Ceres (The Bear)

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"Ceres"
The Bear episode
Looks like Caesar (16294328923).jpg
Ceres (1930) atop the Board of Trade Building
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 6
Directed by Joanna Calo
Written byCatherine Schetina & Rene Gube
Cinematography byAndrew Wehde
Editing byAdam Epstein
Original air dateJune 23, 2022 (2022-06-23)
Running time30 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Sheridan"
Next 
"Review"
The Bear season 1
List of episodes

"Ceres" is the sixth episode of the first season of the American comedy-drama television series The Bear . It is the sixth overall episode of the series and was written by Catherine Schetina & Rene Gube and directed by Joanna Calo. It was released on Hulu on June 23, 2022, along with the rest of the season.

Contents

The series follows Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto, an award-winning New York City chef de cuisine, who returns to his hometown of Chicago to run his late brother Michael's failing Italian beef sandwich shop.

Plot

The episode opens with a flashback set in a home kitchen: Mikey (Jon Bernthal) and Carmy prepare Mikey's braciole while Carmy, Sugar (Abby Elliott), and Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) listen to Mikey tell a story.

In the present timeline, Sydney develops a risotto meal for an upcoming dinner menu, but Carmy rejects it; Sydney serves it to a customer anyway. Natalie comes to the restaurant to figure out the restaurant's unpaid taxes and she and Carmy search for the missing documents. Marcus continues to work hard on developing donuts but finds himself behind on restaurant work. The restaurant has its windows shot out by stray gunfire, and Richie asks the local gangsters to find out who did it. Later, the gangsters get into a scuffle, which Sydney breaks up by offering them leftovers; Richie feels left out and unneeded because of Sydney's success and calls the police on the gangsters.

Context

The name of the episode refers to the statue of the Roman goddess of agriculture that tops the Chicago Board of Trade Building, and to Ceres Cafe, a cocktail bar in the lobby. [1] The bar is known for "strong drinks" and "heavy pours." [2]

When talking about the statue, both Mikey and Richie refer to "architect John Storrs" although Ceres was the work of sculptor John Storrs. [3] The Chicago Board of Trade building was designed in the Art Deco style by architects Holabird & Root; the statue "sits atop the building's pyramidal roof. The straight lines on her garment and her machine-made appearance make her the quintessential...ornament for this completely stylized structure." [4] Mikey tells Richie, Natalie, and Carm that the statue has her back to the east; Ceres faces north, up LaSalle Street, her back is to the south. In Mikey's story he and Richie stumble into 6 a.m. rager where they encounter hockey players Denis Savard, Chris Chelios, and Ed Belfour, and actor Bill Murray. [2] Savard, who played centre for the Chicago Blackhawks from 1980 to 1990, and from 1995 to 1997, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000. [5]

While Mikey is talking, he prepares the braciole that Carmy mentions in the season-one finale, assigning Carm to finish the work ("Carmy, do some parm") and rejecting Sugar's proposal that they include raisins, which is how their mom would have done the dish. [6] [3]

The gentrification of Chicago is the thematic foundation of the episode. "Logan...Wicker...Pilsen" likely refers to the neighborhoods of Pilsen, Wicker Park, and Logan Square. [7] The "bar next door" is the real Green Door Tavern, but it has not closed. [8] It persists, as it has done since 1921. [8] A Sweetgreen gourmet-salad restaurant, marketed to working professionals, is opening soon in The Bear's fictionalized version of the River North neighborhood. [9]

Crooked John asks for drinks to go with the beef sandwiches that Syd hands out: "RC, Green River, whatever we're dealing with." Green River is a soft drink first bottled locally in 1919; by the 1960s it was "a nationally known Chicago icon." [10]

Carmy uses the "cake-tester method" to check "by touch" if the chicken is cooked. [11] [12]

A VIP guest at the Beef in this episode is local weatherman Tom Skilling. [12]

