The Denver Post

In “The Bear” on Hulu, a kitchen staff is nearly eaten alive

- By Julia Moskin

Movies and TV shows about the inner workings of the culinary world have let us peek into restaurant kitchens before. But FX’S new “The Bear” is the first to force you to work in one.

As the series (streaming on Hulu) opens, young chef Carmen Berzatto has left behind a soaring career, replete with awards like the James Beard Foundation’s Rising Star, at an unnamed high-end New York restaurant (played by Eleven Madison Park). He’s come home to Chicago to run his family’s Italian beef sandwich shop after his brother Mikey died by suicide, leaving a $300,000 debt but no note. The monumental task of keeping Original Beef of Chicagolan­d afloat while trying to grieve his brother, retain his employees and make good food is eating him alive — and the show makes you feel you’re right alongside.

To review: Chicago’s Italian beef is one of America’s great sandwiches, with its thin-sliced roast beef, tangy giardinier­a and roasted peppers piled on a submarine roll, then drizzled with or dipped in beef juices. It’s wrapped in paper and eaten in what locals call “Italian beef stance” — feet planted wide, elbows on the counter, butt sticking out to escape the inevita

ble pickle tumbles and jus drips.

Instead of supervisin­g trained cooks as they tweeze herbs and zest yuzus, Carmen is now running on a hamster wheel of tasks: dicing carrots, breaking up fights and peddling his vintage denim collection to buy meat. (Throughout, the camera’s tight shots and jump cuts and the audio’s loud drone give you the sense of being in the room.) Instead of deferentia­l interns, he inherits a prickly crew, loyal to his brother’s memory and his spaghetti recipe, plus a rageful, grieving manager (and childhood friend) who taunts him by calling him “Bobby Flay” — and much, much worse.

As chefs have moved from being invisible workers to celebrity artisans and influencer­s, there have been many attempts to make them stars onscreen. Movies such as “Chef” (2014), “Burnt” (2015) and “Pig” (2021) did it with varying degrees of success, depicting chefs as profound, tortured geniuses. On television, realworld chefs like Missy Robbins, Wylie Dufresne and Alex Guarnasche­lli are frequently featured on “Billions,” and global stars like Alex Atala and Dominique Crenn are profiled in worshipful series like “The Mind of a Chef” and “Chef’s Table.”

But for all the media representa­tion of the restaurant world, “the track record on authentici­ty is not great,” said Christophe­r Storer, co-showrunner of “The Bear,” who produced multiple documentar­ies about the culinary world before turning to fiction with “Eighth Grade” and “Ramy.”

His friend Canadian chef Matty Matheson, who produced and consulted on the series and wound up playing a small part, said he wanted an accurate, unpretty representa­tion of what he calls “this amazing, beautiful shitty industry.”

Some of the series’ accuracy comes from being shot in a real kitchen. One of Storer’s best friends from childhood, Christophe­r Zucchero, is Italian beef royalty; his father and uncle opened Mr. Beef on North Orleans Street in 1978, and he’s now an owner. Most of the scenes at Original Beef of Chicagolan­d were shot in its kitchen: a typical warren of small rooms, functional but grubby and full of hazards: tight corners, sharp knives, high shelves and hot pans.

Its most authentic feature is also the first thing Carmen sees when he jolts awake: the clock, the absolute ruler of any kitchen. No matter how fast he works, he can’t change how long it takes to caramelize onions or get bread dough to rise. Likewise, he can’t replace 30 gallons of stock that took days to make when a container spills in the walk-in. The countdown to opening time is inexorable.

“The stress is real, whether it’s fine dining or Italian beef,” said Courtney Storer, Christophe­r Storer’s sister, who worked her way through high school at restaurant­s in Chicago, where they were born and raised.

She went on to culinary school and later cooked for eight years at acclaimed Los Angeles restaurant­s Trois Mec and Animal, and also consulted on the series.

The Storers said that the show’s themes of family, addiction, obsession and recovery draw on both their own history and their intimate knowledge of life in profession­al kitchens, high- and low-end alike.

The actors worked unusually hard to study the elite corner of the culinary world that Carmen has returned from. Jeremy Allen White, who plays Carmen, and Ayo Edebiri, the intern sous chef who is the only other character from Carmen’s world, both went through basic training at the Institute of Culinary Education in Los Angeles.

White went on to work at Pasjoli, the Santa Monica restaurant headed by Dave Beran, Grant Achatz’s longtime lieutenant at Alinea in Chicago.

But on-screen, the kitchen crew are resistant to Carmen’s upgrades: There’s fennel in the giardinier­a, the beef is braised instead of roasted and even the rolls are tweaked for elasticity. (It takes a lot of gluten to stand up to the juices of a proper beef sandwich.).

What he’s really trying to do is harder than changing recipes: He’s rebuilding two dysfunctio­nal families in mourning — his own and the restaurant’s.

Carmen’s sister is married, living a middle-class life in the suburbs, and wants nothing to do with the beef business; she can’t even stand the smell of the place. He can’t talk about his grief with her, but when he starts going to Al-anon meetings (Mikey was addicted to opioids), that’s a love language she understand­s.

To fix the kitchen, he brings in the practices of an (idealized) fine-dining restaurant. Starting with making the cooks call each other “chef,” he establishe­s mutual respect and a clear chain of command, and opens doors to new skills. (With some mayhem along the way, courtesy of a new digital takeout ordering system.)

“You see the change progress over the series,” Courtney Storer said. “Everything about the cooks changes: The way they carry a towel, hold a spoon, wear an apron.”

Of course, because this is fiction, the chef successful­ly transforms his ragtag crew into a tightknit band: a literal brigade, once a traditiona­l French culinary hierarchy is put into place.

But unlike many onscreen journeys, because of the show’s balance of bitter and sweet, this one doesn’t feel cloying.

 ?? Provided by FX ?? Jeremy Allen White portrays Carmen Berzatto, a highprofil­e chef who takes over his family’s failing Italian beef restaurant after his brother’s death.
Provided by FX Jeremy Allen White portrays Carmen Berzatto, a highprofil­e chef who takes over his family’s failing Italian beef restaurant after his brother’s death.

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