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November 24, 2020 50 mins

Hillary is joined by chefs Samin Nosrat and José Andrés to discuss all things food, from the struggle too many Americans are facing to feed their families to the lighter side of things – like what it takes to make delicious beans. Then, Hillary chats with Rocco DeFazio, the owner of one of her favorite pizzerias, about how his restaurant has adjusted to the pandemic. 

Samin Nosrat is a cook, teacher, author of the James Beard Award-winning cookbook, Salt Fat Acid Heat, and host of the Netflix documentary series based on that book. She is an “Eat” columnist at The New York Times Magazine. She also co-hosts the podcast Home Cooking, in which she and Hrishikesh Hirway answer questions about how to cook during a global pandemic.

 José Andrés is a bestselling author, educator, humanitarian, chef, and owner of ThinkFoodGroup, a collective of nearly thirty restaurants. He is also the founder of World Central Kitchen, a nonprofit specializing in delivering food relief in the wake of natural and humanitarian disasters including the coronavirus pandemic. 

Rocco DeFazio is the owner of DeFazio’s Imports and DeFazio’s Wood Fired Pizzeria in Troy, New York. 

You can find a full transcript here.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You and Me Both is a production of I Heart Radio.
I'm Hillary Clinton and this is You and Me Both,
where I get to talk to people who are doing
extraordinary things. You know, the holidays are upon us, and
while we may not be able to gather with friends
and family the way we wish we could, we can

(00:21):
still take pleasure in another important tradition, making and eating food. Today,
we're going to talk about that. We're going to talk about,
you know, food insecurity because for many people, food is
in short supply, whether because of the pandemic and economic crisis,
or maybe natural disasters, or because of the everyday reality

(00:44):
that millions live with. And then we've got the insecurities
in the restaurant industry when it comes to trying to
keep businesses open, trying to be safe but also produce
a good product in these tumultuous times. Of course, then
on a lighter level, there's a fact most of us
just don't feel all that secure when it comes to

(01:05):
cooking at all. Well, we're going to get into all
of that. We're gonna hear from chef Jose Andreas, known
for his Michelin Star restaurants and for his work bringing
food to people in Moments of Crisis. I'll also be
talking to Rocco de Fasio, the owner of de Fasio's

(01:28):
Pizzeria in Troy, New York, which makes some of the
most delicious pizza I've ever had. But first, Samine noz
rap I was so excited to talk to Sami. Not
only is she the author of the cookbook Salt, Fat,
Acid Heat, which is also a Netflix series, she got

(01:49):
her start learning from a chef I've admired for a
really long time, Alice Waters at Chaponnese in Berkeley, California. Hello,
Secretary Clinton. Oh s mean, you've got a whole podcast
set up going there. I love it. That is so cool.
You know, I've read so much about you. How you

(02:13):
came to cooking, and then you know, working in restaurants
and becoming a chef, and then food writing and and
all of it is really interesting to me because although
I love to eat, I am not someone who is
a natural in the kitchen. Let me just say that,
despite my best efforts. So give me a little bit

(02:34):
about your background. I know you were raised in California,
You're the child of immigrants from Iran, But how did
you end up doing what you're doing well. I also
was not a natural in the kitchen. I definitely came
to the kitchen through eating, through the love of eating,
and my parents came to California from Iran, and my
mom really wanted to instill in me and my brother's

(02:58):
a sense of our culture through our food. And I think,
you know what I've come to learn as I've grown
up and become a cook and just a person in
the world meeting people from all over the world, is
that food is a way that people really connect to
their family history. And especially if you are forced to

(03:18):
leave where you're from, you know, it's a way that
you connect to your homeland. And so for my mom,
I think in the seventies and eighties in southern California,
there weren't a lot of our traditional ingredients from Meran available,
so she really made it her full time job to
sort of traverse the city and even the state to
find the flavors of home. And she is an extraordinary cook.

(03:41):
But like a lot of immigrants, what she wanted for
me and my brothers was for us to succeed at
school and to be really sort of successful in life.
And so she didn't want me to be a cook.
She didn't want me in the kitchen. She wanted me
doing my homework. So apart from like a few sort
of cleaning fava beans or the occasional picking herbs, I
was not really in the kitchen, although I will say

(04:03):
she had a lot of sort of hippie tendencies. So
we you know, we didn't have a lot of desserts
in the house, and so if we wanted anything like that,
we had to make the dessert ourselves. That's a good rule. Yeah,
So I did do a little bit of baking as
a kid, and that was something I did do. I
have to say that among my friends and acquaintances in

(04:27):
the Iranian American community, there's a lot of emphasis on
keeping that cultural connection to Iran to their Persian past
by the food. Absolutely, did that make you feel a
little bit like an outsider when you were growing up?
I think I always felt like an outsider. And definitely,

(04:48):
you know, my mom would make us our delicious We
have this um kind of a fritatic called cuckoo sabz
and so she would make that and then we would
have cuckoo sandwiches for lunch. And no other kids had
that in their boxes. So I was very aware of
having different foods, and you know that my foods looked
and smelled different, and I was made fun of that.

