
Food icons Jeremiah Tower and Alice Waters make peace over a bottle (or two) of Champagne
Champagne helps mend old wounds between food icons, L.A.'s own Willy Wonka, Andrea Crawford's Fillmore bakery, the essential restaurant workers you rarely notice, a redo of the legendary Judgment of Paris wine tasting, and can a new bar save Chili John's? I'm Laurie Ochoa, general manager of L.A. Times Food, with this week's Tasting Notes.
Depending on who you ask — and in this case I mean the two people at the heart of the question — it's been anywhere from 13 years to 30 years since Alice Waters and Jeremiah Tower have spoken to each other. The two food icons had a famous falling out, in part because the rightly earned fame of Waters as the mother of California cuisine overshadowed Tower's significant contributions to food as we know it during his early years with Waters at Chez Panisse and later when he opened Stars in San Francisco.
But last week at the Ojai Food + Wine Festival — a gathering of culinary superstars from around the world — all was forgiven.
'Last night, Alice walked into a room and encountered Jeremiah Tower, who she was not expecting to see, and Jeremiah was not expecting to see her,' said critic and author Ruth Reichl, who was hosting an onstage talk at the festival's Ojai Valley Inn with Waters. 'It was really, for me, one of the most satisfying moments in food in [a] long time. I mean, to see these two icons, happy to see each other.'
'I think I need a glass of Champagne to talk about it,' Waters said after Reichl asked her to describe the previous night's rapprochement.
'I walked into that space, which was so huge, and there were ice buckets all around the room filled with my favorite Champagne, just asking to be opened,' Waters said. 'And it happened to be a Champagne that Jeremiah and I shared a love for. I mean, really, we had been to that Champagne place, and I don't know what it was about it, but we just felt a huge connection ...'
'... again ... ' came a voice from the audience. It was Tower, who was beaming as he finished her sentence.
'Again,' Tower repeated as he confirmed that they had renewed their connection.
'How many years has it been?' Waters, looking thrilled, said to Tower from the stage. 'Thirty?'
'Thirteen,' he said.
'Yeah. We really hadn't communicated, and all of a sudden [it was as if we] were back in the kitchen [at Chez Panisse] having the best time, working together talking together. But that Champagne helped.'
'Always does,' Tower responded with a huge grin.
For those of you wondering, like me, which Champagne is loved so much by Waters and Tower, I found out later from Reichl that it's Krug Champagne. In fact, Tower — who was at the festival to curate and cook a lunch at the festival with chefs Mary Sue Milliken, Susan Feniger, and Elizabeth Falkner — was hosting a caviar and Krug Champagne reception when he had his meeting with Waters.
'I was sitting next to Alice at dinner,' Reichl later told author Bill Buford during a live video conversation that two of them did for her Substack newsletter La Briffe, 'and she was just weeping all night and talking about forgiveness and how important this was to her.'
Tower has previously said that he and Waters did see each other at least one other time since he left Chez Panisse in 1978. When he was promoting the 2017 documentary 'Jeremiah Tower: The Last Magnificent,' directed Lydia Tenaglia, he told this paper's Margy Rochlin that was at Waters' table during the 40th anniversary celebration for the Chez Panisse. But at the time many were still trying to pit the two of them against each other, arguing over who did more to ignite what became known as California cuisine.
Reichl, who witnessed the birth of the movement first hand, credits them both: 'I always felt like the combination of the two of them at Chez Panisse was like lightning in a bottle,' she told Buford. 'It was two people with completely different food aesthetics coming together and doing something magical.'
