SmartLess - "David Chang"
Episode Date: November 16, 2020In this tasty episode of the pod, we bring in Mr. David Chang to have a seat at the table and indulge in a line of questioning by our gang of idiots. As one of the most important chefs and re...staurateurs alive today (and he doesn't care), Dave educates the gents on food & the restaurant industry, being a dad, his early days as a golfer, and other juicy nugs. But most importantly: he's gonna' change Sean's life with the right way to make a tuna sandwich. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey there, Will Arnett here from SmartList.
It's the podcast where Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes, and I interview somebody.
Two of us don't know who that person is because one of us has brought on a surprise guest.
That's the whole conceit.
I wish I could describe it better, but I'm not that smart.
So it's SmartList, and it's starting now.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Hey, are we rolling?
Are we doing this?
We're already podcasting.
That's the great thing about podcasting.
Sometimes you're just doing it and you don't even know.
What about my tasty flair of God on my...
Oh yeah, I saw that.
Did you have JJ Abrams over?
Yeah, I did.
Hey, did you guys see that nexium thing, that documentary called The Vow?
Nexium is a little bit more for...
Yeah, like if you have heartburn.
Heartburn or loose stools.
There's an entire documentary about...
Loose stools and heartburn.
Was I happy when my doctor said nexium?
Like that kind of thing?
It was that cult thing.
I know what you mean.
I can't believe I haven't been back yet.
It's so wild.
I gotta say, and I mean this, and Sean,
you know how much I love you and I've loved you for a long time.
But...
I feel like you could get caught up in a cult.
Who says I'm not?
That's true. I feel like you could just drift away.
By the way, this guy said...
Okay, so wait, I gotta tell you.
So the guy, the crazy sexual predator guy who runs the whole thing.
Sounds like a great guy.
Yeah, he sounds amazing.
Women, but anyway.
It's so fucked up, man.
It's really fucked up.
But it's really fascinating that people can get sucked into that cult like that.
I'm gonna be honest with you.
I saw that thing, you and I, you asked me about that the other day.
We were FaceTiming on a personal FaceTime.
And I...
Did I ask you about the vow?
About, yeah.
And I thought, I don't...
It just seems too dark for me.
I mean, as much as I like to...
I can't take that kind of stuff.
Things is like, I'm fascinated by how somebody can believe that.
Like, what point did you go?
Can I get that?
Yeah, that makes sense to me.
We're getting very close to a religious conversation,
which I don't think would end well.
No.
And also we have a really, really great guest today
that I'm excited to...
Pope John Paul, no?
No, it's...
Could you imagine if we got...
Will's just walking.
How great would it be
if one of us was like,
the Pope is here.
That would never...
And he still has the hat on and everything.
Here comes Will's crappy intro.
Let's hear it.
First of all, it's not going to be flattering.
Speaking of crappy intros, I've heard some...
I don't even try.
I listen to the podcast. You don't try at all.
Well, I don't want to insult the guest
by trying to craft some big flowery thing.
Trying to put any work into it?
Yeah, this isn't for work.
This is just chat and giggle.
Chat and giggle.
Well, I am going to say this.
Our special guest today is
a really, really formidable person.
He has accomplished so much
in what I think is a pretty
small amount of time.
This is a guy who...
That's Webster.
Really started a sort of square one,
worked in a bunch of restaurants,
then started his own restaurant,
then started multiple restaurants
and businesses,
then started a very popular TV show
on PBS
called Mind of a Chef,
and then did his documentary
series about food called Ugly Delicious.
I've seen Ugly Delicious.
He started Momofuku.
Oh, my gosh.
All those restaurants started in New York
and then Sydney and Toronto
and Tokyo and Los Angeles
and everywhere. God, he sounds loaded.
I just want to get him in here so we can start
talk to him. Our guest today...
Unless he's left.
...is Mr. David Chang.
Oh, yeah!
David Chang, look at him go.
I'd love it if you were just chewing when we saw you.
What a pleasure.
I'm so psyched you're here, David.
What an honor.
Now, first of all, David, why?
Listen, it's that voice. His voice
is just so soothing.
I'll do anything.
I'm going to Momofuku.
You know what I mean? I'm just saying when you walk in.
Wait, is that a new thing at the hostess table?
I'm just saying when you walk in,
if you walked in and you heard that,
and you thought like, uh...
Activated when the door opens.
A server will be by to take your order soon. Relax.
Okay.
I'd be like, I'm relaxed.
And a little horny.
Maybe a little bit.
I'd be like, is this a fuck restaurant?
What's going on?
I've actually seen Ugly Delicious.
It's a great show, and you're amazing on it.
I'm a big fan.
Thank you.
I need to go eat at your restaurant in Los Angeles.
Now, Major Domo is the one that's not called Momofuku.
Yeah, that's right. Major Domo.
