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A chef鈥檚 story reflects US-Mexico border tensions

In 鈥淭he Migrant Chef,鈥 author Laura Tillman follows the saga of Mexican restaurateur Lalo Garc铆a to paint a more humane picture of migrants who cross the border.聽

By Kendra Nordin Beato, Staff writer

Journalist Laura Tillman was on the trail of a different story in 2016 when she called M谩ximo Bistrot, a fine dining restaurant in Mexico City. She wanted to learn more about the experiences of the cooks, servers, and dishwashers who served Mexico鈥檚 elite amid the nation鈥檚 widening wealth gap. But when chef Lalo Garc铆a came to the phone, he offered her something else: his experiences of midnight border crossings, migrant field work, imprisonment, deportation, and an unprecedented rise from being a dishwasher in Atlanta to becoming one of Mexico鈥檚 most respected culinary talents.

鈥淚 had no idea that Lalo was at a critical moment in his life,鈥 Tillman writes in 鈥淭he Migrant Chef: The Life and Times of Lalo Garc铆a.鈥 鈥淢exican immigrants were increasingly being used as political pawns during the U.S. presidential election, and Lalo wanted to share his story.鈥澛

In the book, Tillman pieces together Garc铆a鈥檚 life from interviews, hours spent in his restaurant kitchen, and detailed research. She places his narrative arc within a geopolitical and historical framework to help readers understand the complexity of the ties between the United States and Mexico and the lives of the people who cross between the two countries.聽

Garc铆a鈥檚 grandfather began migrant work under the Bracero Program, which permitted Mexican men to work in the U.S. on short-term contracts. Years later, after Bracero ended,聽Garc铆a鈥檚 father, Lupe, started migrant farm work and was eventually able to earn a green card under President Ronald Reagan鈥檚 amnesty for agricultural workers. Garc铆a was still a boy when he joined his father on the trail from rural Mexico to work on farms between Florida and Michigan, gathering fruit as the seasons flowed from April to November. As a teenager, after his family had settled in Georgia, Garc铆a turned to restaurant work. His dexterity and speed honed in the fields shone while washing dishes and prepping food, earning accolades from cooks and gradually securing his place on the line. He earned enough money to buy fashionable clothes and a brand-new Mustang. But in a moment of youthful impetuosity, he drove the getaway car for a robbery and was caught. After serving a prison sentence, he was deported to his grandparents鈥 home in Mexico.聽

But Garc铆a, then in his early 20s, soon crossed illegally back into the U.S. when his father鈥檚 health failed, and resumed his restaurant work. Tempered by his time in prison, he threw his creative energies into a career in food. He deepened his relationships with his employers and co-workers, and fathered a son, Max, with a girlfriend. Eventually, he rose to head chef of a respected Atlanta-area restaurant. When the restaurant owners opened a new taqueria with Garc铆a at the helm, for the first time he had agency to re-create flavors of his childhood: freshly made salsas, tamales, chilaquiles, and enchiladas. When immigration authorities tracked him down seven years after crossing back into the U.S., this time his exile to Mexico was final.

But Garc铆a鈥檚 story doesn鈥檛 end there. After a struggle to find his place, he became an influential chef in Mexico City at a moment when his peers were using techniques of French and Italian cuisine to elevate Indigenous dishes. He inspired and trained a new generation of world-class Mexican chefs who flourished locally. He partnered with and married a woman who matched his creative visions in business and life. He traveled abroad to study and learn new techniques all the while opening upscale restaurants, naming one of them M谩ximo Bistrot after the son he no longer knows. Ultimately, Garc铆a鈥檚 story of persistence, hard work, failure, and success presents a more nuanced portrait of unauthorized Mexican workers seeking a better life.

In 鈥淭he Migrant Chef,鈥 Tillman makes visible the hidden labor of upscale restaurant workers through the thin swinging kitchen door that separates them from the elite clientele they serve.聽

Whether or not you travel to Mexico City to sample Garc铆a鈥檚 creations, reading his story brings humanity, empathy, and understanding to the issue of the U.S.-Mexico border and the people and ideas traversing it.

Editor鈥檚 note: This article has been updated to correct which family member worked under the Bracero program.聽