Two other culinary legends had a surprise encounter last week. Mozza founder and Ojai Valley Inn culinary ambassador Nancy Silverton was at the Ojai Food + Wine Festival in part to host a dinner with chefs Jonathan Waxman, Evan Funke and Sarah Cicolini of the great Rome restaurant Santo Palato. On Saturday, she decided to take a short break from the festival to visit Andrea Crawford at Roan Mills Bakery in Fillmore. As former Times food editor Amy Scattergood wrote in 2007, Crawford first became a part of the California cuisine movement in the early 1980s when she started growing lettuce for Chez Panisse in Waters' Berkeley backyard. Then Wolfgang Puck talked Crawford into moving to Southern California so she could grow herbs and lettuces for Spago restaurant — which she did in the Encino backyard of Silverton's parents (at the time, Silverton was Spago's pastry chef). Crawford outgrew the space and eventually established the Kenter Canyon Farms brand that so many of us know from Southern California farmers markets.
In 2012, she began growing wheat and the next year started baking bread in Fillmore under the Roan Mills label. In 2017, she opened the front of the bakery to the public as a retail operation. But Silverton had never visited.
'What a beautiful space! And it's big!' Silverton told Crawford as they discussed the price of eggs (which is why Crawford is baking less brioche these days), how she worked out more civilized baker's hours (instead of working through the night, her workers start at 4 a.m. and 5 a.m), and whether a lemon cake recipe from Silverton's cookbook 'The Cookie That Changed My Life' could work in the cool rooster-embossed cake pan sitting on top of Crawford's desk.
I bought some of Crawford's gorgeous English muffins, a fantastic cherry pie, some Kenter Canyon arugula and my favorite Camino red wine vinegar made by Oakland's Russell Moore and Allison Hopelain. (I usually mail order the vinegar, a last remnant of the couple's great hearth-based restaurant, but I thought I'd save the postage since I was driving.)
On the way back, the scent of chicken grilling outside Fillmore's La Plaza meat market, a favorite of Silverton's and her partner Michael Krikorian, was too tempting not to stop. And just before we made it back to downtown Ojai, Silverton made us stop at the Summit Drive-In to try their shakes, which the menu board promised are 'hand-scoop and hand-spun.' Silverton is partnering with 'Somebody Feed Phil' host Phil Rosenthal on a diner in L.A.'s Larchmont Village named Max and Helen's for Rosenthal's parents. And even though the diner should be ready to open in early summer and the two have been tasting shakes all over the place, Silverton the perfectionist doesn't think they quite have their shakes down. I didn't mind the stop — I especially loved the extra chocolate sauce that swirled around the chocolate shake. If you see a similar swirl at Max and Helen's later this summer, you'll know where it came from.
Sonoma winemaker Pax Mahle, sommelier legend Patrick Cappiello (who founded Monte Rio Cellars), and Vinohead media company founder Josh Entman had the wild idea to recreate the Judgment of Paris, the 1976 taste-off that changed the course of winemaking in California when two of the state's wines, a 1973 Stag's Leap Cabernet Sauvignon and a 1973 Chateau Montelena Chardonnay, beat every other French wine in the competition.
They're calling the new competition the 1976 Redo, and in January the trio hosted the first round of the competition in which any U.S. winemaker was allowed to enter. Times contributor David Rosoff, founder of the late Bar Moruno and curator of wine programs in many L.A. restaurants, joined 10 other wine pros to choose five finalists from 144 Chardonnays, 125 Cabernet Sauvignons, 80 Syrahs and 45 Chenin Blancs in one marathon tasting. (The final tasting will happen in May.) 'That's 394 wines, to be exact,' Rosoff writes in his account of the tasting.
'The most surprising category was unquestionably Chenin Blanc,' Rosoff writes. And 'the most consistently triumphant category'? Syrah.
The story reveals more about what he 'learned about the state of American wine' and what the wine tasters did after they finished tasting nearly 400 bottles of wine. Hint: It involved more wine.
Seamus Blackley, inventor of the Xbox game console, goes deep when he is obsessed. During the pandemic, as features columnist Todd Martens writes, he didn't just get into sourdough; he acquired centuries-old Egyptian yeast to bake bread. Now the physicist and tech entrepreneur is focused on chocolate — not from cacao harvested in tropical climates more suited to the plant, but from cacao grown right here in Southern California.