And the first time I went to Momofuku in New York,
I went with our friend, David Cross,
years ago.
You probably know David.
Yeah, longtime supporter.
I do. We did a show together, Will.
Sorry, I'm talking to David, Jason.
It was a cheap, easy joke.
And he introduced me
to the wonderful world of
your culinary delights.
But you've done so much.
It is hard to
try to intro you because
you are your...
You're super young, right?
Yeah, that's what I mean. Look at the guy.
I'm 43 this summer. I don't feel young.
Wow. Jesus, that is old.
Yeah, but all the...
No, no, no. Don't make him feel bad.
Only a 51-year-old can say that.
Wait, when you open restaurant after restaurant,
aren't you just like, isn't it just like
a big, huge roll of the dice? Are you just like...
Yes, it is.
Every time I finish opening a restaurant,
I tell myself, I'm never going to do that again.
Ever. I'm sure.
But I would assume, obviously,
the more you do, the longer you're around,
the more your clientele
becomes expanded and the openings
become less risky, right?
And your brand is bigger, yeah. Yes and no.
I mean, in some ways,
they don't want us to do anything new,
but they also want us to do something new.
So you got to find that fine line of
pushing the envelope but keeping it
comfortable for everybody. Like a rock band.
So you started, you worked at...
I think I've got this right. You worked in a bunch of restaurants
and you worked...
You worked for Tom Glicchio for a while
at his restaurant.
Top chef. Yeah, of top chef fame
and you kind of bounced around.
You worked at a bunch of different places.
You decided I'm going to open my own shop
because to Sean's point,
it's a big risk, it takes a lot of guts.
What were those conversations like
to go, I'm going to do this?
Yeah. Well, truthfully,
the main reason I
decided to open up my own restaurant is
I was never going to have my own restaurant
if I did it in a traditional way.
Right. At all. There was just no way.
What would the traditional way be?
So, you know, I opened up in 2004
and I was still working for Dania Belude
Cafe Belude in 2003.
And, you know, I had cooked professionally
for about four plus years. Not enough,
but I had, you know, traveled around
seeing a lot of different things, worked abroad
and if you wanted
to open up your own restaurant back then,
which wasn't that long ago,
you had to be a patron to the restaurant
and know the chef and say, hey,
I'm moving back to Minnesota.
I want to open up a restaurant. Do you have a chef
that you could like give me?
And that's how, like, most people,
most chefs got their own restaurants
as a, you know, through someone
they knew. No one was like, I'm going to open up
my own restaurant. That almost never happened.
And I'm
a relatively competitive person.
I looked at the kitchen where I was at.
I said, oh, I was probably 13 out of, you know,
13 in the
progression of maybe I'll get my own kitchen.
And I was like, I can't do this. I got to find
a different way. And one of the things
that I learned when I was living in Japan was,
you know, food didn't have to be
super expensive to be good.
And I just
want to do something different. So I decided not
to open up
a French fancy restaurant and do something
different. And that's why
if I was better, truthfully, I probably
would never open up Momofuku.
But you've talked about it before. You were kind of
over fancy restaurants. You were kind of,
you kind of had enough. Is that true?
Yeah. I mean,
I worked at most, if you ask a lot of people
back then, they worked at fancy restaurants, not
they cared about the food, per se, or the
clientele. It was the only place you could
work with the best ingredients and learn
the best techniques. So
in some ways, you know,
I got tired. I remember
coming back and it was a lot of culture shock
for me moving back to America
and then being on the
Upper East Side and having to,
you know, chop a salad even
more and everything sauce on the side
and custom, you know, making everything
for all of these. So Jason ate there? Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Jason Bateman is well known in the culinary world
as being one of the most difficult people to cook for.
I have
the waiter pull up a chair.
And this, I'm glad that you touch
on this and Jason is definitely
somebody who's
guilty of this. But as a Canadian,
the first time I
I didn't experience that kind of like asking
for special stuff until
I came to this country. First of all, I
never do that.
I'm one of my Meg Ryan.
Poor Meg Ryan.
Now she's in the same category as
you. I mean Sally, Harry
McSally. Isn't there a famous sort of
this? I'll have what she's having. No difference
to anyone. Yeah, she was very picky.
But I love that. I love
what she's having. That's great.
But what happens in that scene? I don't know the
reference. But that idea
of people going like, um, yes. And I remember
like seeing some being with somebody the first time they like
sent food back. I was so embarrassed.
I was like, Jesus Christ. And it wasn't
because like there was something wrong with it. It was like
it just wasn't the way they wanted it. Yeah.
What I will do is
if food shows up not hot
I
for me, it feels
like it doesn't taste as
flavorful. And so I will
even sushi. Yeah.
I will ask the waiter to
to see if they can throw it
under the light longer or whatever. However, whatever
happens.
That's how they cook it. They just cook it with light.
