Talking With my Mouth Full: my life as a professional eater (M) by Gail Simmons. Top Chef fan? I am, and like many Canadian Top Chef fans I’m secretly pleased to see a fellow countrywoman at the judges table each week. Simmons’ recent memoir talks how she came to be a “professional eater” and gives an inside peek into the world of American celebrity chefs.
America (M) by Gustavo Arellano. If you have travelled in the US, there is a good chance you have the opportunity to experience great Mexican cuisine, but it wasn’t always that way. According to the books press blurb, sales of salsa overtook sales of ketchup in the US sometime in the 1990s, Arellano’s book takes a look at the rise of Mexican food in the United States.
Why would you eat it? You may have the answers to some of your questions after a turn through The Sorcerer’s Apprentices : a season in the kitchen at Ferran Adrià’s elBulli (M) by Lisa Abend in which the author spends a season following 30+ interns who worked in the kitchen at Adrià’s influential and now closed Spanish restaurant elBulli. Fascinating reading for the food obsessed.
Food and Trembling (M) by Jonah Campbell. Campbell’s blog “Still Crapulent After All These Years” is “is about food. perhaps more to the point, it is a blog that is concerned with the question “What is food about?”. Food and Trembling is Campbell’s recently published collection of short, humourous essays on seemingly all topics food related. From the publisher “What hidden evasions and exclusions lie behind the subtle perfection of the BLT? What is the etymology of the croissant? Why did we drink all that Bud Lite Lime? … Food & Trembling approaches eating not with a four-figure expense account, but a rare insight and fierce appetite for the pleasures of the table. Also chips. Too many chips.”
I’ll finish with the most recent title and one forthcoming one: The Man Who Changed the Way We Eat: Craig Claiborne and the American Food Renaissance (M) by Thomas McNamee is a biography of the restaurant critic and cookbook author whose approach to food changed the way that American’s think about food.
That’s a lot of reading, but if you you can’t get enough food books, you might want to check out David’s recent post about the James Beard Award winners for culinary writing.
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2012/05/feast-of-reading.html