logo
José Andrés Dishes on His New Memoir, TV Show, and Top Travel Tip

José Andrés Dishes on His New Memoir, TV Show, and Top Travel Tip

Eater20-05-2025

The day after a whirlwind press tour in NYC this spring — which included sit-down segments on the Kelly Clarkson Show and the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon — global humanitarian and celebrity chef José Andrés trained down to his D.C. home base, swinging by his downtown Spanish stunner the Bazaar to unveil his most personal book yet.
The late-April release of Change the Recipe: Because You Can't Build a Better World Without Breaking Some Eggs coincided with the premiere of Yes, Chef! , NBC's new cooking competition show in which Andrés teams up with Martha Stewart to train a roster of 12 hot-headed chefs. The Emmy-winning, made-for-TV culinary combo met years ago over a meal at Jaleo, Andrés's first-ever restaurant in Penn Quarter.
In one previously aired episode of Yes, Chef! , contestants vying for a $250,000 prize took on the gastronomic challenge of spherification — specifically, whipping up a believable-looking olive that reveals a burst of silky, liquid flavor in one bite. The delicate technique was born at Spain's legendary el Bulli, the three-Michelin-starred institution where Andrés himself worked as a young chef. Now diners can sample the molecular tapa that started it all, with a 10-day special running through Saturday, May 24, at the Bazaars in D.C., Vegas, and NYC.
Two years after closing inside the SLS hotel, the avant-garde restaurant is gearing up to stage a big South Beach comeback at the Andaz Miami Beach. With 40 restaurants under his José Andrés Group umbrella, the founder of disaster relief nonprofit World Central Kitchen has no plans to balloon the Bazaar brand.
'For me, we can't have a Bazaar in every city in America. I want to have a passion for the city and I'm super proud of this one here in D.C.,' says Andrés, speaking to an intimate crowd during his April 29 book launch party. The two-year-old location, situated off the lobby of the Waldorf Astoria hotel in the historic Old Post Office building, famously has a full-circle backstory tied to Trump.
Change the Recipe' s author Richard Wolffe goes way back with Andrés, having penned his first book full of Spanish recipes. 'He made me do it — he said, 'a chef has to have a book,'' says Andrés. 'And here we are a few years later with a few.' (Eleven and counting.)
The cute new canary-colored hardcover, just 5x8 in size and under 200 pages long, is a departure from his norm. It's a collection of short stories that cover a swath of topics, including his childhood to nurse parents in Barcelona, why he used to hate (and grew to love) green peppers, food being a universal comfort in conflict zones, and teachable lessons learned in the hectic restaurant world.
'In a night when printers stop working, the bathroom breaks down, and every [customer] has a request, we make it through and 'change the recipe,'' says Andrés. 'The beauty of our profession is you adapt.'
He says his daughters were ultimately the motivating factor behind the memoir. 'I think we all have to do this — write down memories. Especially if you're no longer here,' he says. But he's not going anywhere soon. 'I've been doing this for 32 years — and I look forward to the next 32,' he says. 'So we'll all be together for my 87th birthday. Probably I'll even be making the food.'
We snagged a quick chat with Andrés on the side, in which he reveals a bonafide biography is on the future horizon.
Eater: What's Martha got that you don't?
José Andrés: She's very practical — she doesn't hesitate and she knows what she wants. She has so much energy. [While filming, she'd ask me,] ''Where are we going to dinner tonight, José?' What? I have to go to bed.'
Why is it more important than ever to mentor chefs these days?
As you grow older, you learn and then try to pass that on to others. The restaurant business is still one of the most brutal and difficult businesses at every level, [between] the success rate and the hours that anyone has. But still at same time, it's one of the most fascinating professions anybody can be a part of.
Tell me more about what this new book means to you.
The short stories are very simple, yet sharing a moment that's important in my life — maybe a lesson I gained from it, and maybe someone's searching for the same answer to the question. I want to write something bigger later in my life. And I will, eventually. Longer stories and thoughts.
Congrats on taking D.C.'s decades-old Oyamel to NYC this spring.
That was a good move. I bring another concept to Hudson Yards and get to expand another brand.
I heard you got off the Amtrak from NY about an hour ago. You travel so much — what would you say is your top packing tip?
[Whips off navy suit jacket and waves it around like a napkin]: Buy clothing that doesn't wrinkle!
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
'Yes, Chef!' airs Monday nights at 10 p.m. on NBC; Andrés also stars in Netflix's newly released spinoff series, Chef's Table: Legends .
Sign up for our newsletter.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hoda Kotb reveals top replacements for ‘Today,' addresses Kelly Clarkson rumors
Hoda Kotb reveals top replacements for ‘Today,' addresses Kelly Clarkson rumors

