Samba In The Kitchen

April 19th, 2008

Remi is a famous cook from Brazil. She has charmed the President of Brazil and Michael Jackson with her cooking, Hollywood and Brazilian Royalty has savored her cuisine. Many stars headed to the Copacabana Restaurant (no longer in business today) very near Hollywood. Meanwhile, she has retired and living in Los Angeles. This year, she is being honored as the theme of the 7th Annual Brazilian Street Carnaval of Long Beach where Brazilians and Americans alike will pay tribute to this culinary artist.

In an interview to Brazzil.Com, Remi talked about her work for Michael Jackson:

Brazzil: You and Quincy Jones have a special relationship. How did he become such a big fan of yours?

Remi: Eventually, I cooked for almost every movie star and musician in Hollywood. I met Quincy once at a dinner I cooked for some other musician. He loved my food and asked me if he could come and do something very important. He told me that he wanted to be Michael Jackson’s producer but every time he invited Michael to his house, Michael would never eat. He asked me if he could get Michael to eat some of my food. He said that Michael was a vegetarian and very picky about what he ate. I said I would try.

I went to Quincy’s house and there I met Michael for the first time. I took him aside and told him, “Let me make you something very special. I know how to cook very healthy food from Brazil. All natural, all vegetarian. You will like it.” He agreed. I made him some black beans, collard greens, farofa (toasted, seasoned cassava flour) and some other things, and he ate four plates full!

Quincy was kissing me all night long and from that time, he has called me many times to cook for him.

Brazzil: Your trip on the Michael Jackson’s Thriller tour. Tell me how that came about.

Remi: That is another very amazing story. I was living in West Los Angeles in a small apartment when I got a phone call. The person on the phone asked me to look outside. He said, “See the limousine? Get in it, now!” I told him I could not because I was taking care of a person off the street and could not leave him. They said that they would send someone to look after the person right away and for me to get into the car. I told them I had to change my clothes because I was all dirty from cleaning. They didn’t care. Finally, I agreed when the man arrived to take care of my guest and I was taken to a big building in Beverly Hills and up to the very top penthouse. It was very luxurious.

The man on the other side of the desk handed me a ticket and said, “You are going to the airport right now. Here is your ticket.” I asked him why. He explained to me that Michael Jackson was having stomach aches and specifically requested me to be his “nutritionist” on the Thriller tour. He was feeling sick to his stomach and refused to go on stage until they sent me to be his private cook. They were all very nervous. They said they were losing millions of dollars in canceled shows and I had to go right then.

I told them I could not and could only go in the morning. After a lot of arguing, they agreed to let me go home and they picked me up early in the morning and I was off to Birmingham Alabama. I spent eight weeks with Michael and his family on the road during the tour. It was an incredible trip I will never forget.

Brazzil: Did you become friends with him?

Remi: We became friends and I saw him numbers of times after that. I visited him in the hospital when his hair caught on fire and I saw him once in a while at an award’s show or party.

Brazzil: They didn’t call you Michael Jackson’s chef. They called you his nutritionist didn’t they?

Remi: Yes. When first I came to the United States, I started learning from other chefs about what is healthy and not healthy. In Brazil, we didn’t worry about what ingredients we used or what happened to someone if they ate something that made them sick. That was just part of regular life there. But in the United States, people cared about what they put into their bodies and I had to learn a lot of things quickly. I am an artist in some way and being a cook, I learned to have a “love for people”. I cared about whether they got a belly-ache from eating my food not only because it needs to be prepared fresh—I always did that—but because of the ingredients themselves. I started substituting different meats in the traditional Brazilian feijoada (see recipe box) and cooking lots of things vegetarian.

It was fun for me to cook this new way because in the end I care about the taste of the food. I learned that food could be not only a wonderful experience, but also be nutritious and healthy.

I know I must have succeeded because Michael Jackson ate my food and he is very, very particular about what he puts into his body. But because Michael is so big, I got a lot of attention around the world during the Thriller tour because they called me his nutritionist. I did after all make him stop having tummy-aches during his tour and he did not have any problem with food while I cooked for him.

O Globo Television in Brazil did a report on me on the show Fantástico talking about me as Michael Jackson’s nutritionist. A Japanese magazine also did a story on Michael Jackson’s nutritionist. Then I guess I was not a cook or chef to them. I was a “nutritionist”. But today, I feel that part of being a chef IS being a nutritionist. […]

Brazzil: There’s a story about you, your salsa, and Quincy Jones in Madison Square Garden, during the Michael Jackson Thriller tour. Tell me about that.

Remi: Yes, Quincy Jones loves my salsa. Quincy first tasted my salsa and became addicted to it at Sidney’s (Poitier) house. Once in Madison Square Garden, I just got done preparing the special tea I made for Michael Jackson and placed it all around the backstage area for him to drink during the show. When I was done, I then went back in the back of the auditorium and waited for the show.

All of a sudden, there was a pounding at the microphone and the crowd went wild. They yelled “Michael, Michael”, screaming and yelling. Then all of a sudden I hear my name. “Remi, Remi!” over the sound system. I didn’t believe it at first but it was Quincy. “Remi, return to Los Angeles, there is no more salsa!” Quincy had run out of salsa before the show and wanted more. He was always playing jokes. That was very funny. I will never forget that.

Brazzil: Once I heard that Quincy Jones had all his brothers line up and kiss your feet. Is that true?

Remi: I will never forget that. The Jones boys loved my cooking and always made their wives write down the recipe. I even dictated recipes over the phone to them all over the United States. But they said it never tasted quite like what I make. One day, they were so happy to eat my cooking again at Quincy’s house, that Quincy came to me and said: “Remi, come here! You must come here outside.” So I went outside to find all his brothers on their knees in a line waiting for me. They all came over and kissed my feet. It was very funny but they were serious. They were crazy for my cooking. It was also the cachaça (sugar-cane liquor). They got very funny and friendly when they drank caipirinhas (margarita with cachaça). […]

Brazzil: Tell me some of the people you have cooked for in Hollywood.

Remi: I have cooked for so, so many people. I once cooked for Michael Jackson and Elizabeth Taylor alone in Michael’s house. That was very special. I have cooked for Oprah Winfrey, Paul McCartney, Eddie Murphy, Dick Van Dyke, Sugar Ray Leonard, Magic Johnson, Bill Cosby, Willie Nelson, Herb Albert. So, so many. I just can’t remember them all. I used to see Gregory Peck and James Stewart walking their dogs in the neighborhood and I would talk with them and got to know them. They were very wonderful men. […]

Brazzil: This year you are being honored at the Brazilian Street Carnaval in Long Beach. How do you feel?

Remi: It is so, so nice. Brazilian television has done stories on me. A Japanese magazine also did a story on me at the same time. But it was more because of Michael Jackson than about my cooking.

To read the entire interview, click here.

Editor’s note: Of course there has never been a “Thriller Tour”. Most likely Remi is refering to the Victory Tour in her interview.

Source: Brazzil.Com, MJFC-USA

Category: General News, Interviews & Quotes