Because I figured that the chef wants
the food to be bursting with flavor
and the colder
it gets, the more muted the flavor gets. Or am I
crazy? No, no, you're absolutely right.
Hot food is supposed to be served hot. Cold food
is supposed to be served cold. And if you go
to a restaurant and you serve something that is
cold and it should be hot
you have every right to send it back.
Because I figured it's probably
the waiter was too busy or
the chef didn't want it at that temperature.
So, yeah, anyway. But the thing is
it's called a pass in most restaurants
when the food hits sort of the organization
before it goes right out to the dining
room. So much shit can
go wrong by that time. Yeah.
Of course, let me ask you this because you brought
this up. I've always wanted to know and this feel
like, is this a myth?
We've all done it before. Somebody's like root to
the waiter or whatever and you go like, oh, you're
guaranteed. Are they sent something back? Yeah, you're
guaranteed for the whole kitchen's going to
spit in your soup now or whatever.
Without divulging any names, have you ever
seen that happen? No, no, no, no.
I mean, listen, it's hilarious.
You know, I watched that movie waiting
and I think a lot of people that are cooks
watch that movie because it's like something
we wish we could do, but that's never
anything anyone's ever seen.
Great. So we can lay that to rest now.
I mean, do people shit talk
customers behind their back all
the time? Yeah. Wait what?
Yeah. I mean,
no, but I mean, if somebody sends a sense, Jason
Bateman is out there. If somebody
sends a plate back to be reheated,
is that a common thing or should I be
as mortified as I feel when I do
do it? Which is not often.
The only time it's a problem is when
the customer's wrong, right? Right.
Right. Like, it happens
all the time. Like, for example, oh, I think
this bottle of wine is corked and it's not
corked, right? Or this steak
should be rare and it's not.
The customer's actually wrong, right?
And I think for years, even if the customer
is wrong, the restaurant just sort of had
to eat shit. And I sort of
decided I was no longer going to do that.
I would tell the customer, no, you're wrong.
Nice. Nice.
I feel like I took us off on a tangent here
and making David defend the restaurant
industry and the people who are screaming
like, fucking Jason Bateman's tail apparently
isn't hot enough.
You took David and me down in your life.
But I want
I do want to get back to something you said.
No, I just wanted to say, well, he's my guest
and I want to hug this time with David.
I'm so excited. I've only got three questions. Don't wear
them all out. Let me say this.
You talked about being competitive
and when you started the restaurant
you were not a lot of people know this.
I don't think that you were a golf prodigy
as a kid. Yeah, it's weird
to think about it that way. I mean, because
obviously I never panned out as a
golfer, but my dad
was way ahead of his time. Now
if you go to the golf course or golf tournaments, you're going to see
tons of Asian kids with their parents
yelling at them. My dad was the
OG Asian dad yelling at
his son to be better at golf. Wow.
You know, Will just got
me re-addicted to golf and I played every
day for the last month.
This whole interview is now going to go to
golf. Listen.
It was so uncool to play golf back then.
Mind you, like no one.
It's not that cool now either. It's not that cool now.
But I burned out. I burned out
really young. I mean, I won a bunch of tournaments
and there was this kid named Tiger Woods
and Phil Nicholson.
They were a little bit better than everybody else too.
No way.
So you were here in Los Angeles?
No, I was. I grew up in Northern Virginia, but
I remember trying to qualify for this tournament called
The Big Eye in Houston.
And I never qualified, but for three years
there was this kid that was a year or two older than me
that was on the cover of the pamphlet.
And I was like, how the fuck am I ever going to beat this guy?
He's so much better than everybody back then.
That was Tiger? Yeah.
And so were you a plus or were you a scratch?
I was, depending on the golf course,
my home golf club,
I was a scratch.
Good God. And what about now?
The last time I played
around a golf seriously was
2003 and I threw
my golf clubs into the ocean at Old Head
in Ireland.
And the 18th hole is this majestic
thing overlooking the ocean and
I literally was thinking to myself
maybe I could practice
and try for the tour or something like that.
How old were you? I don't know.
I was probably like 25, 26, because
my dad has always said, oh, you have all these natural
gifts, but I never had the head game because I just was a
basket case. And
you know, the thing about Ireland is they don't have a
lot of practice ranges. So you just like go there
cold.
Takes you four holes to figure out your swing.
And I literally had like a quadruple bogey
birdie and it was the most
schizophrenic round I've ever played. That sounds like my
game, right? Except for the birdies.
So I said, fuck this, I'm never going to play this
ever again. I chucked my clubs in the ocean.
My dad yelled at me and I was like, dad, I played for
those golf clubs.
So you have not played since?
I played once last summer
and
that was a
I probably won't play again.
Would you shoot something in the 90s?
I shot like I think like an 88.
