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Cooking Up Some Entertainment: Beaten, Seared, and Sauced, Apron Anxiety, & Kitchen Confidential (the series)

4 Sep

With the increasing amount of reality shows focusing on restaurants and cooking competition, chefs have been taken out of the kitchen and into the spotlight.  But being a chef is also a job that requires hard work and many hours on one’s feet in a hot kitchen.  Here are two nonfictions reads and one TV comedy series, those interested in the lives of chefs both in and out of the kitchen will enjoy.  Both books are available in print from the Hoboken Public Library and can be downloaded as ebooks on elibrarynj (http://hoboken.bccls.org/html/ebooks.htm).

Beaten, Seared, and Sauced: On Becoming a Chef at the Culinary Institute of America   by Jonathan Dixonbeaten

Jonathan Dixon was almost forty when he decided to make a career change and went to the CIA (Culinary Institute of America) to learn to be a chef.  This work originated from a blog he began as a student there.  Dixon’s experience is not necessarily the typical one for a CIA student, the majority of whom he notes were just out of high school.  His age gives him an added seriousness about his studying, but also makes it harder for him to submit to the drill sergeant like tactics employed by some of his instructors and the physical demands of the work.  His externship at the now closed NY Indian fusion restaurant Tabla draws attention to some of the more negative aspects of working in a restaurant kitchen including the long hours and their impact on trying to maintain a relationship.  No recipes are included in the work, but as Dixon moves through the different courses, readers will pick up some tips of the trade.

Apron Anxiety: My Messy Affairs In and Out of the Kitchen
by Alyssa Shelaskyapron-anxiety-alyssa-shelasky-book-cover

While in Beaten, Seared, and Sauced Dixon mentions the impact of his course work and externing at Tabla from his point of view, Alyssa Shelasky’s Apron Anxiety gives the perspective of what it is like being the partner of a chef.  I overlapped reading the two books and it was interesting to compare their two perspectives.  In this case the chef in question is Spike Mendelsohn, who competed in the fourth season of Top Chef; in the book she refers to him, however, as simply “chef.”  Shelasky did not start out as a foodie, but is drawn in to the world by “chef.”  The book has a chicklit memoir feel and at first I was off put slightly by Shelasky’s overly privileged party girl persona, but her humor and her spunk won me over in the end.  The book chronicles how it is possible to go from melting a plastic coffee pot on the stove while trying to boil water for cocoa and thinking taleggio is a European DJ, to throwing a fabulous dinner party for friends and family.  Although her love affair with “chef” ends, her love affair with food seems to have only just begun.  Recipes that reflect each chapter’s exploits are included.

Kitchen Confidential (the series)kitchenconfidential

For those who enjoy the humorous side of life in the kitchen, Kitchen Confidential is a 2005 television series loosely based on Anthony Bourdain’s book of the same name.  Although some characters and situations will be familiar to fans of the book such as an overly obsessed bread baker, the show diverges from the source material and adds a great deal of absurd humor and exists in a heightened reality only found in dramadies.   The show was produced by Sex and the City creator, Darren Star which it reminded me of, though in this case replacing the female friendship with male workplace bonding and with more “PG-13” content reflecting its broadcast TV origin.  Bradley Cooper, of Hangover fame, stars as Jack Bourdain, who has renounced his former hard partying ways and sees a chance to finally get back to helming an upscale restaurant.  The cast includes Nicholas Brendon (from Buffy the Vampire Slayer) as a pastry chef, John Francis Daley (currently on Bones) as a constantly hazed newbie, Jaime King (currently on Heart of Dixie) as a ditzy waitress, and Owain Yeoman (currently on the Mentalist) as bad boy sous chef.  Unfortunately despite the winning cast, in part due to scheduling issues, the show only lasted four episodes on TV in the US, but all thirteen are available as a DVD set, which can be borrowed from BCCLS libraries.

Books to Feed the Foodie’s Mind: My Berlin Kitchen, Blood, Bones, and Butter, & Sweet Tooth

3 Jun

My Berlin Kitchen: A Love Story, with Recipes myberlinstory by Luisa Weiss is a charming tale of a women who finds both love and a sense of home in Berlin.  I enjoyed the beautiful descriptions of food, but couldn’t put the book down because of wanting to learn more about her life, love, and travel.  Weiss was born in Berlin to an Italian mother and American father.  After her parents divorced she spent time living in all three countries as well for a time in Paris.  Her background is in publishing; however, she is an avid amateur cook.  Luisa Weiss is the author of the popular blog, The Wednesday Chef where she writes about cooking, her life, and the intersection between the two.  As on her blog, My Berlin Kitchen provides a variety of recipes inspired by her multinational background.  The love story in the book is a beautiful one, but Weiss writes about it in a realistic way including the struggles of her relationship that helps it feel grounded.  Fans of fellow blogger Julie Powell’s Julie and Julia will eat this book up.

Blood, Bones, and Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef  bloodbonesbutterby Gabrielle Hamilton in contrast to Weiss’s book focuses on the life of a professional chef with a not so fairy tale love life.  The book is broken in to three sections “Blood” which deals with her childhood and college, “Bones” with her starting up and working at the popular NY restaurant Prune, and “Butter” with her relationship with her husband and her time with his family in Italy.  I felt the “Bones” section was the most interesting of the three; Hamilton conveyed well the world of the restaurant chef in a humorous and intriguing way.  I, however, found Hamilton to come across as a bit judgmental about those around her and wished there was a bit more introspection on some of reasoning for certain life decisions.  This was especially true in the “Butter” section since she claims that she married her husband as an act of “performance art” so he can have a green card and seems deeply disappointed in their relationship from the beginning, but then goes on to have two children with him.  The book will appeal to fans of Anthony Bourdain’s Kitchen Confidential.

sweettoothSweet Tooth: The Bittersweet History of Candy  by Kate Hopkins interweaves the history of candy ingredients and candy making techniques with Hopkin’s travel to key places which played roles in the history of candy including England, Italy, Hershey, PA, and Salem, MA.  Her focus on the slave trade’s role in sugar production provides much of the bitter aspect of the books title.  A cute aspect is in each chapter she details one candy she enjoyed as a child and gives it a point value for how much it was worth in the barter system with other candies with her friends and sibling, this provides a sweet contrast to the more cynical adult perspective that often permeates Hopkins’s travels.  Through her journey Hopkins tries to recapture the magical feeling of a happiness she derived from candy as a child, which she feels as an adult is now missing.  This book will be a treat to travel writing aficionados whether or not they have a sweet tooth.

Foodies will not want to miss the Hoboken Public Library’s First Book Festival on June 8 where Maricel Presilla, who was named the James Beard Best Chef Mid-Atlantic 2012 will be the keynote speaker.  Presilla recently won the prestigious IACP Award for best general cookbook and a James Beard Award for Best Cookbook of the year for 2013 for her years-in-the-making Gran Cocina Latina, an epic look at Latin American cooking.  

For more information:

http://hoboken.bccls.org/html/book_festival.htm

– Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference