donderdag 28 november 2013

Medium Raw: A Bloody Valentine to the World of Food and the People Who Cook - ANTHONY BORDAIN

From Bookmarks Magazine
No one really expected Bourdain to top his wildly popular Kitchen Confidential, even Bourdain himself: several critics wrote that he seems alternately awed and appalled by his own celebrity. Those parts of Medium Raw--more of a collection of essays than a streamlined narrative--that seemed to grow out of that celebrity, such as Bourdain's feuds with food critics and celebrity chefs, impressed reviewers the least. But they still found much to savor, particularly Bourdain's biting personality, his own humorous self-deprecation, his ability to bring out the unknown elements of the restaurant industry, particularly the kitchen and service staff who might otherwise be ignored, and, not least of all, the well-written (if often vulgar) and compelling stories. In the end, though Medium Raw will best be appreciated by foodies, it is "generally an entertaining read, compelling more for [Bourdain's] passion than his mean streak" (Kansas City Star).


From Booklist
Bourdain, who broke into the collective food consciousness with Kitchen Confidential (2000) and has since cemented his place as one of our foremost food commentators, offers the kind of book you can write only if you've achieved the level of fame at which you can assume that people care about about whatever you have to say (which they do, and should): a loose, sometimes repetitive, always entertaining, and even at times enlightening collection of food-related ramblings and name-naming hit-pieces. The result is more or less the book equivalent of finding yourself sharing plates at a communal table with a chatty, witty, unapologetically profane, knowledgeable and well-connected member-observer of the restaurant big leagues. If, like him, you see the world's greatest chefs as somewhere between rock and porn stars, there's no way you wouldn’t spend hours listening to him chew your ear off with stories of that coke-fueled weekend (or was it a month?) trapped on an island with the world's most insufferably wealthy food posers and with diatribes on how annoying Alice Waters is and how critic Alan Richman is a 'douchebag' (the nicer of the two things Bourdain calls him) for trashing the New Orleans food scene with the city still reeling from Katrina'and then turn on a dime to deliver an impassioned ode to Vietnamese pho and an admiring portrait of perhaps the world's finest fish-portioner at Le Bernardin. It might have been a narcissistic, condescending, and overly insiderish collection if it weren't for Bourdain's consistently disarming self-awareness that he's 'the very picture of the jaded, overprivileged 'foodie' (in the worst sense of that word) that he used to despise.'On seeing himself through the eyes of a hungry young chef who still has to actually cook just to barely survive, he says, 'Look at me and my nice fucking jacket, standing there all famous and shit.'Sure, others may cook better than he does, but no one can dish like he can. --Ian Chipman

http://www.amazon.com/Medium-Raw-Bloody-Valentine-People/dp/0061718947/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1295372000&sr=1-4

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Bourdain
http://blog.travelchannel.com/anthony-bourdain/
http://www.anthonybourdain.net/

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