Q & A With Andre Guerrero: Food Neighborhoods, Closet Pastry Chefs + Ramen Dreams
Andre Guerrero can't imagine living anywhere other than Los Angeles. Save for his earliest years in the Philippines and a couple spent in San Francisco when his family initially moved to the United States, Guerrero has essentially been a lifelong L.A. resident. 
J. Ritz Andre Guerrero at Maximiliano in Highland Park
Over the course of a 30-plus-year career as a chef and restaurateur, Guerrero's restaurants have spanned the city, from downtown to Woodland Hills to Malibu. These days the Glassell Park resident owns two restaurants (in partnership with others, including his two grown sons) within a few miles of where he went to high school, as well as Little Bear in the downtown Arts District.
The Oinkster in Eagle Rock and Maximiliano in Highland Park have become recession-appropriate fixtures of their respective neighborhoods; they also reflect where Guerrero is at in his career, and where he thinks our collective food culture is headed. He had a couple days to recover from Burger Week at the Oinkster before sitting down to chat with us in the dining room at Maximiliano.
Squid Ink: So you've always sort of circled around Highland Park?
Andre Guerrero: Well, my family opened a restaurant in Glendale back in 1979.
SI: What was Glendale like then?
AG: God, almost the same as it is now. I know the residents have changed; There are a lot more Koreans, Filipinos, Hispanics and Armenians there now. After that I worked in Pasadena, downtown L.A., Malibu, West Hollywood.
SI: You've covered a huge swath of the map. What was the style of cooking?
AG: Well, I guess I should go back a little bit. I was an art major. I went to UCLA. I was a painter. When I got out of school, my family always wanted to open a restaurant. My dad had owned a bakery in the Philippines, and my mom did some catering. So when I got out of college, I thought: What am I going to do? I don't want to paint anymore. I need to do something. I need to start being an adult and taking care of myself.
SI: You didn't have the romance of being a starving artist?
AG: No. Actually, I worked with Ed Moses. I was one of his favorite students, so he took me on. I would prep his canvases and help him a little bit. I remember him telling me, "Andre, you're a very talented guy. But I'm going to tell you, in this business it takes a lot more." I don't know what he was trying to tell me. He was trying to discourage me somehow.
I realized I could go to grad school, but what does that look like? I'm going to be a teacher's assistant and I'm going to struggle for a long time, like I saw a lot of artists doing. Or else I can do something else for a while; I almost went to architecture school.
Once my family opened the restaurant, I started cooking. I didn't know what I was doing. I had worked in some restaurants, and I had taken a bunch of courses in restaurant management. I took a few cooking courses. And I had to figure it out. It was at a time when this whole celebrity chef thing started with Wolfgang Puck, he was still at Ma Maison. And Michael McCarty opened his restaurant. There was something in the air, just like now.
If you really pay attention and listen, you get a sense of what's happening out there. There was a little bit of a food revolution happening. And here I was, this young guy with a lot of passion, a lot of desire, not a lot of experience. My dad wanted a French restaurant. I had this crazy idea to do eclectic cuisine. So it was called Café Le Monde -- food of the world -- and we started doing food from the Philippines. One of my brothers went to chef school in Brussels and we were doing Belgian food, and Chinese. It was kind of a crazy menu. No one had done anything like this before. My dad thought I was nuts.
SI: In L.A. in general or in Glendale specifically?
AG: In L.A. And then [Susan Feniger and Mary Sue Milliken] did City Café, but it was after we started. They opened, I think, in the early '80s. Like I said, there was something in the air. I don't think it really matters who came up with the first idea. Eventually somebody's going to do it better. That's kind of where I started. I guess we got some journalists' attention, and started getting great reviews. And then I got the bug for the business and I got pulled into it, and never looked back.
SI: How did you actually learn to cook?
AG: I learned from my parents. I learned how to do French pastry when I was 9. A lot of it was my family. I would help my mom with some catering. My dad was a closet pastry chef, and he made sure that we learned. I could make pâte à choux and sponge cakes and mousses when I was 9. So I learned some skills.
SI: Did you have any other chefs who you would describe as mentors?
AG: I got to work at the Biltmore Hotel with Roland Gibert, and at the time Bernard's and L'Orangerie were the two highest-rated restaurants in Los Angeles. That was one of the most important jobs I ever had.
SI: How long were you there?
AG: I was only there for about a year. A lot of what you learn, you learn because you want to learn. I've known chefs who have worked with some great chefs, and they never really paid attention. They just kind of followed the routine.
SI: Is there anything you missed not having gone to culinary school?
AG: Not really.
SI: So where do your best cooks tend to come from?
AG: There's this whole network out there, and one of the toughest things is if you're a chef and you're coming to L.A. for the first time and you don't have that resource of the networking, it's really hard to find good people. I've had guys who have been with me for 25 years. I've watched these guys grow up. There was a time when, if I was opening up a new restaurant, I'd make a few phone calls and then these guys would put in their notice and they'd come work for me, and they'd be calling all of their friends. And all of a sudden I've got a whole crew.
SI: Loyalty is very important.
AG: Yeah, you get loyalty from certain types of cooks. There are some cooks who, this is what they do. They don't want to be chefs. They don't want to make a name for themselves. They just want to be cooks. A lot of the Hispanic guys, they have families and they have kids. They want to be able to pay their rent. I treat them well. I think one of the most important things is treating people with dignity and respect.
SI: You now have three restaurants. How do you spend your time as a proprietor and in the kitchen? What's an ideal balance for you, if such a thing even exists?
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The Oinkster
2005 Colorado Blvd., Eagle Rock, CA
Category: Restaurant
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