Well, David, that's totally fine
for a guy who's actually got a job
and who never plays. I'm just the
golf does not bring me any joy
whatsoever. I just
I have to. Wow.
I mean, I'm that kind of personality, addictive personality
where if I had the chance, even though
I don't like playing the game, I would play
and practice all day to be that asshole
that wins the club championship every year.
Yeah. Nobody likes that guy.
Right. No, I got a danger
too close to why did you stick
with it for so long just because you had
a gift for it.
No, I'm scared of my dad father, right?
Scared of my dad. Yeah.
Okay. Okay.
But a good motivator, he put
in some good work habits
with you, right? And some thirst for
excellence and winning and all that stuff
and you pointed it towards
restaurants. Well, I mean, it sort
of became pathological, right?
Of like the need to work harder, be
better, practice more. Yeah.
But I say, but you but that's why I brought it up.
You can see it in your in your work
and your drive. Like you have
you're very focused, even though
you do a lot of your focus
requires you to look in a lot
of directions.
You still harness a lot of stuff
at the same time, which is
not easy to do. You know, it's a lot of
restaurants, a lot of businesses. It takes a lot
of determination and a
lot of, you know, discipline,
frankly. I've been lucky
and I've been surrounded by and if this is not me being
modest, I just have really great
people. I got way too much credit
for all the things that happen. And
I don't even cook in the restaurants really anymore.
So, you know,
I just, I don't
know. And when I look back at everything that's happened,
it's hard for me to believe that we did all that,
you know. Yeah. Hey, so
on cooking on, you know,
what does it take to be the best chef
or one of the best? Obviously, you need
to have great taste. No pun
intended. Have you
noticed that you are
a better chef in
one country versus another
country based on how
you like to cook? Yeah. Does that make sense?
No, it does make sense and it's
exactly that. Every country, and I wouldn't
even say every country around the world, even
places in America are very different,
right? Like
just for salt, for example, in
Toronto, I feel that people want
less salt in their food. New York
always wants more salt in
their food. And in Japan,
you think with all the soy sauce, it'd be very salty.
No, they want it sort of at
their minimum salt in a lot of the food. That's
not say ramen or something like that. But in
terms of the cuisine and the technique,
it's certainly
beneficial, I think, to be in America where
it is sort of this
amalgamation of different immigrants
and different techniques. So
if you say, you know,
or chef in Milan or Florence,
Italy, it's hard to
know the world because you're only
cooking Italian food. Right. Right. And
that is a benefit and
sort of a negative simultaneously. Have you
noticed what city or what
area, what region
is more
demands and more sort of
healthier ingredients? Like
can you actually determine that?
Is there a clientele that seems like it
wants something more stripped down
than other places? For sure.
I think it depends on
the customer, like the people that
go to SoulCycle, you know that they're going to,
I mean, you can almost like make
a menu exactly for them.
Right. The type casting of the kinds
of food that people are going to like.
For sure. Yeah. The funny thing
with LA, you think people eat healthier. They
do. They eat healthy
lunches. I find that a lot of people
skip breakfast and they eat like
total shit for dinner and
with ride sharing. Right.
People get fucking shit-faced now. Yeah.
Yeah. Where they didn't use to. You're
right. No. Yeah. It's been great for
restaurants. You know, when you see like, I had this
doctor once when I saw him
at this bar and he was smoking and I thought
that was the craziest thing I've ever seen.
A doctor smoking. And when I've seen
you or chefs on certain shows
just eating literally anything
they want, I was like, yeah
because what I love about food
is everyone has a different relationship to it.
Right. Everyone is constantly thinking
about it and like, should I eat more
of this, less of this and the guilt associated
with eating something you know is horrible
for you, but tastes great. Like how
much or how little should we listen to
that guilt or how much or how little do you listen
to that guilt because party feels like
I want what I want because it pleases me
however I know that what pleases me isn't
good for my body therefore
I eat it but I'm miserable. You know what I mean?
Right. You know, I think like
most things when you're younger you can sort of eat
anything and I remember first tasting
like foie gras or something like that
which is just fat. Yeah. But it's so good
but at some point it
all catches up with you and
I find that the older chefs get
the less they want to eat the stuff
that they actually make. Oh really?
Yeah. Getting back to the ride sharing thing
have you noticed that in Los Angeles since
Uber and Lyft and all that stuff came into play
that the restaurant business
increased because if
for no other reason just the alcohol consumption
could happen like in New York I would imagine
people would make money on alcohol
for years because you're jumping in a cab
but in LA you always have to factor in that long drive
home now no longer. Has the
money gone up? I mean yes before
COVID 100%
and that was a real
boon for the industry because
that's how you make money really
in any kind of restaurant business
as beverages and you know
bottle of wine or several cocktails adds up
and again
if you are eating in LA
more often than not before
ride sharing most people wouldn't indulge
with that second third or fourth drink
they'd have maybe one and that would be it.
