Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
September 1998 | Volume 49, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
September 1998 | Volume 49, Issue 5
When I was the chef at the Hotel Cortez in El Paso, Texas, in the spring of 1963, word arrived that President Kennedy would spend a night at the hotel later that year. I would be preparing meals not only for his party but for the President himself. I decided to design a commemorative dinner, a menu strictly in JFK’s honor, and after giving the matter lots of thought, I devised a meal composed of ingredients that were either grown or processed in the immediate vicinity of El Paso. I never would have believed the amount of preparation necessary for an overnight stay by the President. We had a suite repainted and a local furniture company come in and outfit the rooms with French Provincial furniture. About a week before the visit the Secret Service moved in. They studied the route from the airport. They made a fire inspection and a security check of the hotel. They planned an escape route from the presidential suite through the main kitchen and included me in the escape plan, which flattered me no end. Two agents asked me to show them the kitchen facilities. I gave them a tour of the dishwashing department in the basement, the storerooms and walk-in refrigerators, the bakeshop, the salad department, and the main kitchen. They seemed impressed. Then they dropped the bombshell: “We will be bringing two Navy cooks out of Washington to cook for the President. We hope we can count on your cooperation and help.” I mumbled something as we continued to walk about. Then I began to get mad, so angry that I actually became calm. Having satisfied themselves that my kitchen would be adequate for the two Navy cooks, the Secret Service agents began to make their way to the exit. As we came to my office door, I asked them to step inside. “Gentlemen,” I said, “you are looking at an American chef who has worked for forty years to perfect himself in his profession. If the President of the United States comes to this American hotel, in the United States of America, where there is an accredited American chef, and he brings two Navy cooks along with him to prepare his food, then I am going to be insulted not only for myself but for every American chef in every American hotel in the country. What’s more, as soon as the presidential party clears the hotel, I’m going to squawk loud and long to the press about the insult. If you want to have me relieved of my post, you are welcome to do so. However, that will not change my mind. “On top of that,” I concluded, “I’m a pretty fair country cook, and I don’t believe you can bring anyone out of Washington who can beat me.” They replied they were carrying out the policy of the agency; they were sorry, but there was