(05:08):
You know, I was very aware of being different, and
I've always felt like an outsider. And now I think
that in a lot of ways, that's the source of
probably my strength, and it's definitely what kind of guides
all of the choices I make in all of my
work and in all of the things that I want
to do, because I don't really ever want to make
anyone feel that way, So I try to create work

(05:30):
that makes everyone feel included. I love that. So when
did you begin to realize that you wanted to go
from admiring your mother's cooking and the efforts she put
into it into wanting to cook, and not just in
your home kitchen, but in the outside world. It was
just total serendipity. I moved to Northern California for college

(05:52):
in Berkeley, and my sophomore year I fell in love
and my boyfriend was from the Bay Area. In a
big way of how we spent our time together was
eating food and so um. He had always wanted to
eat at a restaurant called Japanese and you know, to me,
I just knew it as a fancy restaurant. I didn't
really know anything about it, and so we had this

(06:13):
kind of like change box that we saved all of
our laundry quarters in, and and then eventually we went
and ate there and we had kind of what ultimately
was a life changing meal, not so much in that
it was like this kind of mind blowingly delicious meal.
It was delicious, but for me it was the first
time I ate in a restaurant that felt like almost
like eating in the best kind of someone's home, where

(06:35):
just every thing that you could possibly want was there
for you. It was just it was magical. It was magical.
So you had this incredible meal, and then what happened.
You know, I always had jobs throughout college, and so
it inspired me to ask for a job bussing tables,
which I did, and at the time, I was um

(06:57):
studying to be a poet actually really Luke Wort of Careopathy,
and so as I was kind of nearing graduation, I
was sort of struck by this panic of like, oh,
I'm an English major skills, what am I going to do?
And at the same time, I was every day going
to work in this amazing sort of sensory temple, and

(07:19):
so I was watching cooks. I was watching chefs who
are the best at what they did, cook the most
beautiful dishes, and it was so inspiring that within just
a few weeks I still have my journals. Within just
a few weeks, I was like, Wow, maybe one day
I could do that. So I started begging them to
let me in the kitchen, and eventually they said, we can't, really, like,

(07:40):
this will never go anywhere unless you really commit to it,
because there are people, you know, lining up from culinary
schools and kitchens around the world to work here. So
they gave me a stack of cookbooks, you know, thirty
books high, and they said, you have to go read these,
and you need to commit to doing unpaid internship and
you have to have years of sort of paying your
dues before this will turn into anything. And so I

(08:03):
did that, and eventually I got hired. And actually, I
have a really funny story that I'm so excited to
tell you, because if I'm not mistaken, one of the
themes of our conversation today is insecurities, right, like mistakes
and learning along the way. And so I had this
one week where every single day I went to work,
I had these colossal failures day after day after a day,

(08:27):
for two days in a row, I ruined huge batches
of rice, which, as an Iranian person is like, my gosh, yeah,
that's supposed to be at And then the third day,
we were preparing to host some sort of like picnic
and Golden Gate Park for you. Oh my gosh. I
remember that it was going to be like a barbecue

(08:49):
or something long tables, and so there was a dish
that I was making that had an element in common
with something that we were going to serve at your dinner,
at your lunch. Maybe it was like a pork sauce
of some kind. So they said, well, since that's going
to be the same thing for I think at the
time you were First Lady, So for First Lady Clinton's lunch,
then go ahead and just double the batch, double the

(09:11):
batch of sauce. And I probably had made this thing
two times before, but I was like, okay, I can
do this. So what it was was it's a pork sauce,
which is kind of like a rich stock. So it
was like I had to roast these bones and put
them in a pot and then pour like rich chicken
stock that we had already made. You know, it takes
a whole day to make and pour that over it
and simmer it for another day and then reduce that

(09:33):
into this delicious sauce. So I did that. I just
made twice as much, and I put it in this
humongous pot and you're supposed to bring it to a
boil and then turn it down to a simmer and
you kind of can forget about it. And then maybe
like forty five minutes later, there was this really bad smell,
like really bad. Oh no. I just kept being like,
who's ruining something? Like everyone who could be doing that? Yeah?

