
Lectures in History FEEDDROP: Chef José Andrés on Food, Humanity, and Global Relief Efforts
Nov 30, 2025
Chef José Andrés, a renowned humanitarian and founder of World Central Kitchen, shares his culinary journey and global relief efforts with David M. Rubenstein. He discusses the power of food as a tool for community change, recounting experiences from Hurricane Katrina and Haiti's earthquake that inspired his work. José emphasizes his creative approach to cooking, his love for cooking at home, and how he balances running restaurants with humanitarian missions. He also dreams of cooking in space, bridging his passion for food with innovative ideas.
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Collecting Cookbooks To Touch History
- Jose Andrés collects historic cookbooks and travels with them to connect physically with culinary history.
- He values touching and smelling old books to understand past cooking practices and ingredients.
Creativity Over Precise Recipes
- Andrés rejects strict recipe-following in favor of creativity and adapting to the cook's context.
- He says cooking tolerates failure and creativity, so imperfect dishes often become new successes.
End-Of-Month Meals Shaped Taste
- Andrés describes his mother's end-of-month cooking that turned sparse ingredients into cherished dishes like croquetas.
- Those frugal meals shaped his lasting memories and culinary values.
