Friday, May 20, 2016

Dirt Candy: Roasted Carrot Buns

Dirt Candy: A Cookbook. Flavor-forward Food from the Upstart New York City Vegetarian Restaurant
By Amanda Cohen and Ryan Dunley, with Grady Hendrix
Charlotte Potter Publishers, 2012, 224 pages

I don't normally review cookbooks here, but I made an exception for Amanda Cohen's Dirt Candy, because it is absolutely unique: part recipe book, part graphic novel, part vegetarian manifesto, it doesn't apologize for its hybridity, but instead embraces it. The result is both fun and invigorating.


I am not a vegetarian, and neither is anyone in my family. But, like many, I am trying to reduce the amount of meat we eat. I limit red meat, trying to feature chicken or fish when possible, which is easy enough. But doing without animal flesh altogether is more of a challenge. I personally like beans and pulses, but not everyone at home does. Once you eliminate those, it's hard for me to think of filling vegetarian dishes that aren't pizza, pasta, risotto, or some sort of root vegetable gratin. Which I guess isn't too bad, but it gets to be a lot of carbs and/or cheese.


Thursday, February 18, 2016

Skirt Steak - Fried Apple Pie

Skirt Steak: Women Chefs on Standing the Heat and Staying in the Kitchen
By Charlotte Druckman
320 pages, Chronicle Books, 2012

It was necessary to write Skirt Steak. Reading it will make you realize just how necessary it was.


The book is as straightforward as its title suggests: food writer Charlotte Druckman interviewed 73 American women chefs on multiple aspects of their profession, and organized her findings by topic to paint a picture of the situation of women in the professional kitchen. While she does not quite manage to weave everything into a smooth narrative, Skirt Steak is a gold mine of information. The thoroughness and girth of the research accomplished by the author are commendable.


Perhaps inevitably, it sometimes feels a bit dry. There are sections where multiple direct quotes are dumped on us in succession. There are so many names dropped that, unless you are very familiar with the restaurant industry, you are likely to feel quite lost. Thankfully, there is a very useful index you can turn to, should you ever need to look up a specific chef. In this manner, this book can serve as a reference for future use.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Medium Raw - Chicken Laksa

Medium Raw: A Bloody Valentine to the World of Food and the People Who Cook
By Anthony Bourdain
281 pages, HarperCollins, 2010

It’s hard to not want to dislike Anthony Bourdain a lot of the time, but it’s harder to actually dislike him – and Medium Raw makes the latter even harder.


There were definitely things to dislike about Kitchen Confidential, the 2000 tell-all, no-holding-back, warts-and-all, *insert your own cliché* memoir/essay that made Bourdain a star. It was crude, it was arrogant, its tone often spiteful and vindictive. But it was also vigorous, playful and unapologetically, gleefully, loudly entertaining. It exposed the restaurant business as the rowdy, raucous, chaotic, macho environment we now all know it to be. Another of the book's saving graces was that, no matter how harsh Bourdain was about his peers and acquaintance­s in the business, he never set himself up to be any better. No matter what you think of his attitude and tone, the man is lucid about most things, including himself.


This trend continues in Medium Raw, a fairly disjointed series of essays about the world of food and Bourdain's journey through it. If anything, the tone is more measured, the author more humbled, more conciliatory. He explains the angry, frantic state of mind he was in when he wrote Kitchen Confidential. He addresses (and largely admits to) charges that he is no longer really a chef, and that he has been, overall, damn lucky in life. He nuances his much publicized hatred of the Food Network. He even finishes a biting chapter on Alice Waters, whom he clearly has no love for, with the concession that the lady is really probably right about most things that matter, and that she basically just annoys him. You want to know how much Bourdain has changed in ten years? There's an entire chapter devoted to how he is raising his two-year-old daughter.