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Hoda Kotb reveals top replacements for ‘Today,' addresses Kelly Clarkson rumors

NEW YORK — Hoda Kotb on Thursday revealed the people she thinks would be a perfect replacement for the hour of 'Today' she hosted with Jenna Bush Hager, while also addressing speculation she may be taking over Kelly Clarkson's daytime talk show. Since Kotb's departure in January, Bush Hager has continued to host the show's fourth hour with a series of celebrity guests, including Scarlett Johansson, Taraji P. Henson, Keke Palmer, Amy Poehler and Dwyane Wade. Appearing on Bravo's 'What What Happens Live With Andy Cohen,' Kotb shared her top 'contenders' to take up a more permanent position. 'Anybody would be like so lucky, but to me the contenders are ['Today' co-anchor] Savannah [Guthrie]. I think she would be great,' Kotb said. 'I think Justin Sylvester's amazing. Scarlett Johansson crushed it.' Kotb also praised comedian and podcaster Matt Rogers and 'Today' co-host Sheinelle Jones, who she acknowledged is 'going through a difficult time' following the recent death of Jones' husband, Uche Ojeh. But according to Kotb, the best fit for the show would ultimately be 'whoever clicks great with Jenna. I mean, that's the one.' During her appearance, Kotb also suggested there's no truth to the rumors she'll take over Clarkson's self-titled show, but admitted she'd 'never say never.' 'You don't know what life's gonna bring you,' she told a fan who asked about the possibility. 'At this moment, I'm having such fun with the ride that I'm on. But TV is my first love. So, as I say in life, you don't know.' The NBC mainstay announced in September that she would be leaving 'Today' after 17 years, including five as co-anchor. 'I realized that it was time for me to turn the page at 60, and to try something new,' Kotb said at the time. The decision was made in no small part so Kotb could spend more time with her two young daughters, Haley Joy, 9, and Hope Catherine, 5, whom she shares with ex-fiancé Joel Schiffman. By the end of the year, Kotb announced that fellow NBC veteran Craig Melvin would take over her role anchoring the 7-9 a.m. block alongside Guthrie.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Dakota Johnson reveals Pedro Pascal borrows her clothes
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Dakota Johnson reveals Pedro Pascal borrows her clothes

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Dakota Johnson reveals Pedro Pascal borrows her clothes

The 35-year-old American star can soon be seen in the film Materialists alongside The Last Of Us star Pascal, 50. The duo have enjoyed spending time together and have been spotted out and about at restaurants and music events. Appearing on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on Wednesday, Dakota reacted to a photo of her with Pascal at a Stevie Nicks concert, and remarked of her co-star's attire, "That's my sweater." "He does that a lot. He takes my clothes. He's like always underdressed.'

How the Giants' social-media team, online sports space trailblazers, keep and grow audience
How the Giants' social-media team, online sports space trailblazers, keep and grow audience

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

How the Giants' social-media team, online sports space trailblazers, keep and grow audience