You brought up COVID
What is it?
Yeah I guess what is it
sorry let me just
write notes. No like a noodles place?
Just the
Obviously COVID has
completely changed not just restaurants
but the economy and how we do everything
What do you think the future
of restaurants is going to be post-COVID?
Do you have a prediction?
Yeah I do and it has
it's not a good one. I just spoke with Senator
Gillibrand
to a bunch of I don't even know who the hell was on the zoom call
but I've been saying this since March
and it has not been a popular take
and I wish I wasn't right
but I said I think that 90% of all
independent restaurants will close
without intervention from the government
and I think I'm right I think maybe it's
85% 90%
Is that because the occupancy
limitations? Yeah I mean it's
25% depending on like New York
is 25% indoors Las Vegas
is say 50% I think California is
25% still. Everything's
the same. The economics are still the same
the fixed costs haven't changed
and I'll tell you if you're not
100% occupancy for a restaurant
you're losing money. I
heard Tom Clicchio say this
kind of pitched this thing on the Bill Mar Show
Tom had suggested like
he had this whole idea of why
when this happened, when this pandemic happened
didn't the government utilize
all the restaurant businesses to feed
people
to then keep the restaurant businesses
the economy going that way
when there's all these shortages at farms
and with milk
and produce and meats
I thought it was a great idea.
No it's an idea that was certainly floated
and the government not a surprise
they decided not to do it because
Sean don't get pissed off
I thought
this was a real opportunity
I thought you could have had Susie the Sausier
in 2020 and getting
subsidized by the government to do something that
communities needed and it just
hasn't happened.
I always wanted to ask somebody like you
an incredibly accomplished chef
we always want to know
what you eat and what you like
because these guys know that
I'd literally do anything anybody wanted
for a free milkshake or a cookie
and if you had to eat the same thing
or a cookie
cake or
the same thing for a week what would it be
what is your sugar
if you had to pick
how about a donut chunk
same thing for one week
I don't know man
okay then forget that
I'd probably choose fried chicken
sorry David you should know the reason he's asking
is because he quite literally eats a tuna sandwich
with plain chips every day
for lunch
is that real? on a paper plate
almost every day or a peanut butter sandwich
wait tell me about this tuna sandwich
are you making this tuna sandwich
yourself or are you buying it from like a deli
great question both but
I make it most of the time I just put
the tuna the canned tuna
what kind of tuna are you using spring water
or olive oil water no oil no oil
that's not a good thing number one
you lose there that's gross
what do you mean no because
I put mayonnaise in it and celery and that's it
yeah but even still spring water
tuna that's come on you got to change it
let me ask you this is there too much mercury in tuna
I don't know that answer
well then we got to go
wait wait wait
like walk us through it Sean this is a great line
cause David wants to know cause David
this is his area of it
so you're like Scotty I'm going to make some lunch
and so you slip slip slip into the
into the kitchen
slipper slipper
huh
sorry
and you're like
somebody get some fucking WD-40
in here the fucking closet is still creaking
so then you take out a can of tuna
what do you got you got the
I usually do two star kiss yeah
chewed cans
well cause you're exercising a lot probably
so you've got the two cans
you got the two cans of star kiss tuna
yeah and water
and then you do the thing and you just
by hand you don't have one of those automatic
no it's a hand thing
it's a miracle whip
to bring out the best foods
and bring out the best best foods
we don't need the jingle just the brand
best foods mayonnaise
how much mayonnaise how much mayonnaise
all you can handle
that's the only good thing I've heard so far
okay and so
and the celery and I have to eat it with celery
texture now see but now a great
chef will think about
what the size of those celery cuts are going to be
correct David
correct Jason you are very accurate
so now we know this
David what would you do if you if it occurred
to you that you wanted to make a tuna
salad sandwich how would you go about it
and for real how would you make it different
well I wouldn't use
tuna in spring water
because I think it's just too bland you might as well
eat a like drink a soylent shake
at that point I am open
to it I mean I just think the olive
oil is is better and better tasting
and there's better brands
not to be a total fucking snob there's
better brands of canned tuna as well
be a snob be a snob
so I would I probably do that
although downstairs I probably have some
sun kissed as well and then sarcast
you got a two-story house here
or is it a basement is it a basement
I've been lost some onions like I finally
diced some onions and some celery
and then I probably add a little bit more
lemon juice and then I do mayonnaise
I didn't use best foods I'd use a mayonnaise
called QP which is from Japan
and I do some
salt and pepper and maybe a little
bit of agave for sweetness
to bring it out wow that's a whole
new level of some sweetness now here is
what kind of bread would you put it on David sorry just a
we're gonna flash toast the bread yeah I would toast
the bread a little bit maybe a multi-grain type
of sure yeah would you put butter on
that on that toast shut the hell up
unnecessary so David
no Sean
no David
David
this is my problem with cooking you've
just described a 45-minute process
for a five-minute sandwich
and that's why I don't cook
well no that's why
that's well that's not why main reason
and then and then and then 20 minutes
to clean everything I just said I can make