'Oh yes, we're going to have an L.A. chocolate company,' he told Martens. 'We're going to be aiming at a different peak flavor than other people are because we have different organisms,' Blackley added, alluding to microbes in Los Angeles versus the equator-adjacent regions in which cacao is typically grown. 'That's exciting.'
How often do you pay attention to the person bringing you water in a restaurant or clearing your empty plate? Many customers make a point of thanking their server when the food arrives, especially in the days since the COVID pandemic, but the person busing your table can be easily overlooked. There are many restaurant jobs that customers rarely notice but that are essential to making the business work. Food's Cindy Carcamo profiled three restaurant workers for our Back of House series: utility worker Alfonso Lira, who clears tables, makes pizza dough and fixes the sound system, among many other duties at Santa Ana gastropub Chapter One; dishwasher Sophia Velador, who considers her work at Long Beach's Alder & Sage therapeutic; and line cook Tomas Saldaña, who makes the difficult-to-master radish pastries at Paradise Dynasty.
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Newsweek
2 days ago
- Newsweek
Anne Burrell Cause of Death Details Emerge
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Anne Burrell may have suffered cardiac arrest prior to her death, according to a 911 call report from the New York City Fire Department, according to People. The Food Network icon died on Tuesday at the age of 55 at her home in Brooklyn, New York. Newsweek contacted a New York City Fire Department spokesperson via email outside regular working hours. The Context Burrell rose to fame as a sous chef on Food Network's Iron Chef America, and she later hosted her own Emmy-nominated series Secrets of a Restaurant Chef. The Cook Like a Rock Star author was also the longtime host of Worst Cooks in America, where she and chef Robert Irvine mentored amateur cooks. Chef Anne Burrell attends the Austin Food & Wine Festival at Auditorium Shores on November 5, 2023, in Texas. Chef Anne Burrell attends the Austin Food & Wine Festival at Auditorium Shores on November 5, 2023, in To Know On Tuesday at 7:50 a.m. local time, a 911 caller alerted authorities that Burrell might have suffered a cardiac arrest, People reported. A New York City Police Department spokesperson told Newsweek on Wednesday that "officers responded to a 911 call of an aided female inside 505 Court Street, within the confines of the 76 Precinct. Upon arrival, officers observed a 55-year-old female unconscious and unresponsive. EMS responded and pronounced the female deceased at the scene." "The chief medical examiner will determine the cause of death and the investigation remains ongoing at this time," the statement continued. "The identity of the deceased is being withheld pending proper family notification." What People Are Saying The Food Network shared in a statement via X, formerly Twitter: "We are deeply saddened to share the news that beloved chef, Anne Burrell, passed away this morning. Anne was a remarkable person and culinary talent—teaching, competing and always sharing the importance of food in her life and the joy that a delicious meal can bring. Our thoughts are with Anne's family, friends and fans during this time of tremendous loss." Worst Cooks in America co-host Robert Irvine penned a lengthy message to Burrell on Instagram: "I am stunned and deeply saddened by the news of the passing of Anne Burrell. "Anne wasn't just a fiery chef. She was a radiant spirit who lit up every room she entered. From the very beginning on Worst Cooks in America, our friendly rivalry was fueled by mutual respect: I'd risk bleaching my hair; she'd risk losing hers. An epic wager that epitomized her unbeatable spirit. It was a wager I ultimately lost, but I couldn't imagine losing to a more fierce competitor. "Outside of Worst Cooks, I came to know her as a generous and supportive colleague and an even better friend. "I'll always remember her unwavering dedication, not just to food, but to lifting others up. She believed in nurturing culinary potential and celebrating small victories, whether in an amateur cook or on a charity fundraiser. That was Anne. Uncompromising in her standards, yet tender in her mentorship." Today weather anchor Al Roker wrote on Instagram: "So very saddening to hear of Anne Burrell's passing at 55. What a force of nature. A truly delightful human who was supportive of other chefs and a true delight to be around. Our hearts go out to her family and close friends. Michelle Obama commented underneath Roker's post: "So saddened to hear about Anne's passing. I'll