Do not be scared of the stove.’ He was absolutely right. I was intimidated by a three star stove. It changed my life. I went back the next day and I attacked the stove. You have to attack the stove. You have to have that inner confidence and that belief that you can do it. And if you mess it up - who cares? Because by messing things up you take great knowledge. Have another go. As I always say, and I think this is the most important thing I would ever say to a young chef: Cooking is a philosophy; it’s not a recipe. Unless it’s pastry, then it becomes chemistry.” -Marco Pierre White 🧑🍳
"And if you mess it up - who cares? Because by messing things up you take great knowledge." Says the man who is famous for absolutely eviscerating anyone and everyone who dared to make a minor error in his kitchen. I don't have a problem with someone who demands perfection and is a dick about it but MPW pretend he's not an asshole is insufferable.
49:54 Who wouldve thought that marco's closing words to a young cook would be: "id tell this young man to continue to allow his mother to guide him." It was so unexpected and so poignant it took the air out of the room. In my opinion he was giving something truly precious if the young cook took it to heart. The advice to allow your mother to guide you goes beyond the advice that would lead to success in the industry, its a recipe to allow any cook to feel the heart of WHY THEY FEED OTHER PEOPLE to begin with. For all of our warmth cheer and enjoyment. If someone holds onto that ember in their heart they wont miss the point of why they do what they do. Scoff or dismiss it, i think thats possibly one of the most beautiful things about cooking. That was my take on it anyways.
@@jqyhlmnp The wall of sleep turns ya body to a corpse is a black sabbath song lyric reference.. You say Psychopathy? Lemme guess you are a yank that has never left the U.S.A. and has no culture or awareness of how other cultures speak. You are the crazy one, not me YA muppet (cus I know you have no brain cells, ya means YOU or YOUR.) Get a grip of yourself, idiot.
Marco is million percent right here regarding chefs being behind their stoves. It’s the BIG deciding factor behind a takeaway and a high end Restaurant, anyone can be an owner of a food joint but If a CHEF makes a name for himself in a high end restaurant there’s a hell more merit involved in that then just a title.
@@MansMan42069 Wrong. He said he had 3 options Carry on. Sell his soul by putting his name out there but not doing the cooking. Jack it all in. He initially chose the last option. Now he is firmly choosing the 2nd option. Your right. It's exactly like McDonald's. Which for an ex 3 star Michelin chef is a poor place to be.
@@bargepoled Wrong. Gordon puts his name on restaurants and still pretends to be a chef. Marco puts his name on restaurants but has openly declared that he's not a chef anymore. Michelin is meaningless. Marco rose above the stars. Gordon is still shackled by them. Get it right, kid.
Great interview - Bourdain clearly in awe of MPW but at no time does he play the big man - nice to see people who know kitchens and know food speaking candidly... my old man was a chef and would have loved this.
Thank you dear uploader, for this gem of an interview with two true legends of the industry and also of popular culure. All an aspiring chef could ever wish for in a youtube video.
Beautiful 😍 I was heart broken when I heard the news on NPR! They broke into the news cast, I heard his name dread, then the Reality!!! My heart is still sad 😢
Marco is just a family man. No gimmicks just a working family man that understands what feeding people is all about. But does it well, just as parents try to cook the best for their children. I dig that, and it is inspiring.
bruh.... he was never around when his kids were little and growing up and he's basically torturing his wife with keeping her dependant on him and not signing divorce papers....
@@katarinas6012 You're spot on in your assessment. You forgot to mention wives number one and two, the hapless ladies who preceded the Spanish lady who is currently in situ, an on-off state of affairs that is prime-time tabloid fodder. Then there's MPW junior for whom some level of empathy is appropriate...
