A Memoir of Forty Years in Food
Genre: Non-Fiction Memoir | Non-Fiction Cooking / Food
Knopt
June 1, 2013
On Sale: May 21, 2013
Featuring:
256 pages
ISBN: 0307700941
EAN: 9780307700940
Kindle: B00A9ET65C
Hardcover / e-Book
Book Summary
Four decades of memories from a gastronome who witnessed the
food revolution from the (well-provisioned) trenches—a
delicious tour through contemporary food history.
When Raymond Sokolov became food editor of The New York
Times in 1971, he began a long, memorable career as
restaurant critic, food historian, and author. Here he
traces the food scene he reported on in America and abroad,
from his pathbreaking dispatches on nouvelle cuisine chefs
like Paul Bocuse and Michel Guérard in France to the rise of
contemporary American food stars like Thomas Keller and
Grant Achatz, and the fruitful collision of science and
cooking in the kitchens of El Bulli in Spain, the Fat Duck
outside London, and Copenhagen’s gnarly Noma.
Sokolov invites readers to join him as a privileged observer
of the most transformative period in the history of cuisine
with this personal narrative of the sensual education of an
accidental gourmet. We dine out with him at temples of haute
cuisine like New York’s Lutèce but also at a pioneering
outpost of Sichuan food in a gas station in New
Jersey, at a raunchy Texas chili cookoff, and at a backwoods
barbecue shack in Alabama, as well as at three-star
restaurants from Paris to Las Vegas.
Steal the Menu
is, above all, an entertaining and engaging account of a
tumultuous period of globalizing food ideas and
frontier-crossing ingredients that produced the
unprecedentedly rich and diverse way of eating we enjoy today.