(09:54):
I was like, someone's really making something smell really bad.
It just didn't even a ocurred to me that could
possibly be my thing, So I just let it keep going.
Oh my god. And then eventually the chef came and
he realized, like he was like, you have ruined like
hundreds of dollars worth of bones and stock. He was

(10:14):
so mad at me. And what I didn't understand, because
I'd never done it before, was that all of the
weight of these many pounds of bones had like compressed
down at the bottom of the pot and because I
cranked up the heat. It was just like settled on
this burner, just burning, you know, and I felt so terrible,
and to me I wrote about in my book and
I was like, and then I ruined, you know, first

(10:35):
Lady Clintons sauce. And so I do remember the lunch.
I don't remember how beautiful. It was, a typical Alice
Waters special. How long were you at shapinice um so
that first round? I was there about three and a
half years, and then I went to Italy and then
I went back for another couple of years. What was

(10:55):
the experience like in Italy? Was that dramatically different? I
had always wanted to go to Italy, and I think
in certain ways there might be parts of Iranian culture
and Italian culture that are very similar. Certainly the love
of food and family and so certain things about it
felt really familiar. And in Shapanese and in this kind

(11:16):
of like California cooking, we have a lot of sort
of French and Italian traditions that we pull from, and
I always felt much more close to and inspired by
the Italian ones. The French ones are a lot tighter,
and um, I'm messy, I'm not like a neat, organized
person or cook. I'm a messy, loose, relaxed cook and

(11:41):
and I like to sort of use however many tomatoes
are left. I like to use whatever amount of onions
are on the counter. You know. I like to chop
stuff up into whatever sized pieces makes sense. And that's
what Italian cooking is versus French cooking is like cutting
stuff into perfect sized pieces. Yeah, but you know part
of you know, look, I think part of your success
has been you try to make it accessible for people.

(12:06):
You know, your cookbook Salt, Fat, Asset Heat is framed
around what you say are the four fundamental elements of
good cooking. And you know, I feel like you're, in
a sense talking to somebody like me, who you know,
my prowess in the kitchen is limited, and you're basically saying,
kind of go with the flow, give it a try.

(12:26):
Here are things you can do. And I think that
it's really a philosophy of cooking. It's not just a
collection of recipes. Am I right about that? Yeah? Absolutely? Well,
So do you have you ever cooked anything? Oh? God, yes,
I've cooked a lot of things. Like what's a what's
a success? Well, you know, my cooking is I would say,

(12:47):
workman like, sort of serviceable. I mean, it usually is edible,
but it's it's not anything that I'm particularly secure about.
You know. That's why I found what you wrote in
your Netflix and other you know, even the podcast you're
doing now called home Cooking is really addressed to people

(13:09):
like me to kind of root out my own insecurities
about oh, how many pieces of tomato actually have to
go in and all of that. But how did you
go from being given thirty books, being in the kitchen,
finding your way, and then really coming up with this
incredible theory. I saw the pattern. I think after about

(13:31):
two years in the kitchen, I saw this pattern. We
would taste everything and every day they would say, oh,
this needs a little salt. Oh the salad just needs
a little squeeze of lime, or that soup it just
actually needs a little bit of vinegar to brighten it up.
Or are you going to start that carrot soup with
butter or olive oil? Do you want it to taste
French or do you want it to taste Italian? Interesting?

(13:54):
And even with heat, like, do you want this thing
to be blistery and hot or do you want the
texture of your meat to be tender and falling off
the bone. So it was just these kind of patterns
that I saw over time, and eventually I actually went
to one of the chefs and I said, oh, I
think I see something. I think I see salt, fat, acid, heat.
And he said, yeah, duh, like we all see that.

(14:15):
That's a language we all speak. And I actually was
felt really betrayed. I was like, if you all see this,
how come nobody told me? And and he was like, oh,
because it's like so natural to us, we all get it.
That was when I understood, like there's something so basic
for these guys that nobody explains it. And so that
was I actually said I'm going to write this book

(14:36):
one day, but I still didn't know enough, Like I
needed to go do still years and years more homework,
figure out how to talk about it and teach about it,
figure out how to write, figure out you know, basic
science homework. I still had so much more work to
do before I could sit down and write. And then
the book was a big success and then Netflix came calling.

(14:59):
So talking that experience, I mean, I will say probably
as early as like two thousand seven, two thousand eight,
it occurred to me that my desire was to teach
people how to cook as many people as possible, because
I saw so many people afraid to just do these
basic things, because there would be something like I would

(15:20):
go to a potluck, let's say, and I would make
something so simple like roasted cauliflower with like pine nuts
and currents. You know, It's like that was like six ingredients,
pine nuts, currents, salt, olive oil, cauliflower five ingredients, and
people would be like, I don't even know how you
did this. This is amazing. What did you put in this?
And I'm like, no, literally, it's like salt cauliflower, like
it's nothing. There's nothing in this, you know. And so

(15:43):
it's not that what did I put in this? It's
just that I know that you know, this is how
you slice the cauliflower. This is how much salt I used.
I probably my oven was hotter than yours. Probably I
spaced the cauliflower out on the cookie sheet a little
bit more than you did. You know, I probably groasted
it farther than you did, right, But like, did I
put anything different in it than you know? It's just

(16:06):
I knew a little bit of this this and this,
and so if you knew this, this, and this, you
could make it too. We'll be right back. There were
two other things though about the Netflix experience, because clearly
they went after you smartly, because that's exactly what you
were doing, trying to make cooking less mysterious more accessible.