Wise words from Marco about true life as a master chef. Sad to see Anthony so nervous and fidgety! He obviously hadn't been dealing w/ his issues. Sad he lost his connection to his cooking passion and went Hollywood. Marco figured out what's important in life and didn't let fame ruin him. Thanks for the nice video.
the way i found this video was search for marco and then in the filter settings look for videos 20 min or more hahaha i know exactly what you mean :) #ZinTravels
His MasterChef judging popped up in my feed since I’ve been watching back issues of Brit MasterChef. I knew who he was but had never listened to him. I’m now on a Marco interview catch up…. Anthony I would watch on PBS and am still stunned that he’s gone. R.I.P. Anthony. You’re missed by many.
they both speak from their hearts and soul - something refreshing about hearing these people - RIP Ant, loads of fun watching your life - Marco, stay Marco, I ate ate Yew Tree - bloody Gorgeous
In my early times, I had to serve clients with heaters on table side (rechaut on gueridon) and serve seconds, main, sides. On a table of 8 that was a lot of copper pans and pots, lots of heating plates, lot of serving cutlery and everybody had a different dish...... that was serious sweating and skills.
Good memories of an old style Italian restaurant we would go to . I loved when my sauce was made tableside by chef. I’d also order their Zabaglione which was made tableside too. Very delicious!
I’m behind Marco all the way! It’s different, it’s way different! When you get those starts and you cook that dish it is yours. You can teach the best chefs to cook those dishes and it will not taste the same. You fly in from another country to eat at that restaurant and you have some commi cooking? Hell no, it’s not Michelin restaurant
Love Marcos philosophy and Anthony's also, kitchen work is hard and demanding. Every one should try it at least once to understand it, I did my tour of duty in the kitchen already
About time...Julia Child turned Larousso Gastromique into a class of classic French dishes and Organic Gardener taught me to grow the best fruits and vegetables. Growing up on a dairy farm prepared me to make the most of dairy/ poultry and gave me an understanding of wild game and fish( we had a stream and a pond.
Marco is the purist has been carping from the sidelines. Tony thinks Michelin chefs should capitalise from their achievements. Ultimately if you eat at the restaurant it's your choice
A bizarre stance for MPW to take given that he presided over a substandard restaurant chain, became the face of Knorr stock cubes for several years and presents Australian MasterChef.
Yeah, it does seem a little hypocritical. I wonder if his stance is a little more nuanced - something like: three-starred chefs shouldn't go down the media-heavy/unrated concept route without first acknowledging they've compromised their status as a three-star chef by doing so. I'm not sure he's saying "don't do those things as a chef". One way of hearing what he's saying is "don't pretend you're working at the three-star level when you've spread yourself more thinly across other projects which don't serve the three-star function".
So agree, I want to get tucked in. Best meal of my life was student district monte marte Paris. The boeuf bourguignon and an appetizer, of course, was escargot, but the wine and bread were impeccable too. It was also very inexpensive. It was heaven, it's been 15 years and I still dream of it I grew up with parents from different areas of the Deep South, pi had real French etc... exposure, but I also learned real Appalachian food and using what's was available... fried green tomatoes, okra, fresh vegetables, vegetables cooked with ham hock. I adore Marco Pierre White
That's only because Marco looks like he doesn't want to be there. They both want to get out of there, smoke, drink a glass of wine and have a good meal. It's the only stuff that gives them pleasure, they both seem miserable.
I personally think that there's too much admiration for money and being a star rather than being good at your craft and becoming a decent human being. I feel like there's a balance that we totally screw up. Streamers who play videogames, models who happen to look good, bodybuilders who happen to have great genetics and so on, earning somewhere in the 6 to 8 digits, who often have no integrity, lack responsibility, sell out for various companies, don't give much back and are so proud of themselves and what they've "accomplished" vs a housewife who's working her ass off to barely be able to feed her kids. It's just all messed up in my opinion. I feel like sir Marco Pierre has a level of integrity that we need lots and lots of. Maybe he's a little oldschool and such, but I think that he's sharing a great message that most people will dismiss because they just don't care and because they don't have the balls to get real about the bigger picture. Love and strength, Thomas
Did Michael just come from the beach? I find it disrespectful for someone to wear open sandals at an interview, I mean Anthony and Marco at least took the time to wear something casual.