always be thankful for her support of Let's Move, and for joining us at the White House Easter Egg Roll to inspire kids and families with her healthy recipes. She was such a warm and talented chef and my condolences go out to her loved ones." Gigi Hadid, who appeared on an episode of Beat Bobby Flay in 2020 alongside Burrell, posted to her Instagram Stories: "I am heartbroken to hear of the loss of the Great Anne Burrell. As a longtime fan, getting to share this day with her was a dream come true. Beat Bobby. Hang. Eat. I wish we could have done it again. She was awesome. Rest in Peace Legend." Cake Boss star Buddy Valastro shared a photo alongside Burrell on Instagram: "Anne, your passion, energy, and love for food lit up every kitchen. You were a true force and a beautiful soul. Rest in peace, Chef. We'll miss you dearly." Aarti Party host Aarti Sequeira shared a personal story of Burrell to Instagram: "The first time I met Anne Burrell, it was in the halls of Chelsea Market, during the New York Wine and Food Festival." "'You're doing great,' she said, 'but maybe don't cry so much on camera!' referring to my many instances of breaking down under the pressure of Food Network Star." "She was right, of course. I didn't like it but she was right. Anne was a tough but invested teacher, who thought enough of you to tell you the truth without watering it down. I always appreciated that she cared enough about a newbie to the game to give it to her straight. Ever since, she always greeted me with warmth, joy and that trademark big laugh…Rest in peace, and prayers for your loved ones mourning the loss of your bright, shining presence." Chef Sandra Lee said on Instagram: "Oh Anne—you are so loved and you will be so missed. You were the next generation of light in the culinary Food Network world. We all adore you and will forever remember your quick wit, sassy drive, determined nature, and magical laughter. I hope you have so much fun in heaven's kitchen. My heart is broken that you're no longer here, but I'm so grateful that we had such wonderful moments together. With all the truffles and caviar the universe can hold—all my love, Sandra." Comedian Loni Love wrote on X: "Anne Burrell's passing has left me in shock and sorrow. She was a gifted chef, and an extraordinary person. Chef Anne was the same on and off camera. She would just check on me out the blue. I will miss her tremendously. My condolences to her husband, family, and fans. Rest Chef." What Happens Next Burrell is survived by her husband Stuart Claxton, his son, Javier, her mother, Marlene, her sister, Jane, and her brother, Ben. Funeral details have not been released.


Business Wire
12-06-2025
- Business Wire
Roger Waters ‘This Is Not A Drill – Live From Prague – The Movie' Coming to Cinemas Worldwide
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Roger Waters, founding member and creative genius behind Pink Floyd, returns to cinemas with 'This Is Not A Drill – Live From Prague – The Movie.' Trafalgar Releasing and Sony Music Vision will release the film worldwide beginning on July 23. The official film trailer is unveiled today and is available to watch here. Tickets for cinema screenings worldwide are now on sale at Originally recorded and filmed during Waters' live show at the O2 Arena in the Czech Republic on May 25, 2023, this breathtaking new edit is directed by his long-term collaborative partner, Sean Evans. Billed as his 'first ever Farewell Tour,' the show is a stunning indictment of the corporate dystopia in which we all struggle to survive and is dedicated to 'our brothers and sisters all over the world who are engaged in the existential battle for the soul of humanity.' The release will give fans the chance to see and hear his critically acclaimed live show in full cinematic glory and includes 20 classic Pink Floyd and Roger Waters songs, including: 'Us & Them,' 'Comfortably Numb,' 'Wish You Were Here,' and 'Is This The Life We Really Want?' Additionally, Waters performs his highly celebrated new song, 'The Bar.' Together, the production is an extraordinary assault on the senses - musically, visually, politically and philosophically. The accompanying music, available for preorder now, is set to be released on Legacy Recordings, the catalogue division of Sony Music Entertainment, on August 1, 2025, and will see the performance presented on a 4 LP set/Blu-Ray/2 CD/DVD/Digital Audio. A performance clip of 'Wish You Were Here' is available to view here. 