it under five minutes wow
see
so
David I want to swing back
I'm not a swinger swing back to what
golf I want to I wanted to swing back
to something you were talking about playing
golf with your dad and
your dad actually did your dad
partner with you on one of your in your first restaurant
he did is that true yeah there was a lot
of family drama going on and I obviously
had a contentious relationship with my dad
here we go let's tuck into
this yeah I want to know that grab it you have any
alcohol there David just start
start sipping we're gonna get you crying
in about 20 minutes he just
he never said like I love you or
anything very stern asian father
and there was a lot
of shit going on personally and in my
family and is your dad
still with us no he's not he passed away
recently sorry about that I'm sorry it's all good
and I remember
being like a lot of my friends are going to graduate
school and I was like fuck it I
I saw how much money I might need
to start this restaurant I was like it's cheaper
than graduate school and then I would also remember
being well if I'm 26 years old
and I have to declare bankruptcy then that's not
so bad
but you didn't lead with that with your conversation
with your dad I think I
did I said listen I'm I'm doing this
with or without you and I'm going to raise the
money I said you know and
I think he offered and he
and he got three of his friends and they
pitched in a loan that I
paid back in two years
125 grand and I'm very
fortunate very fortunate obviously but
I even got to the point of thinking about doing
crazier things like actually
applying to school using the graduate
like money loan
and then bankroll in the school that way
I was going to do something crazy
that was a lot of pressure then to
not only did you know that your dad
specifically had his eye on you
for excellence and you wanted to make him proud
but now you're asking for his seed
money as well
that must have felt great to pay him back
and for him to have seen the incredible
success you've had before
he passed did he ever give it up to you about the success
you know how he did it
he told me
a few years back
stop working so hard
did he really
wow that was his way
do you have kids now
I do I have a 19 month old
and so wasn't the blessing in disguise
to have a father like that
so you can just shower your kid with tons and
tons of love yeah it's been amazing
I'm definitely the father that I'm not
what if you were like no I'm exactly the same way and I don't want to receive my kid
you get into that
fatherhood before
in Ugly Delicious
I think it's season 2 in the first episode
when you find out the reveals that you and your wife
are expecting a baby boy
and
you really one of the great things about that show
was it wasn't just about food
it was about how food kind of connects us
and how what food the role it's played
in your life and how it's connected
you to your family and was connecting you
to your new family
and I was really really moved
by that episode
the way you talk to your mom
and your sister and your mother-in-law
and your wife and then you kind of go
investigate other people and you talk
to other restaurateurs about
their relationship I forget that restaurant
in Oregon your friend has that cool restaurant
yeah Peter Peter's restaurant
what's it called oh Kano Kano yeah
and he lives there he lives on one side
of the restaurant and then and it's kind of like there's just
like a wall separating the kitchen and his kitchen
and I just love the way that
there are because I feel
the same way that there is no division
we can't put our lives into these
different boxes it's all one big
soup you know and nice
these lives that we live thank you or stew
mm-hmm
better go
I'm not married to a soup but I
could go either way broth
broth is good yeah because broth
cleaner yeah it's cleaner that's in
your show too about how broth is like a
such a huge but I just love
the way that you broke that down that like
it's all connected in the way
that we live our lives and that we can't compartmentalize
and that it's all just like this big
and I was really impressed
with your connection to family and how
important it was to you and I wonder
now you know now meeting
you because you were so nervous about
becoming a dad and you're so honest
about it and
and I remember your mom saying that you were
going to be great parents she said your wife was going to be
even better well yeah that's what she said the
only reason I'd be a good parent was because of my wife
yeah I know I remember I'm
glad to say you're still mad about that but
but did all your dreams
come true did it happen the way you thought
it would you know being a dad has been
amazing and I think it's been the only
highlight of quarantine because my son's not old enough
to go to school and drive me crazy but
being a dad
has been amazing because all I
did was work or go out
and have just do whatever I wanted
to do and I never intended
to think that I would ever have a family or
I thought I'd just be a bachelor
my entire life and
still thinking about it or
options always there but
being a dad has caused me
to being a husband
has I think caused me and forced
me not forced I think I've
willingly tried to be better and to grow up
I think it's taken me a long time to decide to
grow up instead of being a fucking jerk
yeah is that what made you nervous about
the prospect of being a parent about
the sort of
responsibility that would immediately come
or was it more tied in to sort of like
your experience as a child
there was that you know I
definitely didn't want to raise
my future child the way I was raised
but I wanted
to be present I wanted to
I didn't know how it would affect
how I worked right yeah
and that was my big concern is
how do I find a
division between work and life
and you know it's something I'm still trying to figure out
yeah you know even when