Not only was it disrespectful, it was also very unprofessional. Light washed jeans and sandals does not help boost confidence when speaking in front of an audience and is apparent with the shaky tone of voice.
Key part to these two standing out, as men; aside from their mastery of craft, is their oratory skills, and thoughtfulness to who they present to. You don’t have to enjoy cooking or pursuing being a chef to learn very valuable lessons from these two. The ability to speak, very very well. Communication is paramount in all of life. And that is with both of their stark differences in culture and delivery. Very very skilled oration skills
I love the tasting menu, but I really get what Marco is saying. This is also the first time I see Anthony looking nervous in a conversation with someone. Marco can be very intimidating, but in a good way.
Bourdain wrote in Medium Raw that the chef who served Marco the 18+ course meal, Grant Achatz, was actually in the audience here. He was, as you can guess, quite offended by Marco's remarks.
MPW integrity is ASTOUNDING. He is talented, principled, ambitious, but his integrity extends beyond food, The guy is hyper, hyper cool, because of his principles!!!!!!
I truly enjoyed watching, listening to this video and hearing what has been said. And paying attention is diving into a moment that can be comprehending “topics”. Those that hopefully will last.
As an organic gardner, goat farmer( small scale) for more than 50 + years I see the deviation caused by out crappy practices not only in growing but how we eat.
When Marco won his 3rd star in January 1995, Derek brown head Michelin guide inspector told Marco "remember what made you great". He was saying stay behind your stove.
I think chefs should have "term limits" or breaks so they can be their best selves for themselves, their families and the people they serve. At some point, they should have an apprentice so they don't burn out.
There's an old southern saying... let me lie down and let my food digest. It means the meal was so good you overate. It could be one meal,but it definitely means it was really good.
Classic / East vs Modern / West. Marco was trained & worked the restaurants you go to enjoy & relax. Our Western style is just to go eat & not take too long.
I’d hate to say it but... the moderator has no idea how to do anything but offend these brilliant legendary chefs. Recipe for good interview: 1. Honor your guests. 2. Honor your listeners. 3. Wear shoes. 4. Don’t be a douchebag.
The moderator asked a cheap low ball question to solicit from his guest a self aggrandizing and judgmental response regarding cooks vs chefs. Then the guest Chef Pierre White recounted his own culinary ascendency in humble, sober and grateful terms; providing a rich and earnest context within which the original question withered. Then shockingly, like a dead hand thrust up from the grave through the ground, the moderator’s next question vainly persisted in the same vein. Unfuckingbeleivable! The approach is asinine, a discredit to him and disrespectful to his guests. The undisputed king of tone deaf. GFY (Go Fuck Yourself)
The moderator not only insulted his guests by being clueless and naive about cooking he was an absolute tw*t . Thank God for Anthony (who the he'll calls him "Tony"?) Mr Bourdain successfully took over moderation
So silly in a way to ask this, but we all miss you, Tony. You were a bright light, why did you go? I have no idea why you chose to snuff it out. I'm just sad that you did, and I don't think I'm alone.
The most uncomfortable appearing chairs in captivity, the sandals, the F bombs... Marco outclasses it all. I'm a massive Bourdain fan btw, but none of his shows were about cooking, but travel shows about food. (mostly, about food)
Prophetic observation about Man United by Marco! Btw, I have never seen Anthony cook anything on TV. I wonder if he really was a good cook because of this. Loved Kitchen confidential though, reminded me of of my training as a chef.
Even if he wasn’t a great cook he was at very least a good one but that’s not even the reason tony is legend he’s a legend cause he was really in it he was about that life. He was real.
The moderator shouldn’t have been in the same room as these two. unprofessional and wore sandals to this interview? Not to mention rude at 29:30 . Respect the guests.
I'm interviewing two Legends today in front of thousands of people! Guess I'll break out my rubber sandals???
@Qi QI What are you a psychiatrist? what do you know about depression!
for 99% of history a cook was a working class pleb slaving for the delight of the wealthy, so kinda makes sense and pays homage.
