Jennifer Garner and José Andrés working with WCK on Jan. 9.Photo:Amy Katz/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

Founding owner of the World Central Kitchen (WCK) Chef Jose Andres talks with WCK volunteer and movie star Jennifer Garner at the WCK site in Altadena, which has been decimated by the Eaton fire.

Amy Katz/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

José Andréswas eager to step in with relief efforts amid the Los Angeles wildfires.

“She lost a friend [and] she was there like one more,” Andrés, 55, told PEOPLE while hosting an event during theCayman Cookoutat the Ritz Carlton, Grand Cayman.

“It feels like she was my friend since childhood — and we just met, we barely met — and there she was. I did not have to tell her what to do, because she’ll always find something to do on her own,” he said.

The chef, who owns restaurants likeThe BazaarandZaytinya, shared that Garner, 52, was “giving hugs to so many people” while distributing food to those in need. “I think that’s almost like a psychology worry that I don’t think anybody realizes, but that’s so deep and so important,” he told PEOPLE.

Andrés working with WCK on Jan. 9.World Central Kitchen

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“Everybody that was able to show up even for an hour, for me, they’re amazing people, because they don’t have to,” Andrés continued to PEOPLE. “Some of them are suffering the consequences of the fire, but there they are. And they don’t do it where there are cameras, they’re doing it where there is nobody, and that makes it very special.”

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On Friday, Jan. 17 the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner confirmed there have been 27 fatalities as a result of the wildfires, which started on Jan. 7. Meanwhile, thousands of other people have fled their homes.

World Central Kitchenhas fed the frontlines as part ofdisaster relief in Gaza, Ukraine, and countries all over the world since 2010. After the L.A. fires broke out, Garner said she used her “celebrity privilege” to aid WCK’s efforts.

“It’s just like you need to do something with your hands and so I took advantage a little bit, of celebrity privilege and called chef [Andrés] and said, ‘Please, can I come with you?'” she toldNBC News.

Garner.Swan Gallet/WWD

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Swan Gallet/WWD

Garner toldMSNBCthat she knew one of the people who died during the fires.

“I did lose a friend, and for our church, it’s really tender so I don’t feel like we should talk about it yet,” Garner said, her voice cracking. “I did lose a friend. She didn’t get out in time.”

“My heart bleeds for my friends,” Garner continued. “I mean, I can think of 100 families, and there are 5,000 homes lost. I can — without even [thinking] — I could just write out a list of 100 friends who lost their homes.”

“I feel almost guilty walking through my house,” she added. “You know, what can I do? How can I help? What can I offer? What do I have to offer with these hands and these walls and the safety that I have?”

Click hereto learn more about how to help the victims of the L.A. fires.

source: people.com