Good Vegetables Can Be More Expensive Than Meat

We need to eat more of them, says José Andrés, but the Farm Bill does not support better eating

Mark Bittman
Heated

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Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

I met José Andrés in the ‘90s at Jaleo; who knows how. I was traveling to D.C. with some regularity to track interesting restaurants for The New York Times. I had a couple of good guides: the most lovable of whom was the late Michel Richard who — though he ran a creative, interesting, well-known restaurant — liked to eat in regular places.

Jaleo was in between: a really good Spanish place at a time just before Spanish food exploded internationally. (El Bulli had been up and running for a while, but Ferran Adria was not an international sensation, though by then he was José’s mentor and friend.) I knew Spanish food, both from my travels and from my friend Ignacio Blanco’s restaurants in Connecticut and New York (now called Ibiza, in Danbury and Chappaqua), and Jaleo was clearly the real deal.

José and I became friends: We shot TV together in Washington, in San Sebastian, in Catalonia, and probably elsewhere. He was — is, as far as I know — an incredible cook. His hake pil-pil, which he made for me at Arzak, was miraculous. (It’s an astonishing dish, when it works, and the fish juices emulsify with the olive oil. Not everyone can make it work.)

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