@@SKRUBL0RD What are you talking about the sandals???
Do you really think either of them gives a fuck about his shoes? Calm down.
Even worse than orange clogs.
“He said, ‘Marco, you can cook as well as anybody.” He said, ‘Do not be scared of the stove.’ He was absolutely right. I was intimidated by a three star stove. It changed my life. I went back the next day and I attacked the stove.
You have to attack the stove. You have to have that inner confidence and that belief that you can do it. And if you mess it up - who cares? Because by messing things up you take great knowledge. Have another go.
As I always say, and I think this is the most important thing I would ever say to a young chef: Cooking is a philosophy; it’s not a recipe.
Unless it’s pastry, then it becomes chemistry.”
-Marco Pierre White 🧑🍳
Truth 👍🙏✝️♥️🏹🎣🛶🇺🇸
That's why I don't bake
Attack the stove? Like Office Space?
"And if you mess it up - who cares? Because by messing things up you take great knowledge."
Says the man who is famous for absolutely eviscerating anyone and everyone who dared to make a minor error in his kitchen.
I don't have a problem with someone who demands perfection and is a dick about it but MPW pretend he's not an asshole is insufferable.
ATTACK THE STOVE.
49:54 Who wouldve thought that marco's closing words to a young cook would be: "id tell this young man to continue to allow his mother to guide him." It was so unexpected and so poignant it took the air out of the room. In my opinion he was giving something truly precious if the young cook took it to heart. The advice to allow your mother to guide you goes beyond the advice that would lead to success in the industry, its a recipe to allow any cook to feel the heart of WHY THEY FEED OTHER PEOPLE to begin with. For all of our warmth cheer and enjoyment. If someone holds onto that ember in their heart they wont miss the point of why they do what they do. Scoff or dismiss it, i think thats possibly one of the most beautiful things about cooking. That was my take on it anyways.
FIRE THE SOUND GUY.
Ikr, basically have to listen in mono
“I don’t want four puddings. I just want to go home.”
Awesome and true.
Marco is a freaking quote machine.
“Gordon Ramsay made himself cry”
A philosophical classic.🔥
"It was his choice." YESSSSSSS!
But did Mario throw the risotto on himself?
#thuglyfe quote haha
@@marjoriejohnson6535he chose to stand in the way of it
This should have been a convo between Bourdain and Marco with Bourdain running it. Why is this host even there?
Ruhlman was the moderator, not the host.
To show off his sandals
@@GH-oi2jf Same thing lad. By the way the wall of sleep turns ya body to a corpse.
@@scrubber1986 I get typing out “lad” but you physically spelled out “ya”?! That’s actually psychopathy.
@@jqyhlmnp The wall of sleep turns ya body to a corpse is a black sabbath song lyric reference.. You say Psychopathy? Lemme guess you are a yank that has never left the U.S.A. and has no culture or awareness of how other cultures speak. You are the crazy one, not me YA muppet (cus I know you have no brain cells, ya means YOU or YOUR.) Get a grip of yourself, idiot.
My right ear understood, now I have to switch to the left one.
HAHAHAHAHAHA
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Why don’t people use headphones which have a mono mode?
Mine was exactly opposite!
(Yes, my headphones were on correctly)
Dude right? The audio sucks!
Wow,
To hear him say he went to them and said "take my restaurants off your list, I'm retiring".
RESPECT!
Who is him ?
@@strateshooter1402 Marco Pierre White
Bourdain repays his challenges to MPW's knowledge in respectful listening. It's a brilliant conversation to observe.
Marco is a king. Bourdain is a rat.
Marco is million percent right here regarding chefs being behind their stoves. It’s the BIG deciding factor behind a takeaway and a high end Restaurant, anyone can be an owner of a food joint but If a CHEF makes a name for himself in a high end restaurant there’s a hell more merit involved in that then just a title.
We all know a certain few "chefs" who spend more time in front of a camera than behind their stove.
