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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 9:49 am 
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Location: St. Ben's
(edit: Re: Frank Bruni, Born Round)

^ I enjoyed this book as well, most of all his vivid and loving remembrance of his family and their meals together.

He is brave to portray just how foolish and vain he was during his search for a healthy eating lifestyle. I can relate to that, lol!

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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 12:34 pm 
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Location: Mundelein, IL
At the IC (Highland Park) rummage sale, I picked up several cool hardbacks ($1) and paperbacks (50 cents), including a pristine paperback copy of Harold McGee's On Food and Cooking, a hardback of The Frugal Gourmet with signed card inside (I gave away my paperback copy years ago and have regretted it since), and a 1974 edition of Beard on Bread. Very much enjoying browsing all three. They're helping me get over my sadness at having to return A. J. Liebling's Between Meals to my brother.

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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Wed Mar 30, 2011 2:27 pm 
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Location: Naperville
Hidden Kitchens: Stories and More from NPR’s the Kitchen Sisters

I listened to this Audie winner with my husband and three grown kids on our Christmas road trip (north of Hayward WI). No one wanted me to play it, but I was driving and they all had their electronic gadgets. Suffice it to say, they all got hooked and we listened to the whole book and had great conversations as a result.

Often, the audio-version of a book is not much different or better than reading it yourself, but this one is an exception.
Frances McDormand narrates the stories which are filled with music, sound effects and voices that capture the food, the culture and the people. My favorites were the Chili Queens of San Antonio, Wild Rice gathering in Northern Minnesota and George Foreman’s story of his childhood.

Davia Nelson, Nikki Silva and Jay Allison explore street-corner cooking, traditions and how communities come together through food. In between the vivid stories, you listen to intriguing messages from NPR’s Hidden Kitchen Hotline. Callers share anecdotes of family recipes and underground kitchens. I promise, this will enhance your next commute or road trip.


Last edited by janeyb on Mon Apr 25, 2011 11:46 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Fri Apr 22, 2011 6:53 pm 
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Location: NW suburbs
I'm currently making me delighted way through a volume that includes, as it notes, "two culinary classics." One might think that hyperbole until one reads the comment from M.F. K. Fisher that these are "two of the best books about cooking in the English language."

The author is Nicolas Freeling and the books are The Kitchen Book and The Cook Book.

Freeling, who spent his childhood in France, was a professional cook for many years before becoming a hugely successful writer of crime fiction. Turning back to his love of food, he produced these wonderfully warm, insightful, often humorous food memoirs.

I did a search, and Freeling didn't come up anywhere on the forum, so I thought it might be good to share this discovery.

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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Mon Apr 25, 2011 10:13 am 
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Location: West Rogers Park
Cynthia wrote:
I'm currently making me delighted way through a volume that includes, as it notes, "two culinary classics." One might think that hyperbole until one reads the comment from M.F. K. Fisher that these are "two of the best books about cooking in the English language."

The author is Nicolas Freeling and the books are The Kitchen Book and The Cook Book.

Freeling, who spent his childhood in France, was a professional cook for many years before becoming a hugely successful writer of crime fiction. Turning back to his love of food, he produced these wonderfully warm, insightful, often humorous food memoirs.

I did a search, and Freeling didn't come up anywhere on the forum, so I thought it might be good to share this discovery.

I love Freeling's crime fiction (especially his first series about van der Valk). He includes quite a bit about food and cooking in those. Your post makes me want to read his books about cooking as well (and maybe reread Love in Amsterdam).


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2012 10:42 pm 
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Location: Chicago
Voila!
http://www.lthforum.com/bb/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=18633
At this writing, exactly 30 threads below yours in this very column.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 1:37 pm 
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Location: Mount Prospect
Note: I'm subscribed to Lucky Peach... but it's far from what I'd call "Literary" even though it's from the esteemed McSweeny's. It's fun, loose and vulgar, with a vibe somewhere between Wired (colored text on photographic backgrounds, scientific notes by Harold McGee) and an underground comic (each issue has doodles and stream-of-conciousness rants by a group of chefs).

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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 12:32 am 
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Location: Norwood Park, Chicago IL
Did anyone out there read Gabrielle Hamilton's "Blood, Bones and Butter"? (I thought it started out wonderfully, bogged down a bit towards the end, but ultimately left me thoughtful and appreciative of her prose.) Or Richard Wrangham's "Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human"? (OK, I know, that's not exactly literature, but much of this book was done with a storyteller's voice.)

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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 8:29 am 
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I read Hamilton's book about a year ago and would highly recommend it to anyone interested in what it's like to be a chef. I agree it's very well written. She comes across not entirely favorably, I guess her honestly is commendable and a bit unusual to find in a memoir.


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 Post subject: Re: Great Books
PostPosted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 8:02 pm 
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Location: St. Ben's
I agree; it's a really nicely written book that makes an engrossing read. One of my wife's and my favorite books from last year.

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 Post subject: Reading
PostPosted: Sat Sep 01, 2012 5:47 pm 
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Location: Roscoe Village
Mods, feel free to move. I searched and couldn't find a link to the right thread.

For Leah and others so inclined:

Sci Fi author Norman Spinrad offers his take on how to cook:

http://cooklikeahumannormanspinrad.blog ... jules.html


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 Post subject: Re: Reading
PostPosted: Mon Sep 10, 2012 10:38 am 
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Location: Roscoe Village
“EVERY CULTURE IS PASSIONATE ABOUT FOOD; SOME ARE JUST PASSIONATE ABOUT FOOD AND THE FOOD IS SHITTY.”

http://www.believermag.com/issues/201209/?read=interview_gold


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PostPosted: Mon Sep 10, 2012 2:44 pm 
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Location: Norwood Park, Chicago IL
Heh, that interview in the Believer brought to mind Anton Ego from Ratatouille.

I'm currently waiting in line for the library's copy of Marcus Samuelsson's "Yes, Chef." Anyone out there have anything (not too spoilerish) to say about it?

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 11, 2012 12:26 pm 
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Location: Naperville
I am enjoying Yes Chef. I am only half-way through and it is due back at the library. I plan to finish reading it quickly and pay the fine. It is a great chef story. I don't think I will ruin anything by mentioning that at age three, Marcus Samuelsson walked with his Mom and sister 75 miles while suffering from tuberculosis. His Mom dies and he and his sister are adopted by a Swedish couple. This situation sets the stage for the rest of the story. Samuelsson's style is quiet. But he does a great job writing about family, race and of course -food. His story is incredible and I am having fun reading about how he makes his dreams reality.
I read Blood Bones & Butter recently and Gabrielle Hamilton's story is more raucous. The two chef's have different story-telling styles, but I would recommend both.


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