my son was born pre-COVID right I
travel a lot right whether it's
filming TV or the restaurants
or whatever shit I gotta do
I mean I think it's like probably five almost
a little over five months a year I'm on the road
and even when I
am at home working
you know it's I see you in the morning
and I'll see you the next morning
right you know
and I think that's how a lot of my friends
now in LA most of my friends in New York
saw their kids you know they're with their
nannies or somebody that's looking
after the kids but their parents are working
and you know I
I just was like man I want to be a dad
that's literally my
number one job I want to be good at is
be a dad like that if you
ask me what you care about the most
obviously I want to make sure that I can
financially take care of my family and the
people that work for me and the company
but I think overall my
priority when I found out my wife was
pregnant was I want to be
something that I think I'm going to be terrible at
which is being a dad
are you still enjoying the
entrepreneurship of opening multiple
restaurants like is it still excite you
invigorate you get you out of the bed in the morning
I mean yeah it changes
it changes it's
this post COVID world we'll see
what happens right but
two years ago I stepped down as CEO
and we have other
people in place for the culinary decisions
if anything I feel like I'm just like a guidance
counselor so I
been focusing a lot more on media so I can
it does sound lucrative though this is
why we have the two-story house guys
sorry keep going David
it could be three
good point so
you know that's where I'm at is I don't know
you know we're
facing some challenging times and
I always say again I'm never
going to do another restaurant and yet I always
do another goddamn restaurant
what would be the natural
progression for somebody like yourself
and to piggyback on that
is there something else you want to you dreamed
of doing ever you know
I'm these are really
hard-pressing questions for me right now
well this is a tough listen we
the hard one told me you guys would be
the toughest smart
we need an answer when we make
Leslie Stull look easy okay
I'm out of here I
think for me
career-wise just like what I want to cook is very
different
and I'm trying to find some metaphor analogy but
I just
while I always care about
eating in a fancy restaurant all these things like now I just
want to cook or make things
that are just wholesome
and pure like a sandwich or
piece of pizza I don't want the artist like a tuna
sandwich even a tuna sandwich right I care
more about
not about winning awards or I just want to do
that is good simple as
that and I don't care
about winning awards either that's why I never win
him because I'm like you know what I don't
want him currently the
the big awards go to
those places that design a plate
that's almost doesn't even
look like food right the artistry of it the way
that it's all it's like an Oscar
film you know like best picture there's a
certain film you know
that's not necessarily populist
but it's it's complicated I get
I think I've always wanted to be something that's populist
but even still now I just would rather
serve a bowl of chili yeah yeah I mean like
that to me is more
appealing both
in taste and how someone might
consume it you know you have a restaurant that's
kind of lo-fi like that
yeah but it's still not exactly where
it could go and I don't even think it could be
a restaurant right the kind of food that I
personally the thing is I'm making more food now
at home than ever before what about like a diner
what do you do with your leftovers and just give me
your address real quick
give it outside
I'd be good for leftovers David
but my restaurants are hard
man yeah so damn hard
where do you stand on design
or do you just punt that to a partner
I mean originally I didn't care about
design or service
it's true like if you talk to anybody
about the restaurants our restaurants were like jail cells
very minimal
no comforts very loud music
and very much in your face
young and obnoxious
and it was very punk rock
in some ways without being punk right
and I like the hard challenge and I wanted
to win someone over
with nothing but the food
yeah going back to what I was at like
is there something completely outside
of the culinary world that you
always dreamed of doing or you would want to kind of dabble
in or Sean has it Sean has
he has to ask that question
I want to pitch you some ideas yeah
he can't he can't not ask that
because I'm always interested in what other people
are interested in other than the thing they're known
for well I'm sort of doing that
you know I I'm
I'm like sort of trying to figure out what that is
I'm still will always be
related with food
I think we're making a bunch of
consumer product goods like sauces
and salts and stuff we're going to get into
the hard goods business and
part of this is how should I phrase this
I like to do things
that people think are stupid right
or like it's not cool go on
and if you ask a lot of guests or even
like a younger version of me would
you sell pots and pans or fucking
a line of sauces I'd be like
what a fucking sell out in some ways it's
like how do you turn that
yes it's maybe selling out but how do
you make it awesome so you can put in the
component of like Paul Newman where he
sort of became somewhat philanthropic selling
salad dressing
money away listen let me just tell you this
David there's no such
thing as selling out there's only
buying in
okay
full stop do you talk about
all these places to go where do you like to go
I mean all things being equal and you know
without COVID etc when
you're sitting at home and it's like
you know you look at your watch and you look at your wife and you're like let's go
I really want to have
something that's satisfying
and going to make me feel good where do
you what's the first place you think of