He's a hypocrite. He has a chain of bar and grills in the UK with his name on them,
@@bargepoled Wrong. He doesn't pretend to be a chef anymore. His name being on the restaurant is no different from "McDonald's".
@@MansMan42069 Wrong. He said he had 3 options
Carry on.
Sell his soul by putting his name out there but not doing the cooking.
Jack it all in.
He initially chose the last option. Now he is firmly choosing the 2nd option.
Your right. It's exactly like McDonald's. Which for an ex 3 star Michelin chef is a poor place to be.
@@bargepoled Wrong. Gordon puts his name on restaurants and still pretends to be a chef.
Marco puts his name on restaurants but has openly declared that he's not a chef anymore. Michelin is meaningless. Marco rose above the stars. Gordon is still shackled by them.
Get it right, kid.
Great interview - Bourdain clearly in awe of MPW but at no time does he play the big man - nice to see people who know kitchens and know food speaking candidly... my old man was a chef and would have loved this.
25:09 Bourdain is dialed in. A master, but still learning from another master. Fuck Tony we miss you pal
Thank you dear uploader, for this gem of an interview with two true legends of the industry and also of popular culure. All an aspiring chef could ever wish for in a youtube video.
A meeting of titans. RIP Tony, the real ones will always remember. Probably the only person who could hold his own with Marco and not poop his pants.
anthony sitting like that is fantastic
MPW is a fucking legend. He changed food culture in the UK, reached the highest high and then, and then, gave up his stars. Epic.
Bourdain was talking about Jiro’s sushi restaurant.
I miss Anthony. My favourite guy. So real and interesting. Sadly missed. See you on the good side x
Man I really enjoyed this. RIP Anthony, we wish we could have done for you what you did for so many of us and inspired you to keep going.
Beautiful 😍 I was heart broken when I heard the news on NPR!
They broke into the news cast,
I heard his name dread, then the
Reality!!! My heart is still sad 😢
Indeed, as Terry Bruno said, "beautiful," thank you to Scott Thomas for saying this.
so true.....
My right ear really enjoied this
Marco is just a family man. No gimmicks just a working family man that understands what feeding people is all about. But does it well, just as parents try to cook the best for their children. I dig that, and it is inspiring.
bruh.... he was never around when his kids were little and growing up and he's basically torturing his wife with keeping her dependant on him and not signing divorce papers....
@@katarinas6012 tabloids love people like you.
@@user-pt1cz4ot1e She is spot on and 100% accurate in her comment. She knows!
@@katarinas6012 You're spot on in your assessment. You forgot to mention wives number one and two, the hapless ladies who preceded the Spanish lady who is currently in situ, an on-off state of affairs that is prime-time tabloid fodder. Then there's MPW junior for whom some level of empathy is appropriate...
watch Hells kitchen celebritys uk. with Marco
Love how Marco pauses for applause after saying quotes
He pauses for the dumb audience to absorb his words.
Wise words from Marco about true life as a master chef. Sad to see Anthony so nervous and fidgety! He obviously hadn't been dealing w/ his issues. Sad he lost his connection to his cooking passion and went Hollywood. Marco figured out what's important in life and didn't let fame ruin him. Thanks for the nice video.
Love your channel!!!
Couldn’t have said it better, daddy Jack!
Or maybe he knows he is utterly out of his depth sitting next Marco Pierre White.
DADDY JACKS COOKING WITH THE BLUES
Love your videos man!
That mother advice by Marco is gold. Hope ppl follow it
Marco is viciously funny I could listen to that man talk about nothing for hours
the way i found this video was search for marco and then in the filter settings look for videos 20 min or more hahaha i know exactly what you mean :) #ZinTravels
I could listen to him talk about hours for nothing
@@ZinsWorld #Zinsworld
very sharp too...
His MasterChef judging popped up in my feed since I’ve been watching back issues of Brit MasterChef. I knew who he was but had never listened to him. I’m now on a Marco interview catch up…. Anthony I would watch on PBS and am still stunned that he’s gone. R.I.P. Anthony. You’re missed by many.