Production

Costuming

For the flashback, designer Courtney Wheeler put Carmy in a "gray long-sleeved henley to signal relaxed, happier times for the family [because] 'Michael is cooking this meal every Sunday, and maybe the Bears game is on.'" [13] Richie wears a gray-and-maroon "Chicago tracksuit." [13]

Filming

The flashback with Mikey in the Berzatto house kitchen was filmed in California. According to Ebon Moss-Bachrach, "Jon's scene was the last thing we shot, so we were able to change our appearance a little bit...Jon was in the middle of doing American Gigolo and we could only really get him for a day. A few of us went out to L.A., and we shot it there, so the whole temperature was quite different, the light was different. It felt not so dark, in a way." [14]

Music

The songs included in the episode were "Call the Police" by LCD Soundsystem, "Beat City"by the Flowerpot Men, "Peace Blossom Boogy" by Babe Rainbow, "Aphasia" by the Budos Band, and "Last Train Home" by John Mayer. [15]

Food

Sydney presents the cola-braised short ribs and risotto dish she conceptualized at the end of "Sheridan." Carmy rejects Sydney's proposed addition to the dinner menu as "not ready." [3] Short ribs are a cut of beef, usually derived the chuck and short plate cuts, which consists "of layers of fat and meat and contain pieces of the rib bone. They're very tough and require long, slow, moist-heat cooking." [16] According to Food & Wine , "On television and in real life, nothing is cozier than a Dutch oven filled with braised, fall-off-the-bone tender short ribs served over risotto. Here, per Sydney's creativity, classic wine and stock braising liquid get a surprising addition from cola, which balances the savory with a touch of complex sweetness to create a smooth, rich sauce." [17] Braising is a cooking technique in which meat is "first browned in fat, then cooked, tightly covered, in a small amount of liquid at low heat for a lengthy period of time" which develops flavor and makes the protein tender. [18] According to The New Food Lover's Companion , risotto is a labor-intensive, delectable, creamy "Italian rice specialty made by stirring hot stock into a mixture of rice (and often chopped onions) that has been sautéed in butter. The stock is added 12 cup at a time and the mixture is stirred continually while it cooks until all the liquid is absorbed before more stock is added." [19] Sydney's risotto recipe uses an étouffée stock as a flavor base; this is what she was working on in "Sheridan" when she asked Carmy to help her strain her stock. [20]

Critical reviews

Vulture rated it five out of five stars. [12]

Den of Geek hailed Bernthal's debut appearance a crucial to the long-term overall emotional impact of The Bear: "The Bear has been great from its first episode on. But it didn't fully become the best version of itself until season 1 episode 6 'Ceres,' in which Mikey is first introduced via flashback. As Mikey attends to the Berzatto family dinner and enthralls his siblings with a story that they've all heard a thousand times, the melancholy at the center of the story firmly locks into place and is never dislodged. Every character on The Bear makes more sense when you remember what they've lost. Even Syd, who never knew Mikey, has to confront his shade within Carmy's baby blue eyes every day." [21]

Retrospective reviews

In 2024, the Hollywood Reporter ranked "Ceres" 16th-best out of 28 episodes produced to that point, commenting "Bernthal instantly infuses Mikey with so much life, making the audience feel the character's absence almost as much as the loved ones he left behind." [22] ScreenRant ranked "Ceres" 15th out of the 28 episodes produced through the end of season three, calling it one of the "more interesting" episodes of season one and saluting the introduction of the "brilliant" Jon Bernthal as Mikey. [23]

In 2024, Variety listed "Ceres" at number 10 on a list of top 10 episodes of The Bear. [24]

In 2025, Vulture ranked "Ceres" as 20th-best out of 38 episodes of The Bear, describing it as "quite a good episode" that is especially "lovely if you've spent any time in Chicago." [25] Esquire magazine listed "Ceres" at number 8 on its 2025 list of top 10 best episodes from the first three seasons of The Bear, with the goddess of the harvest serving as "a marker of change for The Bear as its characters transition from their old world of meat slop into whatever Carmy has cooking in his head. Of greatest concern is Richie, whose pathetic boorishness is reinforced before his great metamorphosis in season 2." [9]

