Steal the Menu: A Memoir of Forty Years in Food
By (Author) Raymond Sokolov
Random House USA Inc
Random House Inc
15th February 2014
United States
General
Non Fiction
641.5092
Paperback
256
Width 132mm, Height 202mm, Spine 15mm
234g
Part autobiography, part culinary history, Steal the Menu is former New York Times food editor Raymond Sokolov's account of four decades of eating. From his pathbreaking dispatches on nouvelle cuisine in France to finding top-notch Chinese dishes at a New Jersey gas station to picking the brain of the most Michelin-starred chef in the world, Sokolov captures the colorful characters and mouth watering meals that define food today. Throughout, he shares a lifetime of personal anecdotes, including infuriating President Nixon's daughter over a wedding cake, as well as prescient observations on one of the most tumultuous-and exciting-periods in gastronomic history.
[Sokolov] has had a front seat at the worldwide revolution in cooking and eating. . . . Watching his formidable mind at work deconstructing nouvelle cuisine or creating a taxonomy of French sauces, it becomes clear just how he has kept that seat for so long.
The New York Times Book Review
Peppered with reflections on culinary history and tales of extraordinary journalistic adventures . . . a thought-provoking and delightful read.
Fuchsia Dunlop, author ofEvery Grain of Rice: Simple Chinese Home Cooking
Mouthwatering. . . . [Sokolov] gives the food scene an often fascinating historical context. Daily Beast
[A] ranging history of American food, and the sociopolitical events that shaped it. . . . [Sokolov is] a down-home guy at heart, happiest when correcting assumptions about everyday foods . . . and remembering treks through the heartland in search of the countrys best barbecue. . . . A pleasure. New York Observer
As gastronomic guides go, you cant do much better than former New York Times and Wall Street Journal restaurant critic Raymond Sokolov, whose jaunty prose in Steal the Menu gets you a tableside seat everywhere from Tennessee barbeque pits to French haute cuisine temples.
Entertainment Weekly
A knowledgeable look at the transformation of fine dining over the past half-century, viewed through the prism of the authors personal historyfoodies will find this book refreshingly different.
Kirkus Reviews
Reading Raymond Sokolovs wonderful Steal the Menu is like having dinner with ones wittiest, most erudite and charming friend, someone who knows everything worth knowing about food, its historyand culture, about chefs and restaurants,abouthow our cuisineand our kitchens have changed over forty yearsand about how to tell an authentic key lime pie from an imitation. Bon apptit!
Francine Prose
Steal the Menu is a lively insiders account of goings-on in the American food scene over the last forty years. And who better to tell this story than Raymond Sokolov, one of Americas best food writers With his keen ear for language, Sokolov is by turns authoritative and funny, deeply informed and irreverent. This book offers up a feast for the senses as well as the mind!
Darra Goldstein, founding editor, Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture
Ray Sokolov dines out delightfully on a life of dining out in the Western worlds most ambitious restaurants. His wit seasons his learning, which is considerable on a vast array of subjects, from classical French cuisine, to where to find the best hamburger in the Midwest, to barbecue in Texas. The result is a zesty stew, a chronicle of movements in cuisine across the decades and oceans. As an entertainment, Steal the Menu rates a full complement of stars.
Joseph Lelyveld, author of Great Soul
I read Steal the Menu straight through with pleasure. The writing is stylish, sometimes provocative, always informative, with a balanced perspective on the tumultuous changes at the table weve all lived through.
Dr. Andrew Weil, coauthor of The Healthy Kitchen
Raymond Sokolov is very good company on the page. Steal the Menu is proof of that. His writing is witty and engaging, but what sets this book apart is its appreciativeness: food is food for thought, something to be curious about, as well as a huge pleasure.
Naomi Duguid, author of Burma: Rivers of Flavor
This is an indispensable book for anyone and everyone who takes cooking seriously.
Jason Epstein, author of Eating
[Sokolov] is a good traveling companion. Reading his writing is like being driven in an old, comfortable roadster, top down, evening falling, balmywith the promisebecause Sokolov always does his homeworkof something really good to eat just down the road.
The Christian Science Monitor
Raymond Sokolov ate his first meal in Detroit in 1941 and dined with tenacious curiosity in France as a correspondent for Newsweek. He went on to sustain himself writing about food at The New York Times and Natural History magazine, and, most recently, by covering restaurants worldwide for The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of The Saucier's Apprentice, the novel Native Intelligence, and a biography of A. J. Liebling, Wayward Reporter. He lives in New York's Hudson Valley.