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A Conversation with Chef Alain Giraud

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By Cheri Sicard
Photos: Mitch Mandell
Posted August 6th, 2007
FabulousFoods.com Recommends: The Country Cooking of France, by Anne Willan, (2007, Chronicle Books)
The Country Cooking of France
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Did I say enough or do you want me to go deeper on that story? I cook in a classic way and when I started I was looking to work in Paris. And I think Paris is like New York, it's like Los Angeles, it's like any big city in the world. You come with your own heritage, the one inside you, then you absorb the world around you. It's what happened to me in L.A. I found this place here and it reminds me of Provence. It's not Provence, it's thousands of miles away. But you have the same sort of climate, same weather. The people have a really honest way of life, it's Santa Monica. It's...cool, can I say that? You have this wonderful atmosphere here. Like I said, the farmer's market it's like an escape to an island for me. Wonderful people, I like the interaction in the market. I have a lady, she's very nice, she grows sweet basil. She's a farmer! Very sweet, very honest. The market is very important for us because you get fresh produce, fresh fish from the people who are growing it. They know about the land, about El Nino. (He Laughs.) Wow, if you let me go on you'll have to ask only one question!

Lavande FoodCheri Sicard - That's all right, it makes my job easier. But I will ask, since we're on the subject of market, what are your favorite ingredients?
Alain Giraud - Favorite ingredients are the very simplest ones. Maybe tomatoes, I'm in love when the tomatoes are going to look good, the skin, the flavor, and you have so many different kinds here in the market. So, tomatoes, olive oil. I use a lot of olive oil. Hehehe, chocolate (he says with a devilish grin), any dark chocolate, the darkest I can get. I love a lot of seafood, but you have to be very sharp when you cook seafood. Meat is easier but fish and seafood are very...precise. I mean, what I tell my chefs is that when they start to work in the fish station they have to be very precise, if you go one more minute, it's over. And truffles, I love truffles. because they are rare, number one, they are very rare. I like them, not because they are expensive, but I really enjoy truffles because they are like a gift from nature. What is really interesting about truffles is that the hand of man doesn't touch it, just dig it out of the earth. It's not like caviar, it is a pure gift.

Lavande Ice CreamCheri Sicard - What kitchen tool could you not live without?
Alain Giraud - My knives. Knives, and I have a black iron pan. I was lucky when I came here, I found three old ones. I like to use those. I don't have any non-stick pans. Not one! And, I have an ice cream machine! I love ice cream. I fought for that. Nobody understood why I wanted an ice-cream machine, but I said I want it. (Editor's note: when we dined at Lavande, we understood perfectly well why Alain fought for the ice cream machine, for the meal was finished with the most delicious, delicately flavored lavender ice cream. Now, I am a serious ice cream addict, and I have to say that this was the most exquisite ice cream I have ever had!)

Cheri Sicard - Do you have any other kitchen gadgets like that, that perhaps aren't really necessary, but you really like them anyway?
Alain Giraud - I have plenty of them! A Japanese machine that cuts potatoes, a Japanese mandolin. I have a machine to open eggs, from China. A small blender, I have two of these at each station. A hand (immersion) blender. It's great, if the sauce is a little too thick, you add some olive oil and voila! And a big blender too, to do grains.

Cheri Sicard - You've won many prestigious awards. How important were they to your career?
Alain Giraud - Ahhh, I want to be against...not competition, I like competition, but when I was working in Paris, in a big hotel, you see these people walking around and it was like they had lost something somewhere. The competition had some power over them. The competition I did, I was attracted to because the judge was matching the wine from the South of France with any type of food you wanted to create for the competition. I was working in Paris, but this took me close to my roots, to the South of France. I met a lot of people through that. I was lucky. I won it. It was the last one I did. It was the only won I made. I made one, I won it, it's enough. I don't need anymore. Thank you. I met a lot of people though. I have a lot of connections, many friends in the wine business. I take the honor with me, but the competition doesn't change my way of thinking. (Editors note: Giraud has won other awards, they just haven't been through direct competition.)

Cheri Sicard - You came to Lavande from Citrus?
Alain Giraud - Yes. I was the chef de cuisine, which is a French title for the person running the kitchen. In America you have the executive chef, executive sous chef. In France, chef du cuisine means a lot. I like this title. At Citrus, Michel Richard was chef/owner, the man behind the spirit of the place, for sure! I don't know if you've ever had the chance to dine at Citrus, but it is a beautiful restaurant. I think it was the prototype of a restaurant of the 80's in California. Something clear, simple, not pretentious, very serious food, bright. I like Michel. We did a lot of things together, he's a very good friend. He's moved to Washington now. I was looking for something different. Not only different, but something for myself. When I came to Loews, we negotiated for a while. I didn't want to be just a chef in a hotel. I wanted a baby! I have already two at home, I wanted number three here! I had the need to have something that was a part of me. Someplace that I can cook anything that I like.




 

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