Always on the go, bouncing from platform to platform, the San Francisco Giants ' social-media department is a little bit of everything, a creative whirl constantly keeping fans informed and entertained. For a discipline so relatively new, though, the Giants' social-media team is borderline venerable. It was among the first in pro sports to jump into interactive spaces on the internet and has a trail of defunct or obsolete sites to prove it: Giants Tumblr. Vine. Foursquare check-ins. 'We put Lou Seal on MySpace as a rogue,' Giants vice president of brand development and digital media Bryan Srabian said. 'MLB quickly shut that down.' Srabian started off as a one-man online band in 2010 after the team realized that several departments had social media accounts but nothing that represented the Giants as a team. MLB signed off on a test run. 'We knew we needed to be on social media because Twitter is down the street and our fans were maybe more tech-savvy than some,' Srabian said. 'We really were the first team, so I was tasked with kind of figuring out: what does that mean? 'It was a fun period of people making their brands seem fun. I felt like, 'Well, this is the next generation of connection to the team — and maybe their first connection is through social media.'' The Giants joined Twitter, then Facebook and Instagram. 'I think there were five people working at Instagram at the time,' Srabian said. 'It was a lot of trial and error, but there was this feeling of you don't want to miss out because the early adopters saw a lot more success.' It didn't hurt that the Giants were beginning their run of three titles in five years at the same time. With fan engagement skyrocketing — Twitter's Jack Dorsey attended the Giants' first tweetup — and sponsors requesting cross-promotions on the team's official accounts, the social-media department doubled in size by 2013 — to two people. Now Srabian runs a department of seven that flourishes on a dozen platforms, including X, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest and SnapChat. The Giants' social-media team is behind the scenes at every home game and almost every road game, providing video snippets and packages, interviews, news, the occasional meme and — now and then — ticket discounts. View this post on Instagram A post shared by San Francisco Giants (@sfgiants) 'We've moved beyond the point where it's a luxury — it's beyond that,' Srabian said. 'It's a necessity.' Teams don't just generate interest and resulting ticket and merchandise sales via social media, they also collect valuable data that helps to tailor ads and offers to individual fans, and the reach is international. For Spanish-speaking fans, the Giants have three Gigantes accounts, and Jung Hoo Lee 's interpreter, Justin Han, helps with social media posts for the Korean audience. @sfgiants Follow Jung Hoo Lee around for a day in the life at Spring Training #MLB #Baseball #DITL ♬ original sound - San Francisco Giants The department's work spans marketing, community relations and public relations and weaves in aspects of journalism, history, comedy and visual arts. Social media might be the most creative and most adaptable department in the organization as well as the most collaborative, working with the Giants' team photographers, Suzanna Mitchell and Andy Kuno, graphics, design and SFG Productions. Dreams the way we planned 'em If we work in tandem — SFGiants (@SFGiants) May 21, 2025 Across a dozen platforms, the Giants strive for a consistent voice, which can be tricky given the many accounts and the larger staff size. There are some guidelines — keep things positive, light, conversational — but nothing is too onerous. 'We're always trying to find the balance between super funny, cutting-edge stuff and staying true to the Giants' brand, which is very classy,' said Travis Hall, the team's senior social-media coordinator and TikTok authority. Unlike some teams, the Giants prefer not to tweak or antagonize their opponents much. When they do, it tends to be subtle. After the Dodgers took the lead in the NL West in 2021, for instance, MLB posted a fireworks graphic and 'we pocketed that one,' social media director Jen Eisenmann said. 'Once we won the NL West at the end of the season, we copied the graphic pretty much exactly and posted it.' 'It was one of those 'if you know, you know' moments,' Srabian said. Even with less snark than many other sports social-media accounts, the Giants' team must deal with the negative aspects of the internet. Official team accounts make obvious targets for rival fans, or, in the case of the A's, the team's own former fans. The Giants never have turned off comments, as the A's did after announcing their planned move to Las Vegas, but there is still enough ugliness among the responses that it can take a toll. 'The first few years, that bugged me, but there's nothing we can do to change it no matter how nice or friendly we are,' Hall said. 'Even when you're winning, you'll still have people who are negative — but the good thing is you'll see in comment sections that fans will police themselves.' 'We don't feel that every negative comment or troll has to be acknowledged,' Srabian said. 'The joke in social media is when someone doesn't like something, it used to be 'fire the intern' and now it's 'fire the admin! ' So there's a lot of that, but the fans always come first and you want to make sure you're listening to your fans if they have legitimate concerns.' One thing that the social-media department strives for is invisibility, trying to glide through the dugout and around the field without getting in anyone's way or in any camera shots. They keep joshing tabs on co-workers' inadvertent appearances on postgame shows or newspaper photos. Hall heard about it the most when a reddit forum confused him for Buster Posey after a game ('That was bad,' Hall said, 'but at least I was dressed nice.') Chris Bowersox, the team's social-media manager and YouTube ace, used to be mistaken for former GM Scott Harris. Giants players quickly grow to trust the social-media staff, who spend time with the team during the spring and go on the road during the season. Patrick Bailey OK'd a 'Day in the Life' segment with Hall for TikTok and Instagram. Lee, Mike Yastrzemski and Luis Matos went out for Korean barbecue together — with Han interpreting — for a YouTube feature. Players and coaches played a 'Flip Cup' game on TikTok for Hall this spring, 'and that's the hardest I've ever laughed behind a camera,' he said. @sfgiants No matter how many failed flip cups life throws at you, keep flipping until you succeed #LifeLessons #FlipCup #Determination ♬ original sound - San Francisco Giants For inspiration, the department keeps an eye on what other pro teams are doing with their accounts, especially if something goes viral, but the Giants just as likely to draw ideas and references from pop culture or fashion, art or food trends — or social influencers, many of whom the team welcomes to the park during the season. 'I think the best, most well-rounded social media people aren't only baseball fans,' Eisenmann said. 'If you have other interests, that's a great way to attract a different audience. 'The baseball fan is already going to follow the Giants and is engaging with our content. We want people who might not otherwise be coming to games to see our posts and say, 'Oh, that looks like fun! ''

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store