(16:30):
But you know, it took a while to get used
to being on camera totally. How is that for you?
I always wanted to make a show, but I don't
think I understood exactly what it would mean for me
to be the person on camera, or for me what
it would mean for me to be the conduit for it.
I also don't think I understood that I had a
specific talent for it. I just people kept telling me, oh,

(16:52):
you're a naturally. Are natural? And I was like, okay,
I don't know whatever. I just keep showing up and
doing it whatever like And I think later I actually
asked somebody, another director who kept saying I was a natural,
was like, what does that mean? And he said, Oh,
it just means you act the same when the cameras
are on and when they're off. You don't stiffen up.
And I was like, okay, but a lot of people do.

(17:13):
I mean that that is absolutely something that you are
lucky that doesn't happen. Yeah, it just happens to be.
My thing is I can block out a lot of
stuff and really focus on whoever is there with me.
But again, what was funny was I really wanted this show,
but I wanted the show because I wanted to to
send this message out to the world. You know. It

(17:34):
wasn't for me to be the star of it. And
I think it didn't really occur to me what I
was doing until the show almost came out. What did
occur to me throughout the filming was that I am
not like a blonde, skinny woman. I am not let's
say like like, I do not adhere to the traditional,
let's say Western ideals of beauty. I am a brown,

(17:56):
curvy woman, and I would be eating on camera and
I'm a person who really loves to eat, and those
things are not historically, you know, like shown on camera.
I also, and I think that was so endeared. You
were enjoying yourself, you were enjoying what you were doing,
you were enjoying what you were eating. I think that
all contributed to the success of it, Thank you. But

(18:19):
I think there's another element and you alluded to it,
which I connect to. You know, you want people to
not only enjoy food, but to feel comfortable actually preparing it,
and that has become so important during this pandemic. All
the people who are at home, and you know, there's

(18:40):
lots of articles, you know, they're doing sour drow bread
or whatever it is that is motivating them. But there
are a lot of people who now are able to
take a deep breath and out of necessity or choice,
are trying to actually get reconnected with food. Absolutely, and honestly,
I think there are so many dark ings weighing on

(19:01):
us during this time, but one of the most hopeful
things for me is the idea that practice is the
way that we become better cooks. And this time has
forced so many people to cook, and so when we
emerge from our cocoons, you know, I think that there

(19:24):
will be an entire generation who has a kind of
cooking skill. Then I think a few generations in this
country kind of didn't get it wasn't passed down to
us well, but part of it, you know, speaking for
myself and as a young woman, you know, there were
two things that you didn't want to do because you
thought it was giving into the stereotypes of the past.

(19:46):
You didn't want to cook, you didn't want to type, totally, totally.
So my mother would put three very healthy meals, you know,
on the table every day during my entire childhood, and
you know, I'd set the table or maybe chop and
I'd help clean up. But boy, you know, the idea
of being in that kitchen was not something that looks

(20:07):
like what you were saying with your mom. It's not
something that I was attracted to, you know, unlike me,
you were ignited. So I just have to ask you
what's on the menu for you know today in this week.
You know, what are you cooking up that you can
share with me? Oh yeah, oh man, uh. I actually
I have a pot of bean soakings that I'm really

(20:29):
excited to go cook. And then we have these tomatoes
that we grow here in California at this time of
year that are they're called dry farmed tomatoes. Dry farm
dry farmed, and so it means that the farmers stop
watering the plants after the plants send out their first leaves,
so it forces the plants to send really deep roots

(20:50):
into the ground. And then when the tomato fruits start coming.
They're like kind of small and shrivel e, but they're
really really intense in flavor, and they are the most
delicious tomatoes. They're so good. I can't even tell you
how good they're so um. Oh my gosh. So I
have all the delicious dry farm tomatoes. I was gonna
make a tomato salad, and then I got fresh corn massa,

(21:13):
so I was going to make tortillas. I was gonna
make casesa dillas and beans and tomatoes. Yeah, you know,
I have to tell you to me and and this this,
I'm I'm going to confess this. My beans don't ever
really work out. I mean, I know you're supposed to
soak them and soak them and soak them and all
the rest of it. But you know, beans are such

(21:35):
a good source of protein. I mean, I love the
idea of beans and when somebody else makes them, you know,
good black beans and good fava beans and all the
rest of it. What am I doing either wrong or
not enough of Okay? I like soaking because I think
of it as inactive cooking. So it's like I'm lazy.
So I'm like I'll just soak it, and how long
do you soak, I just put it in water the

(21:55):
night before. Oh okay, so you did overnight. Yeah, okay,
if I can think of it, or if I can't
think of it, then I'll do it in the morning
and then i'll cook in the afternoon or something. Okay.
But if you don't have the time to soak, and
even if I do soak, I would add a little
pinch of baking soda to the water. Baking soda, okay, yeah.
And I don't know what your water is like where

(22:16):
you live, but if you have hard water, that can
make your beans tough, and if you have even a
little bit of just like slightly acidic water, that can
make your beans tough. So baking soda can help balance
out your water. It just makes them a little bit softer,
so that is nice. And then I also put salt
and whatever other flavorings I want. But I also think
the other criminal thing that people do is they don't

(22:38):
cook their beans long enough. So I think in general,
you just have to cook them much longer than you think.
And so when you say much longer, how long is it, Well,
I don't know, because I don't know what kind of
you are. Like every bean is different, but probably until
the first few are falling apart. Like my friend Tamara
Adler says, you have to taste five beans and they
all have to be creamy, and that's how you know. Yeah,

(23:00):
this is very helpful. Thank you for everything you've done
to make people like me who are insecure cooks feel
much better about trying in the kitchen. Thank you, Thank
you for everything you've done. Thank you, Smin. You can
listen to Samine on her podcast Home Cooking, which she

(23:22):
co hosts with Rischie Cache. Here way so means fantastic
cookbook is called Salve Fat Acid Heat. Up. Next is
chef Jose Andreas. I first heard of the chef because
of the restaurants that he started opening up and I

(23:43):
began to eat at, and then I learned about how
committed he was to help people in need. He started
a whole nonprofit disaster relief organization called World Central Kitchen.
He was born in Spain. He moved to New York
City when he was a young man, I think like
twenty or twenty one. And since the COVID nineteen pandemic

(24:04):
broke out, he's been doing what he does best, jumping
into action to feed people. Back in February, he set
up a field kitchen to cook for passengers and crew
members quarantine on the Diamond Princess Cruise ship in Yokohama, Japan,
and then just spread across our country in the world
to help people. I was so happy to catch up
with him again. Jeff, it's wonderful to see you, and

(24:28):
welcome to this podcast, my friend. Thank you for having me. Well,
you're so busy. We've been lucky to find you in
between disasters and restaurant openings and all the things that
you are involved in. And I want to start a
little bit in the beginning, just so listeners know a
little bit about how you got to where you are.

(24:50):
You were born in northern Spain. You moved to Barcelona
when you were just a little kid, I think around
the age of five. How did you end up going
to culinary school when you were fifteen? So I was
not a very good student in the traditional sense. That
doesn't mean that I was not highly interested in learning,

(25:11):
but the traditional school system being in front of a
teacher and listening to what the teacher had to tell
you didn't work for me. My father I knew I
had love for cooking. My father always cook at home,
and he said, why you don't join cooking a school?
And I went to cooking a school. But exactly the
same thing happened. I barely went to cooking a school

(25:34):
because I beg I'm going to work in the restaurants.
And me I am the living proof that you still
can't learn, only you have to be learning in the
way that really suits you. And and that's why I'm
a guy that likes to be with the boots on
the ground for learning. And this is the way I've
been doing it all my life. From that time that

(25:55):
you came to this country as a very young man
until today you're equally well known for your restaurants as
well as then the philanthropic work that you are now
so well known for. You almost came up with a vision,
because I do think it was a vision about how

(26:18):
to bring food to people. How did you come to
the realization that this was something you had to do.
What was the inspiration? What gap were you trying to fill?
Obviously there's many things in life. My mom, my dad,
they were nurses. They work on different shifts on the hospital.

(26:39):
The hospital was the place they exchange My brothers and I.
So I spent a lot of time in the emergency
room nearby, waiting for my mom or dad take us home.
I always saw nurses and daughters going the extra mine.
I think for me watching in the distance because I
was not involved Katrina, and especially is seeing what happened

(27:01):
at the Superdome in my brain, an arena a stadium
is a gigantic restaurant that entertains with the sports and musicians.
Was not reason that we were supposed to leave so
many men and women stranded in an arena which actually
had every single infrastructure to provide quick and fast relief.

(27:23):
So me I began thinking is I realized that you
send authors and nurses to take care of the wounded
and create hospitals. You bring first responders and search units
to look for people under the rubble, to bring experts
in every category. But actually we were not bringing cooks
to feed people in need of food. And I realized

(27:44):
the problem is very simple, because we need to show
up and he's millions of restaurants around the world. Is
hundreds of millions of food people around the world. Let
me great organization that there's lowly, but surely we are
able to respond anywhere. So that's how it began. Let's
be quick, Let's be fast. When anybody is hungry or

(28:05):
anybody's thirsty, they cannot wait a week or a month
from now for governments or agency relief agencies to provide
eight food and water must be achieved right now. And
that's what we began doing. And so far we keep learning,
but every day we keep answering two more natural disasters

(28:25):
in America and around the world. I want to talk
for a minute about the cruise ships, because you went
to Yokohama with the cruise ship that was quarantined there.
You also went to the West coast here, and at
the time that you went, that was considered pretty dangerous.
I mean, nobody really understood what this pandemic was going

(28:47):
to mean. Talk a little bit about what that was like.
Because it's one thing to show up after the disaster
has sadly and tragically passed and you're helping to cover
It's another show when it's unfolding and you're in the
middle of it. I began following this pandemic right at

(29:08):
the beginning of January. One of my best friends, Ambassador
Orgel Hardo, he was the Mexican ambassador in China over
six years, so he had a lot of knowledge of China,
and he was getting me a lot of information in
the thing I love, which is how the Chinese, the
Bohan Redium was feeding their citizens. So my brain already

(29:30):
began working on that front. When Jokohama happened and the
Princess Crook ship was arriving and many bad decisions were made.
I was a navy boy, I know only a bit
or two about being inside ship. I was very amazed.
Between all the big agencies in the world, they will
not make the right call, which was take everybody out
of the ship as soon as we can, especially the

(29:51):
people that may be infected, and test everybody else. But
for us, we had a lot of experience in Haiti
and in most Ambigue with cholera, and we kept all
our teams clean and healthy, and the people we were
feeding the camps, we were feeling healthy. These gable is
kind of an understanding how to behave in kind of
a disease that maybe in thanks you so in the

(30:13):
case of cholera, because they're the conditions of the water
and sanitation. But this we arrived and we did a
very good job. We feed there eighteen thousand meals a day,
almost over forty days. What I was very proud is
that if you will see the health experts in the port,
and you will see the other people that were in
wide has MutS, you will have our time understanding who

(30:37):
are the people taking care of the health code and
who didn't. I was very happy that wasn't dragging chen.
We went through all of these without getting one person sick,
wearing masks, wearing globes, sanitation keeping distance. We began that protocol,
and we began sharing that protocol with all the Wall
Central Kitchen family. To this day, we've been very healthy.

(30:58):
We had more than twenty seven hundred restaurants across America.
We've been feeding people in five six seven countries. We've
been in Laura in the hurricane, We've been in the
fires in California, we've been in the explosion in Lebanon,
and the team's of War Central Kitchen we've been saying
because we did simple things to take the barttle seriously,

(31:19):
to make sure that success was not getting infected yourself
and more important, not infecting anybody else. And this is
what has allowed us to keep feeding millions of meals
through this pandemic successfully. We're taking a quick break stay
with us. On a personal note, I am so grateful

(31:40):
for the partnership between the World Central Kitchens and the
Clinton Presidential Center and Little Rock because when the schools
closed there in March, as schools did in most of
the country, a lot of those children lost their lunch,
some of them lost their breakfast. And in partnership between
World Central Kitchens and the staff at the Clinton Center Library,

(32:05):
you've been able to feed I lost tracks six eighty
thousand people, and now you're putting together produced boxes for
people to be able to take home. So I wanted
to personally and publicly thank you. You know, I've heard
you say often that food is a national security issue,
and I couldn't agree with you more. And it's a

(32:26):
national security issue in a lot of different ways. We
cannot be so dependent on external food sources. I saw
a graph the other day where a pair grown in
Argentina was sent to Thailand to be packaged and then
sent back to the United States to go on a

(32:48):
supermarket shelf or into a restaurant pantry. This is crazy.
We've got to deal with food as a national security issue,
in part by creating better agricultural supply lines. These many
things that have to happen at the ground level, but
there's many things that they should be happening at the

(33:08):
top from in this case, from leadership, Congress, White House.
And there's many things we know today that we didn't
know twenty forty years ago. But one thing is certain.
If food is not taking seriously, the next revolutions will
be because lack of food. In a moment that on paper,
food will be plentiful right now, we had two plagues

(33:31):
of locusts in Africa back to back. They ended with
huge parts of Africa without grain. We've been having fires,
we are having issues with water. One day the perfect
storm may be coming and one day we will wake
up and realize, actually we don't have as much food

(33:51):
in our hands as we thought we had. That's why
it's important that we need at the highest part possible
of government a person that will always be thinking as
food as a national security issue. Let's make sure we
are ahead, and let's make sure that food doesn't become
a problem, but that food becomes a solution to keep
everybody healthy. Better nutrition in a school, creating jobs, making

(34:16):
rural America richer again. And of course we know right
now that a lot of Americans in this richest of
all countries are skipping meals. They are lining up in
their cars or on foot to pick up food supplies,
getting donations from pantries and other charities. And you know,

(34:39):
part of the problem is that we just don't really
understand how food insecure, vulnerable people are trying to live.
We don't see them. I mean you see them because
you go not only into disaster areas, but you try
to help feed the home was you try to have

(35:01):
a backup system like you did with us in Little
Rock for kids who are out of school. They don't
have that free lunch anymore. How are you thinking about this?
Because you're right, we have to have the national security plan,
uh and it should start yesterday, but we also have
to have the real hunger and food and security plan
as well. What I realized is that thought should not

(35:26):
be political and should be a Republican Democrat issue. Right now,
we need a strategic plan until COVID is beaten to
fit America. In a very simple way, right now, we
throw money of the problem. Let's make sure that instead
of throwing money with boxes that sometimes there are not
even reaching the people. Let's make sure that we put

(35:47):
restaurants up on working like walls and each has done
three thousand restaurants that we've been paying per meal. The
restaurants can be open, they can pay their lists, they
can hire their people back. Those people can the rents,
they can buy from the farmers and the fishermen. In
the process, the local mayors they have a place where
to go to feed their communities. You need every dollar