Marco is spot on! Unfortunately same thing happening in every industry...
A meeting of generational legends...for my part, MPW is the boss and 'gets' it- both the business and the art and simply calls it like he sees it.
It's been downhill for Marco ever since he "turned in" his Michelin Stars.
@@gmancolo downhill in what regard? He’s quite well off
@@charlesbirdsong6782 His food is lame, and he desperately tries to live off his long ago fame. His son is a train wreck as well.
@@gmancolo I think you will find he is more content as a human being than any other point in his life.
they both speak from their hearts and soul - something refreshing about hearing these people - RIP Ant, loads of fun watching your life - Marco, stay Marco, I ate ate Yew Tree - bloody Gorgeous
In my early times, I had to serve clients with heaters on table side (rechaut on gueridon) and serve seconds, main, sides. On a table of 8 that was a lot of copper pans and pots, lots of heating plates, lot of serving cutlery and everybody had a different dish...... that was serious sweating and skills.
Good memories of an old style Italian restaurant we would go to . I loved when my sauce was made tableside by chef. I’d also order their Zabaglione which was made tableside too. Very delicious!
Thank you for sharing this.
I’m behind Marco all the way! It’s different, it’s way different! When you get those starts and you cook that dish it is yours. You can teach the best chefs to cook those dishes and it will not taste the same.
You fly in from another country to eat at that restaurant and you have some commi cooking? Hell no, it’s not Michelin restaurant
I love kitchen confidential and just listened to MPW’s book. This is a great addition
Love Marcos philosophy and Anthony's also, kitchen work is hard and demanding. Every one should try it at least once to understand it, I did my tour of duty in the kitchen already
2 legends RIP ANTHONY BOURDAIN not forgotten ❤❤❤
Well said
The difference with 15 courses of sushi is that you get the food directly from the chef rapidly, not with a waiter in between.
I'm pretty sure he's referring to the restaurant from "Jiro Dreams of Sushi"
You don't ever ask Marco pierre to repeat himself
About time...Julia Child turned Larousso Gastromique into a class of classic French dishes and Organic Gardener taught me to grow the best fruits and vegetables. Growing up on a dairy farm prepared me to make the most of dairy/ poultry and gave me an understanding of wild game and fish( we had a stream and a pond.
the moment marco speaks the room is silently listening
So happy I've found this. I read about it in Bourdain's book. It's one hell of a debate.
Marco was prophetic about Sir Alex Ferguson.
Marco is the purist has been carping from the sidelines. Tony thinks Michelin chefs should capitalise from their achievements. Ultimately if you eat at the restaurant it's your choice
A bizarre stance for MPW to take given that he presided over a substandard restaurant chain, became the face of Knorr stock cubes for several years and presents Australian MasterChef.
Yeah, it does seem a little hypocritical.
I wonder if his stance is a little more nuanced - something like: three-starred chefs shouldn't go down the media-heavy/unrated concept route without first acknowledging they've compromised their status as a three-star chef by doing so.
I'm not sure he's saying "don't do those things as a chef". One way of hearing what he's saying is "don't pretend you're working at the three-star level when you've spread yourself more thinly across other projects which don't serve the three-star function".
as long as you're not deaf in your right ear, you'll be ok listening to this clip
My right ear is now wiser than the left one
I hit my earpieces twice and then played another video till i understood this was a "feature" haha
Marco: “When I was a boy…”
Me: (Grabs popcorn)
Love listening to this man’s stories…
Food is a philosophy and Marco is the greatest philosopher.
i just learned of marco,and i love his spirt,and soul,transformed in his cooking,just to be in his presence would be a honor
So agree, I want to get tucked in. Best meal of my life was student district monte marte Paris. The boeuf bourguignon and an appetizer, of course, was escargot, but the wine and bread were impeccable too. It was also very inexpensive. It was heaven, it's been 15 years and I still dream of it I grew up with parents from different areas of the Deep South, pi had real French etc... exposure, but I also learned real Appalachian food and using what's was available... fried green tomatoes, okra, fresh vegetables, vegetables cooked with ham hock. I adore Marco Pierre White
I love how Bourdain looks like he's really enjoying himself.
