Secret Ingredients: The New Yorker Book of Food and Drink

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$11.23 - $23.87
UPC:
9781400065479
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
2007-10-30
Release Date:
2007-10-30
Language:
english
Edition:
Later prt.

Product Overview

Since its earliest days, The New Yorker has been a tastemakerliterally. As the home of A. J. Liebling, Joseph Wechsberg, and M.F.K. Fisher, who practically invented American food writing, the magazine established a tradition that is carried forward today by irrepressible literary gastronomes, including Calvin Trillin, Bill Buford, Adam Gopnik, Jane Kramer, and Anthony Bourdain. Now, in this indispensable collection, The New Yorker dishes up a feast of delicious writing on food and drink, seasoned with a generous dash of cartoons.

Whether youre in the mood for snacking on humor pieces and cartoons or for savoring classic profiles of great chefs and great eaters, these offerings, from every age of The New Yorkers fabled eighty-year history, are sure to satisfy every taste. There are memoirs, short stories, tell-alls, and poemsranging in tone from sweet to sour and in subject from soup to nuts.

M.F.K. Fisher pays homage to cookery witches, those mysterious cooks who possess an uncanny power over food, while John McPhee valiantly trails an inveterate forager and is rewarded with stewed persimmons and white-pine-needle tea. There is Roald Dahls famous story Taste, in which a wine snobs palate comes in for some unwelcome scrutiny, and Julian Barness ingenious tale of a lifelong gourmand who goes on a very peculiar diet for still more peculiar reasons. Adam Gopnik asks if French cuisine is done for, and Calvin Trillin investigates whether people can actually taste the difference between red wine and white. We journey with Susan Orlean as she distills the essence of Cuba in the story of a single restaurant, and with Judith Thurman as she investigates the arcane practices of Japans tofu masters. Closer to home, Joseph Mitchell celebrates the old New York tradition of the beefsteak dinner, and Mark Singer shadows the citys foremost fisherman-chef.

Selected from the magazines plentiful larder, Secret Ingredients celebrates all forms of gustatory delight.

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