(36:08):
that comes from the federal government or from private donations
is multiplied by three. That's it's my idea. Why we
don't keep school lunches up and going breakfast and lunch
in every community, and not only for children, but for families.
Why we don't increase snaps what we call food steps
so people can use set in restaurants, so people that

(36:28):
if you are elderly and you don't want to go
out because it's not safe for you to go out,
what you cannot use maybe snaps to get food delivered
to your house is gonna be cheaper because those elderly
people are gonna be healthy, they're gonna be fed, and
you are investing in keeping the economy up and running.
Right now, we lack this kind of leadership three sixty
degrees strategy that we should be putting in place in

(36:52):
this moment, but they should be lessers learned about how
to make sure that in the process of keeping every
American child said, we keep the local economies running, rural
America getting is stronger, and putting everybody at work in
the process of feeding America. This will be a good
investment in the future of America, but it requires a

(37:15):
vision and then political will. Right, Let's hope that we
keep pushing on one day. We hope that one plate
of food at the time, we can keep creating a stronger,
better America. Well, I hope everybody is listening because that's
a great policy overview for what we need to do
about food security. And I want to underscore what you said,

(37:36):
because I'm not sure many people know this, is that
World Central Kitchen has been paying restaurants to be their
partners so that they can keep their employees employed and
they can keep doing what they do so well, namely
making food that will nourish people. You know. To wrap up,
I just want to reiterate my gratitude to you for

(37:59):
everything you do. But I know how hard you work.
I know even in the middle of the pandemic, you're
on and off planes. You're going from wildfires to disastrous
explosions in Beirut and everywhere in between. It is so
important that the people who are helping to take care

(38:19):
of others also take care of themselves. You know, you
and I've had some pretty long days. But at the
end of those days, if we're going to keep being
of service, and particularly someone who is literally creating a
new brand of philanthropy, you've got to replenish yourself too. Well.

(38:40):
I'm very blessed because I have a wife I don't deserve.
My best friend. She keeps me honest, she gives me
a straight I've been taking a little break this summer.
Actually I lost forty pounds and it's still I promise her.
By the end of the year, I should be losing
another thirty pounds. So this is very important. And if
I want to be jumping between helicopters and amphibious vehicles,

(39:04):
and I want to be doing this, it's my calling
life feeding the many. Obviously, I want my restaurants successful too.
We have only four hundred working right now. But I
cannot wait to have everybody else back sooner rather than later.
So yes, the responsibility is on the shoulders. I wish
I had a little restaurant in a little island and

(39:25):
just be there with my wife, making ROMs hours and
cooking a little grill chicken on the beach. But I
decided to have a slightly more complex life and was
Senator Patrick moyneghan that back in nine on a Sunday morning,
almost first customer I ever had in my restaurant, Halleo

(39:45):
on Seventh and in Northwest Patrick Moneghan told me that
if you love America, America will always love you back.
America has given me and a great place to belong,
three and beautiful American born daughters, an opportunity to serve.
The least I can do is used to get back
a little bit of everything I got. If we all
do that, I know America is gonna be always a

(40:08):
country that we all dream of. It's a pleasure always
talking to you. Thank you so much for spending some
time talking about food and life and everything in between.
Thank you very much for having Since the pandemic broke out,

(40:28):
World Central Kitchen has provided more than thirty million meals
in four hundred cities across America. To support their vital work,
visit w c K dot org. Now I can't talk
about food without talking to one of my favorite restaurant owners,

(40:50):
Rocco di Fasio from Troy, New York. I first started
meeting with him, working with him, and eating his fabulous
food back when I was a senator from New York.
I know you can have a big fight about what
makes for delicious pizza. I can just tell you that
Rocco's pizza is really special, and I think it's because

(41:11):
of all the love that this three generation business puts
into it. So I wanted to talk to Rocco about
what things have been like at the restaurant during the pandemic,
how he's adapting to this new reality, and of course
get a little update on his famous pizza and legendary gelato.
And a quick disclaimer for those listening, this interview will

(41:33):
leave you craving both. Hello, beer, It is so good
to see you. This is not as good as being
with you in person, but it will have to do
until you know we can travel again. I still remember
very well eating your pizza for the first time. It

(41:54):
was delicious. But in addition to such delicious pizza, it
was just so much fun. The business that your parents started,
that you've kept going, that you've now passed on your kids.
It's such a great American story and it is centered
around food. You know. I first learned about you because

(42:16):
when I was senator from New York, I used to
read local newspapers all the time, and I would find
things in it and I would say, Hey, let's follow
up on this. And I saw this article about how
you wanted to try to rebrand Troy, New York to
really make it a kind of little Italy destination, and

(42:39):
I thought that was such a great idea. So I
contacted you. But first my office tried to call to
connect with you, and you kept hanging as I because
you thought it was a prank. Give a little bit
of history to our listeners about your parents, Anthony and Josephine,
and you know, are American journey, which of course led

