It
is a beautiful summer day. Sunlight streams through the large windows
at the front of Hamersley's Bistro on Tremont Street. They look out
over a small square of paving, set back from the road, creating an
island between the restaurant and the busy street. I am waiting for
Gordon Hamersley to arrive. He doesn't come in through the open front
door, but arrives through the back entrance, passing through the
kitchen on his way. He pauses for a quick discussion about the day's
menu, some supplies that are late and a promised wine delivery. Somehow
this sums up the man. "This restaurant is my life, it's how I define
who I am and what I do," he says. Dressed in chef's whites he makes us
a coffee and then settles down to talk about the restaurant and his
career.
Gordon is a long
term icon of Boston cooking. He has stayed the course for twenty years,
sticking with a basic formula, that started in 1987 and then moved
across the street to the current location in 1992. The best analogy for
Gordon Hamersley would be the Rolling Stones. No, seriously. Mick
Jagger and his cohorts started their music when it was so new that it
caused controversy and excitement that something so different could
emerge from the then turgid music of the late 1950's. They grew in
popularity and gathered a huge fan base from near and far. Gradually
they became icons, outlasting myriad other groups that came and went,
passing through times when their music seemed passé and eventually
arriving at a place where they now seem destined to go on forever.
Gordon has a similar tale. He helped launch the then revolutionary
French/American cuisine as America took to fine dining with real gusto
after a diet of meat loaf and Chicken Parmigiano. He has endured, and
now occupies, a comfortable and permanent place among exalted chefs in
the New England area.
"To
me cooking is a life long road of discovery. I still love to do it
everyday," he chuckles. He is very clear about the fact that he loves
to cook and that although he is a restaurateur he believes in the
importance of being the chef first and foremost.
So how has his restaurant withstood not only the arrival of literally
dozens of competitors into the area, but also the fickle nature of
Boston diners, who are so easily bored, moving onto the next culinary
thrill. "Owning your own restaurant lets you redefine it on a monthly
basis if you want to," he says. "Our food has evolved, it has become
somewhat more simple and straightforward." That's not to say that the
place has lost its direction. "I still have a tremendous love of
classic techniques, but I work hard to refine and lighten them," he
acknowledges. "The food has become cleaner and leaner as my own tastes
change and develop." There's a skill right there. Staying in touch with
the restaurant's basic premise - a bistro - and yet evolving and
refining. I wonder if that's what stops Gordon or the customers from
getting bored with the food. "In the end it's about constant change,
constant refinement of what you do," he concludes.
Given that Hamersley's has been such a success, I can't help but ask
why there are not twenty of them. "So much of what makes me happy is
cooking everyday," he answers. "I defy anyone who owns more than one
restaurant to do that." Here's a man then, happy with his lot in life.
He works with his wife Fiona at the restaurant. It's successful, he's
successful and he's doing what he loves. Clearly, starting a chain of
bistros would rock that boat, so why do it?
There's another dimension for Gordon. He has forty employees, talented
sous chefs and long term staffers who enjoy the family style management
philosophy. He wants to know the people he works with. "I would hate
having to ask a manager, who's that?" he says. "I like it here, I like
to wander around the neighborhood. The South End is a great place, full
of characters and politics, people know each other."
It's not all easy these days."It is getting harder, there are more fees
and regulations." Like many other restaurateurs, Gordon is troubled by
the increasing levels of legislation that affect his day-to-day
operation. It must be especially hard when the extra expense the
various regulations create are paired with the increasing levels of
competition in the immediate area around the restaurant. This is
perhaps the best testament to the enduring nature of Gordon as chef.
Regular diners recognize his gastronomic style and panache, readers of
his terrific cookbook "Bistro Cooking at Home" can see for themselves
the creativity of his approach.
"I don't think of myself as an artist, I am more like a craftsman,
perhaps a finger painter," he muses. "I work like an artist though, I
see the food as a palette of flavors and colors for me to work with."
From almost anyone else this would seem pretentious. But from Gordon
Hamersley, with decades of success behind him and no easing up in the
enthusiasm for his food, it seems almost modest. Is he satisfied with
his career as a chef, is there more to come? "To me, cooking is a life
long road of discovery," Gordon describes how he looks everywhere for
inspiration. He tells a great tale of enjoying deep fried macaroni down
south. Apparently it tasted terrific, despite some very iffy
ingredients. Once back home he reinvented the dish as a sophisticated,
velvety oven baked pasta and cheese that makes your mouth water as he
describes it.
After decades
of hard work, isn't he tired of the daily grind? "If I am not working,
by day two I need to cook, I am back in the kitchen," he asserts. He
does have outside interests. "I train dogs, I hunt ducks and birds, I
fish," he reveals. "I tie my own flies. If I want to forget the
restaurant for a while I sit down and tie a dozen flies."
In the end I think I get the why and how of Gordon Hamersley. He's a
gentleman chef, softly spoken and sincere about his love of cooking.
The very fact that he is still in the kitchen two decades after he
started the bistro concept proves my point. Could he have his own brand
of pans and cooking implements - sure. But for Gordon it seems to be
more about quality of life expressed through his art - cooking.
Dozens of young chefs come and go, but just like Mick Jagger, he will
still be drawing a crowd, seemingly forever. As the Stones say, "Time
is on my side, yes it is." In the case of Gordon Hamersley and
Hamersley's Bistro it seems to be true.