in New York it's a sushi restaurant
called Shuko
in downtown
in like so the West Village it's so good
okay you know it's different what streets
it on I think it's like
12th Street between 5th and 6th or
Greenwich and Broadway what about Los Angeles
we're in Los Angeles man that's the thing
that LA there's so many
places but really that
arts district is sort of where the
the newer spots are
which is amazing to me the best you guys
bobble hey Jason try to sound
older by the way yeah what is it
no art
district is where all the new kids
me and the lady Jesus
you know what just take yourself out to the shed and kill yourself
I say
I do not get out David
what about this spago I've been hearing
about
there's so many good spots
I went to once I'm not so he said we went
and it's not cheap and it was
it was us and it was Thoreau and
she to Jones and we decided to play the credit card
roulette and whoever lost had to pay
for the meal and Thoreau lost
and he was so mad
for real that he because he's
and I'll say this he's so cheap
and he
it's just us talking it's just us talking
he won't be right he didn't fucking listen to our show
he cries when he orgasms
too apparently
every time
and I'm always there to wipe the tears
it's weird
remember when we can
remember when we could go out and eat
we're still recording
can you just up the energy a little bit
what about the tower bar
what about the tower bar
hey lady
Sean can you pull the pamphlet
into the frames so we can see the
Scotty bring another pill in for you
it's almost
night night time
it's five fingers of
chardonnay the pill and then he's out
and a cup of tuna
I can't wait
I get excited around this time of day
wait a second
before we lose our shit the last thing David
I want to ask you about your book
can you talk a little bit about your new
book yeah
eat a peach
great song
yeah fuck man it's out it's a memoir
you can read about my crazy life
I don't even understand why it's out
there I've been pretending
that it didn't happen that's the easiest way
for me to get through life
it's so revelatory you're so open and honest
in it so it's kind of like you have
to pretend right that
everybody's not reading about your
what you're thinking about
did you read it did you read it for an audio
book I did
I don't know that's why I was like your voice
you guys are so good at doing this shit I don't know
how it's I was of course
I read all the criticism and
first thing yeah he shouldn't have he shouldn't
have read his own book
never
never read any criticism
or reviews because if you believe the good
ones you got to believe the bad ones too
so are you like
avoiding phone calls
no no I mean it's it's been
I think incredibly well received
we were supposed to it was supposed to come out in May
and we had like a 21
city book door so
that's not happening but
you know
it's just weird because
I don't know it's not only weird that
the book is there it's weird that
I'm such a competitive person and I'm like
fuck you know I got to beat all these
goddamn Trump books
all order right now
David listen we've taken up too much
of your time already I can't thank
you enough man I think you're such a cool
dude and and you've done so many amazing
things in
you know I just wish you nothing but success
and thanks for coming here and giving us your time
I'm so glad I'm at you David
I'm gonna make you a tuna fish sandwich now
that's that's what I gotta do Sean
I would love to see your version of that
I would love by the way yes
I would kill to taste that no I'm serious
I'm going to we're gonna I'm gonna get you
your info and I'm gonna make you something
that hopefully you will enjoy I would kill
for that that's so cool thank you David
yeah leave it outside in the sun for a few
hours and I'll pick it up
I
thank you for being with us
thank you David thank you David see you later
man thanks guys
I feel like we have
a good shot at getting a table inside
of a week yeah instead of a week the three
of us could call and say like Sean and Jason
and we'll want to want to come in for
for dinner and they want it to be
gratis he literally just texted me
right like we should because we're friends
they'll probably throw in the desserts
maybe right you think maybe
you know me I don't like dessert
you know how much I love dessert right
I know angel
I love it so much yeah I loved
him though he was great he's uh
super normal yeah
super normal and such a like huge
family guy and really I implore
our listener to watch second season
of ugly delicious episode one
and what he's really struggling with
when he finds out that he's gonna have a kid it's
it's such a beautiful kind of
exploration of himself he's really honest about himself
he's like I don't know if I'll be any good
I think I'm gonna be a terrible dad
he's really worried will you stop
rolling up your sleeves yeah it's so gross
why is just like pulling he's wearing
a short-sleeve shirt he's just pulling up the
sleeves and making it a tank top
I don't want to look at your dumb guns
how are they they're dumb
are they not great
well I guess they're good all right they're fine
well we should probably go look at my
noodles my forearm is bigger than
my biceps what's wrong with me
yeah so like a ramen noodle just like a really
take a photo of it insta he doesn't
he doesn't insta he don't you don't have an instagram yet
do you he does is he talking about
take take an instant picture instagram like the
polaroid well post take a picture of him
post it to jason take it to the post
office
so long
it's been let me just see how many steps
I've got left because I did a lot of mailing
already today
I mailed my wife a letter
she's right next to me
but the journey was incredible
I mailed her a letter every day
to let her know I love her
all right we should probably kick it
we should wrap it up
love David
the other thing is
bye
bye
smart
less
smart
less