A BuzzFeed writer who watched season one for the first time in 2025 commented, "Richie is not enjoying the breakaway from the system. Everyone in this show is so good with the subtle expressions. So much character crammed into little 30-minute episodes." [26]

See also

References

  1. Selvam, Ashok (June 26, 2025) [2023-07-17]. "Every Single Restaurant Featured in All 4 Seasons of 'The Bear'". Eater Chicago . Retrieved September 21, 2025.
  2. 1 2 Swiers, Autumn (September 10, 2025). "This Classic Chicago Bar Was Featured on The Bear, But It's So Much More". Tasting Table. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  3. 1 2 3 admin (October 6, 2022). "The Bear - S01E06 - Ceres | Transcript". Scraps from the loft. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  4. "Chicago Board of Trade Building". www.architecture.org. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  5. "Blackhawks in the Hall". Chicago Tribune. June 16, 2000. p. 233. Retrieved November 3, 2025.
  6. Ram, Chandra (June 22, 2024). "Braciole". Food & Wine. Recipe developed by Marianne Williams. Retrieved September 21, 2025.
  7. Lowery, Tim. "The Bear is a prime dramedy about a Chicago Italian beef joint". AV Club. Retrieved September 23, 2025.
  8. 1 2 "The 24 Restaurants Mentioned on 'The Bear'". charfoodguide.com. August 3, 2023.
  9. 1 2 Francisco, Eric (June 4, 2025). "The 10 Best Episodes of 'The Bear,' Ranked". Esquire . Retrieved November 6, 2025.
  10. Haddix, Kraig & Sen (2017), p. 130.
  11. "Using a Cake Tester vs Meat Thermometer for Steak". www.oxo.com. Retrieved November 2, 2025.
  12. 1 2 3 Eakin, Marah (June 4, 2024). "The Bear Recap: A Delicate Ecosystem". Vulture. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  13. 1 2 Menon, Radhika (August 10, 2022). "How The Bear Injected Personality Into the Standard Kitchen Uniform". Vulture. Retrieved October 18, 2025.
  14. Hadadi, Roxana (June 29, 2022). "The Bear's Ebon Moss-Bachrach on the Art of Playing the Obstacle". Vulture. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  15. Hough, Q. V. (June 27, 2022). "Soundtracks of Television: 'The Bear'". Vague Visages. Retrieved September 21, 2025.
  16. Herbst & Herbst (2013), p. 697.
  17. Ram, Chandra (January 17, 2023). "Cola-Braised Short Ribs with Risotto". Food & Wine. Recipe developed by Marianne Williams. Retrieved September 23, 2025.
  18. Herbst & Herbst (2013), p. 96.
  19. Herbst & Herbst (2013), pp. 338–339.
  20. Fox (2024).
  21. Bojalad, Alec (June 27, 2024). "The Bear Doesn't Work Without Jon Bernthal as Mikey Berzatto". Den of Geek. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  22. Wigler, Josh (July 8, 2024). "Every Episode of 'The Bear,' Ranked". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 21, 2025.
  23. MacArthur, Greg; Lealos, Shawn S. (June 30, 2024). "The Bear: All 28 Episodes, Ranked from Worst to Best". ScreenRant . Retrieved November 5, 2025.
  24. Hailu, Selome; Shanfeld, Ethan (July 2, 2024). "The Top 10 'The Bear' Episodes, Ranked". Variety. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
  25. Eakin, Marah (June 27, 2025). "Every Single Episode of 'The Bear,' Ranked". Vulture. Retrieved October 9, 2025.
  26. Hayes, Jeremy (July 2, 2025). "I Watched 'The Bear' Pilot for the First Time, and I Accidentally Binged It All". BuzzFeed. Retrieved October 3, 2025.

Sources