That's only because Marco looks like he doesn't want to be there. They both want to get out of there, smoke, drink a glass of wine and have a good meal. It's the only stuff that gives them pleasure, they both seem miserable.
I personally think that there's too much admiration for money and being a star rather than being good at your craft and becoming a decent human being. I feel like there's a balance that we totally screw up. Streamers who play videogames, models who happen to look good, bodybuilders who happen to have great genetics and so on, earning somewhere in the 6 to 8 digits, who often have no integrity, lack responsibility, sell out for various companies, don't give much back and are so proud of themselves and what they've "accomplished" vs a housewife who's working her ass off to barely be able to feed her kids. It's just all messed up in my opinion.
I feel like sir Marco Pierre has a level of integrity that we need lots and lots of. Maybe he's a little oldschool and such, but I think that he's sharing a great message that most people will dismiss because they just don't care and because they don't have the balls to get real about the bigger picture.
Love and strength,
Thomas
True
Why have I only just come across this , Kitchen Gold , RIP Tony miss you and so does the kitchen world 🌎
Did Michael just come from the beach? I find it disrespectful for someone to wear open sandals at an interview, I mean Anthony and Marco at least took the time to wear something casual.
Forget the disrespect it’s just plain fucking weird.
I kinda liked it.
If you are worried about what someone is wearing and not the way they work/are then you have your priorities in the wrong place
Not only was it disrespectful, it was also very unprofessional. Light washed jeans and sandals does not help boost confidence when speaking in front of an audience and is apparent with the shaky tone of voice.
@@jbo4547 When you're an interviewer, what you're wearing is part of the way you work/are.
It's such a shame these two gentlemen didn't collaborate
Marco is the dreamer, Anthony is the realist. Cool to hear both of them share their ideals in the same forum.
This totally made my day!
Damn, Marco schooled Anthony Bourdain on the merits of a renowned chef being present in the kitchen.
It's telling of the real stature of Marco, the giant in their midst.
They come from different worlds…high class french cuisine and a nyc kitchen…both talented and fascinating people
Key part to these two standing out, as men; aside from their mastery of craft, is their oratory skills, and thoughtfulness to who they present to. You don’t have to enjoy cooking or pursuing being a chef to learn very valuable lessons from these two. The ability to speak, very very well. Communication is paramount in all of life. And that is with both of their stark differences in culture and delivery. Very very skilled oration skills
I love the tasting menu, but I really get what Marco is saying. This is also the first time I see Anthony looking nervous in a conversation with someone. Marco can be very intimidating, but in a good way.
Bourdain wrote in Medium Raw that the chef who served Marco the 18+ course meal, Grant Achatz, was actually in the audience here. He was, as you can guess, quite offended by Marco's remarks.
MPW integrity is ASTOUNDING. He is talented, principled, ambitious, but his integrity extends beyond food, The guy is hyper, hyper cool, because of his principles!!!!!!
❤Tony was so brilliant and such a great talent.
Marco pierre white and Beethoven in the same room together would have been a shit showw!!💪🏾💪🏾💯
The way Tony looks at Marco is with such tremendous respect.
Marco reminds me of Scar from Lion King. So calculated.
This forum is so uncomfortable... except Marco. Body language speaks volumes.
Excellent! They set the stage for us to enjoy the theatre.
Two of my favorite people. Legends
I agree with Marco. The Greats of the great cuisine times were there in their kitchens.
what an edifying and inspiring talk.
Great interviews, fire the sound engineer
bloody awful sound.makes it difficult to just relax into the discussion
2008, not bad for the double oughts IMHO
The audio is unbearable
I’m at that point that it doesn’t have to look bright and pretty it has to be tasty and correctly cooked .