'This Is Not A Drill – Live From Prague – The Movie' is filmed in 8k, providing exceptional detail and clarity, and features an enhanced audio mix. For the production, Waters was joined on stage by his outstanding band of musicians: Jonathan Wilson, Dave Kilminster, Jon Carin, Gus Seyffert, Joey Waronker, Robert Walter, Shanay Johnson, Amanda Belair and Seamus Blake. Collectively they deliver an unforgettable and powerful performance, with a call to action, to love, protect, and share our precious planet home. Roger Waters quote: What do you want? A quote? Alright Errr… THIS IS NOT A DRILL Notes for Editors Available film assets can be found here. About Sony Music Vision At Sony Music Vision, we bring film and television storytelling to life for our industry-leading creative talent and iconic music catalog around the world. We pair world class filmmakers with groundbreaking and legendary artists to create, finance, produce and distribute powerful content that features unique access to our archives and vast portfolio of music. A full-service content studio, we collaborate globally across the Sony entertainment companies to engage audiences with premium film and TV projects, including documentary and narrative feature films, as well as television specials and unscripted and scripted series. About Legacy Recordings Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, is home to the world's foremost library of historically significant commercial recordings, a peerless collection of works by the most important musical artists of the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries. Across a variety of platforms, the label offers contemporary music fans access to thousands of meticulously restored archival titles representing virtually every musical genre. About Trafalgar Releasing Trafalgar Releasing is the global leader in event cinema distribution, connecting fans through unforgettable cinematic experiences in over 15,000 theaters across 132 countries. A subsidiary of Trafalgar Entertainment, the company specializes in the production, acquisition, marketing, and worldwide distribution of live and pre-recorded content, led by a global team based in the UK, US, and Germany. Trafalgar Releasing's diverse slate spans chart-topping concert films and live concert broadcasts, award-winning theatre, acclaimed opera, dance, television, podcasts, and music documentaries—featuring some of the biggest names in entertainment including Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, BTS, Metallica, Pink Floyd, Coldplay, Billie Eilish, The Chosen and the Royal Ballet and Opera. For more information, visit
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Yahoo
Classic Rock Icon, 81, Has Exciting News For Fans
Classic Rock Icon, 81, Has Exciting News For Fans originally appeared on Parade. Roger Waters etched his name in the halls of rock history as a founding member of Pink Floyd. With concept albums like The Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here, Animals and The Wall, Pink Floyd delivered prog rock epics while weaving stories of alienation, greed, authoritarian governments and the pain of loss. Since embarking on a solo career in the mid-'80s, Waters has performed his original material as well as Pink Floyd classics. In recent years, he has dazzled fans worldwide with his immersive "This Is Not A Drill" tour. For those who haven't yet experienced it, Waters has good news. This Is Not A Drill—Live From Prague, both a new concert movie and live album, is on its way. The concert film captures his performance at the O2 Arena in the Czech Republic on May 25, 2023. The set included 20 classic Pink Floyd songs like "Comfortably Numb," "Money," "Another Brick In The Wall Pt. 2," "Us & Them," and "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" – as well as selections of Waters' solo work. Waters also shared a video of him singing "Wish You Were Here," taken from the concert. Dave Gilmour originally sang the song from the album of the same name (an ode to Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett), but Waters' version is just as strong. This Is Not A Drill—Live From Prague begins a short theatrical run on July 23 (with tickets going on sale on June 12). The concert will also be released on August 1 as a 4-LP or 2-CD set (as well as digital audio). For those who want to watch the concert at home, it'll be available on Blu-ray or DVD. For more information, fans can visit his website. The 81-year-old Waters described the This Is Not A Drill tour as his "first ever farewell tour," per Prog magazine. The tour was also an attack on "corporate dystopia in which we all struggle to survive, and is dedicated to our brothers and sisters all over the world who are engaged in the existential battle for the soul of humanity."Classic Rock Icon, 81, Has Exciting News For Fans first appeared on Parade on Jun 5, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.