Los Angeles Times

Talking to the Joe Beef chefs, who wrote a cookbook about the end of the world

LOS ANGELES - On a recent morning, chefs David McMillan and Frederic Morin sat at Chateau Marmont, the swank hotel on the Sunset Strip, to talk about their new book, "Joe Beef: Surviving the Apocalypse, Another Cookbook of Sorts."

It is a sequel to their debut cookbook, which they also wrote with Meredith Erickson, and it is again about the pair's much-lauded restaurant Joe Beef in Montreal, where they practice a distinctly Quebecois style of French-influenced cooking.

In the diffuse light of the hotel's patio-adjacent dining room there were double cappuccinos on the table, an uneasy smokiness to the air from the wildfires scorching nearby neighborhoods, and the distinct feeling that the ghost of Anthony Bourdain (patron saint of Joe Beef, a habitue of the Chateau) was among us. The end of the world, the unifying principle of their new cookbook, seemed a reasonable topic of conversation, though it quickly strayed darker and truer than just cookbook chatter.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

I'm just going to start with the obvious: Why the apocalypse?

David McMillan: There was a moment when it hit us. We'd gone from lean-and-mean cooking machines who could work 120 hours a week and not feel anything and all of a sudden we had multiple businesses, three kids each, 80 employees. And there

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times5 min read
There's A New Highly Transmissible COVID-19 Variant. Could FLiRT Lead To A Summer Uptick?
Two new COVID-19 subvariants, collectively nicknamed FLiRT, are increasingly edging out the winter's dominant strain ahead of a possible summer uptick in coronavirus infections. The new FLiRT subvariants, officially known as KP.2 and KP.1.1, are beli
Los Angeles Times3 min read
Alleged Violin Thief Also Robbed A Bank, Prosecutors Say, With Note That Said 'Please' And 'Thx'
LOS ANGELES — The violins were expensive — and very, very old. They included a Caressa & Francais, dated 1913 and valued at $40,000. A $60,000 Gand & Bernardel, dated 1870. And a 200-year-old Lorenzo Ventapane violin, worth $175,000. For more than tw
Los Angeles Times2 min readWorld
Facing A 'National Emergency,' South Korea President Urges Citizens To Have More Babies
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol announced this week that he would create a new government ministry to tackle the country's low birth rate, which he called "a national emergency." The ministry will serve as a specialized "con

Related Books & Audiobooks