Amazing conversation, knowledge that applies far beyond any kitchen.
I truly enjoyed watching, listening to this video and hearing what has been said. And paying attention is diving into a moment that can be comprehending “topics”. Those that hopefully will last.
As an organic gardner, goat farmer( small scale) for more than 50 + years I see the deviation caused by out crappy practices not only in growing but how we eat.
Prophetic observation about Man United by Marco!
Respect
When Marco won his 3rd star in January 1995, Derek brown head Michelin guide inspector told Marco "remember what made you great". He was saying stay behind your stove.
I think chefs should have "term limits" or breaks so they can be their best selves for themselves, their families and the people they serve. At some point, they should have an apprentice so they don't burn out.
Term limits? Wtf and who’s going to pay for that? You’re not very bright.
Wow, 2 strong personalities going head to head. I luv it........
This is the BEST DUELING BANJOS EVER. Do you realize how brilliant of a debate is….
Way to fail with the audio levels. Who edited this, an intern?
"Gordon Ramsay made himself cry" with the finger pointing up and his delivery reminded me a lot of Trump's "Only Rosie O'Donnell"
"I don't want four puddings, I just want to go home." 😂
What happened to the sound?
My mom and other moms wrote the rules of the kitchen. Marco and this guy perfected it
There's an old southern saying... let me lie down and let my food digest. It means the meal was so good you overate. It could be one meal,but it definitely means it was really good.
WOW HOLY XXXX THIS WAS BEAUTIFUL
Classic / East vs Modern / West. Marco was trained & worked the restaurants you go to enjoy & relax. Our Western style is just to go eat & not take too long.
Sad
Miss you Tony Inspried countless generations to come
I’d hate to say it but... the moderator has no idea how to do anything but offend these brilliant legendary chefs. Recipe for good interview: 1. Honor your guests. 2. Honor your listeners. 3. Wear shoes. 4. Don’t be a douchebag.
Ruhlman was very nervous
He was wearing shoes just not modern adult shoes.
The moderator asked a cheap low ball question to solicit from his guest a self aggrandizing and judgmental response regarding cooks vs chefs. Then the guest Chef Pierre White recounted his own culinary ascendency in humble, sober and grateful terms; providing a rich and earnest context within which the original question withered. Then shockingly, like a dead hand thrust up from the grave through the ground, the moderator’s next question vainly persisted in the same vein. Unfuckingbeleivable! The approach is asinine, a discredit to him and disrespectful to his guests. The undisputed king of tone deaf. GFY (Go Fuck Yourself)
Moderator was fine. Lay off the ..
The moderator not only insulted his guests by being clueless and naive about cooking he was an absolute tw*t . Thank God for Anthony (who the he'll calls him "Tony"?) Mr Bourdain successfully took over moderation
So silly in a way to ask this, but we all miss you, Tony. You were a bright light, why did you go? I have no idea why you chose to snuff it out. I'm just sad that you did, and I don't think I'm alone.
Why is there no audio??
The most uncomfortable appearing chairs in captivity, the sandals, the F bombs... Marco outclasses it all. I'm a massive Bourdain fan btw, but none of his shows were about cooking, but travel shows about food. (mostly, about food)
The Cheese Whiz line was so true. Big Corps definitely didn’t appreciate Anthony’s “F it”attitude.
Prophetic observation about Man United by Marco! Btw, I have never seen Anthony cook anything on TV. I wonder if he really was a good cook because of this. Loved Kitchen confidential though, reminded me of of my training as a chef.
Even if he wasn’t a great cook he was at very least a good one but that’s not even the reason tony is legend he’s a legend cause he was really in it he was about that life. He was real.
Seen him cook lots on tv
Seriously? Who's idea was it to have the interview in a metal box or whatever it is?
The moderator shouldn’t have been in the same room as these two. unprofessional and wore sandals to this interview? Not to mention rude at 29:30 . Respect the guests.
This was the most inspiring thing I have listened to in a long time. Thank you.