KEY POINTS
  • Celebrity chef Jose Andres' nonprofit World Central Kitchen has dished out more than 2,000 plates of food in Washington, D.C., to people affected by the government shutdown, Executive Director Nate Mook says.
  • "We have hundreds of thousands of fellow Americans that are struggling right now because of the situation," Mook says.

Celebrity chef Jose Andres' nonprofit kitchen typically responds to natural disasters such as earthquakes and hurricanes, but the organization is now responding to an urgent need in the nation's capital.

World Central Kitchen has opened an emergency kitchen in Washington, D.C., to support federal employees either working without pay or furloughed by the longest U.S. government shutdown in history. Executive Director Nate Mook likened it to a "man-made disaster."