Los Angeles Times

For Anthony Bourdain, food was just the entry point for a much wider cultural discussion

I ate Anthony Bourdain's food before I ever met him.

For a time, in the late 1990s, my husband and I happened to live around the corner from Les Halles, the small brasserie where Bourdain served as chef starting in 1998.

Les Halles wasn't the best French restaurant in Manhattan. But it was a great neighborhood restaurant. Stuffed with locals ordering red wine and steak frites. For a time, it was our go-to for special occasions: small celebrations, a place to take out-of-town guests and, for several years running, the place we ate our Christmas Eve dinners because we were too damn lazy to cook.

It was cramped. And in summer, a little sweaty. But the mussels were

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

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times2 min read
Lakers Fade Again In Game 3 Loss To Denver, Moving To Brink Of Elimination
LOS ANGELES — The climb is mountainous, trouble lurking at every step. One bad dribble, and Denver runs the other direction, creating an open three. One missed assignment, and Aaron Gordon cuts baseline for a dunk. One whiffed box out and the Nuggets
Los Angeles Times4 min read
Bill Plaschke: Darvin Ham Is On The Hot Seat As The Lakers Are On The Brink Of Elimination
LOS ANGELES — The chant began in the final minutes of another lost season, the blame thundering down from furious Laker fans in four sharp syllables. "Fi-re Dar-vin … Fi-re Dar-vin … Fi-re Dar-vin." The Lakers are on the precipice of a second consecu
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Kawhi Leonard, Clippers Struggle Again In Game 3 Loss To Mavericks
DALLAS — In a game that became testy in the fourth quarter, the health of Kawhi Leonard was paramount for the Clippers. Leonard was listed as questionable with right knee inflammation for Game 3, and though he started Friday night, he rarely looked s

Related Books & Audiobooks