(43:02):
to starting the business. Yes, both of my parents came
to the United States in the very early thirties. My
mother was from near a small town outside of Naples,
and my father was from Calabria. And my mother's friends
would always tell her how did you marry this color braise?
Why did you? Oh? Yeah, because the two didn't Why

(43:28):
did you marry this color Braise. So when you're parents,
Anthony and Josephine started the business back in nineteen, what
kind of business was it, because I know it's changed
throughout the years. Oh it has, we have changed. Yes,
it was a neighborhood store, but there were dozens of
these stores. What was the point at which you all

(43:49):
discovered the attractiveness of pizza and especially wood fired pizza.
Wood fired wasn't known anywhere, but we had this building
next to us, and so I'm talking to my parents saying,
you know, I think we should open up pizzeria. And
they both said, I think you should use a wood

(44:09):
fired oven, because both of their parents use a wood
fired oven. And it'll be from the old country, from
the old country. That's all they had. My dad always
used to say when things were going well, now we're
cooking with gas. Well that's where that expression came from. Yes,

(44:30):
we're moving up. We're moving up in the world. We
have gas. When did you actually take charge of the business. Nine.
I just had this conversation yesterday with people from Brooklyn
who were up to try it, and they said, your
pizza crust is unique. Well, I can attest to that,

(44:50):
having eaten a lot of us, and everybody will say
that because it isn't pizza though, it's my grandmother's itali
and breaddough recipe. Now is this your Neapolitan grandmother or
your it's my colored braise. So and I tweeked the

(45:10):
recipe for pizza. You know, even after everything you've seen,
all of the decades of hard work that changes in
your neighborhood, did anything in your past experience prepare you
for a global pandemic? How did you even wrap your
head around it? And how as a small business owner

(45:30):
did you figure out ways to survive? Open the playbook,
Matthew my son, we would talk we need to open
the playbook now, meaning things that we have been working on,
we gotta do them now. Like give me an example.
First thing we did, We're going to offer breakfast, interesting

(45:54):
breakfast pizzas, breakfast pizzas, a and vegetables, which was a
big hit. Sounds delicious, are delicious to the fastest growing
food segment is vegan. So now you have vegan pizzas. Yes,
we make vegan gelato. Okay, what's it tastes like? Tell

(46:14):
me the truth? Heaven really the only thing I will
leave now. You know a lot of listeners are challenging
themselves by trying to cook through this pandemic. What is
the secret to trying to make a great pizza at home?
We've been selling a lot of our pizza dough ready
to make, and I really tell people, if you're gonna

(46:34):
make it, just come and buy it from us. Don't
buy the stuff in the supermarket, go to a bakery
and go to Italian bakery or a pizzeria that you
like their dough. And we sell dozens and dozens of
fresh pizza dough to people who now want to do it.
Interesting and I told Matthew one of the things I

(46:57):
want to do for the holidays is a pete some
making kit and we also have directions on this. So
what we're going to be offering for the holidays is
people can buy to dough, to sauces and very good
imported Peccorina Romano cheese. Then you just have to get

(47:19):
your toppings to make your pizza and explanation how to
do it. And you know what the first set is
in the directions, turn off your TV, get off your phone,
put some Frank Sinatra music on so great Ord Martin

(47:41):
or Tony Bennett, and then start making it. Oh my god,
that is so perfect. You know, I hope everybody is
listening because it's not only the actual ingredients of the pizza.
It's like what's in your mind and your thoughts right
your heart beating? Thank you well. I hope you're not

(48:01):
going to be inundated by people after this podcast runs
calling you for pizza, doll. But you know you're gonna
have to get ready Rocco because that may be coming.
To turn off the TV, turn off and talk to
each other to plan a visit to Rocco's visit De

(48:23):
Fasio's pizza dot com. That's it for today's show, Wishing
you all a happy holiday season and thinking of everyone
who can't be with family and friends right now. Let
us all hope and work to make it so that
our country in the world are different this time next year.

(48:45):
You and Me Both is brought to you by I
Heart Radio. We're produced by Julie Subran and Kathleen Russo,
with help from whom I Aberdeen, Nikki etur Oscar Flores,
Rihanna Johnson, Nick Merrill, Lauren Eaterson, Rob Russo, and Lona Valmorrow.
Our engineer is Zack McNeice and original music is by

(49:08):
Forest Gray. And a huge thanks this week to opal
ve Done for her help with this week's episode. If
you like the show, tell someone else about it. You
can subscribe to You and Me both on the I
Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We'd love to hear from you. Send us your questions

(49:30):
and comments or even ideas for future episodes to You
and Me both pod at gmail dot com. Come back
next week when I talk with three incredibly thoughtful people
who have struggled with mental health. Veteran author and advocate
Jason Candor, Broadway actor and Tony Award winner Audra McDonald,

(49:53):
and author Ali Brausch. I hope you'll join me then,
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