I'm currently reading Knives at Dawn by Andrew Friedman, which is the story of the American team's contest at the Bocuse d'Or. Amazing what they put themselves through!
I recently read and loved Provence, 1970 - mainly about M.F.K. Fisher (who Lindsay just wrote about in her final blog post) but also Julia Child, James Beard, Richard Olney, Simone Beck, Judith Jones and Elizabeth David. Lindsay's other recommendation, Laurie Colwin, is an essential read - Home Cooking and More Home Cooking are both wonderful books.
I really enjoyed Life, On the Line by Grant Achatz. Fascinating to see the journey and struggles a talented chef has to get to the top. Blood, Bones & Butter by Gabrielle Hamilton was another great read, on the same themes. Toast, Nigel Slater's biography (at least up to the point where he starts cooking professionally) is a really good read.
For anyone who loves cookbooks (and don't all EYB members?) I highly recommend The Pedant in the Kitchen by Julian Barnes. It's beautifully written of course, coming from a very talented writer but also so much of it resonates with anyone who likes following recipes rather than take a "throw it all together and hope it works" approach to cooking. The Sweet Life in Paris by David Lebovitz is a fun read - the deliciousness and frustrations of life in Paris, in David's witty style. Another witty writer is Jay Rayner, a British restaurant critic - his The Man Who Ate the World is laugh-out-loud funny. He has a new book out in March, A Greedy Man in a Hungry World which I'm really looking forward to.
Our own Susie Chang's anthology A Spoonful of Promises is a lovely read, with the bonus of some great recipes. With the same format, short vignettes with an associated recipe, Molly Wizenberg's A Homemade Life is a delightful read.
And if that's not enough, then check out EYB members picks for Food writing and Autobiography, biography and memoirs.
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