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Best Food Writing 2009 PDF

364 Pages·2009·1.351 MB·English
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738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page i best WRITING 2009 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page ii also edited by holly hughes Best Food Writing 2008 Best Food Writing 2007 Best Food Writing 2006 Best Food Writing 2005 Best Food Writing 2004 Best Food Writing 2003 Best Food Writing 2002 Best Food Writing 2001 Best Food Writing 2000 also by holly hughes Frommer’s 500 Places to Take the Kids Before They Grow Up Frommer’s 500 Places to See Before They Disappear Frommer’s 500 Places for Food and Wine Lovers 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page iii best WRITING 2009 Edited by Holly Hughes A Member of the Perseus Books Group 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page iv Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book and Da Capo Press was aware of a trademark claim, the designations have been printed in initial capital letters. Copyright © 2009 by Holly Hughes Pages 343–348 constitute an extension of the copyright page. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a re- trieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechani- cal, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America. Set in 11 point Bembo by the Perseus Books Group Cataloging-in-Publication data for this book is available from the Library of Congress. First Da Capo Press edition 2009 ISBN 978-0-7382-1369-9 Published by Da Capo Press A Member of the Perseus Books Group www.dacapopress.com Da Capo Press books are available at special discounts for bulk purchases in the U.S. by corporations, institutions, and other organizations. For more information, please contact the Special Markets Department at the Perseus Books Group, 2300 Chestnut Street, Suite 200, Philadelphia, PA, 19103, or call (800) 810-4145, ext. 5000, or e-mail [email protected]. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page v Contents (cid:2) Introduction ix Holly Hughes Food Fights The Cranky Connoisseur,from enRoute 2 By Timothy Taylor Too Much of a Mouthful,from Word of Mouth 8 By Tim Hayward The Raw Deal,from chow.com 11 By Lessley Anderson Medium-Size Me,from Gastronomica 17 By Jim Hinch Go Slow, Foodies,It’s the Way to Win, from the Washington Post 30 By Jane Black Stocking the Pantry Seeking Market Freshness,from the Philadelphia Inquirer 36 By Rick Nichols The Misunderstood Habanero,from Heirloom 41 By Tim Stark Illegal Cheese, from Gastronomica 48 By Eric LeMay Wine Scams: A Counterfeiter Confesses,from Food & Wine 57 By Lettie Teague Marshmallow Fluff,from Gastronomica 67 By Katie Liesener Spam: It’s Not Just for Inboxes Anymore,from City Pages 76 By Rachel Hutton 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page vi vi| Contents Out of the Wild,from SF Weekly 81 By Peter Jamison Summer’s End,from Saveur 92 By Tamasin Day-Lewis The Meat of the Matter Beef: It’s What’s for Dinner,from Raising Steaks 98 By Betty Fussell The Last of the Great $10 Steaks,from WestWord 106 By Jason Sheehan Highway to Hog Heaven,from Broward Palm Beach New Times 111 By John Linn By Meat Alone,from The New Yorker 116 By Calvin Trillin The Disappearing Art of the Country Ham, from the Charlotte Observer 125 By Kathleen Purvis Morality Bites,from the Chicago Tribune Magazine 137 By Monica Eng The Beauty of the Beast,from The Stranger 149 By Bethany Jean Clement Home Cooking Kitchen Smackdown, from the New York Times 154 Take This! Sort of French, Sort of Italian 154 By Julia Moskin Take That! Starting with Five Appetizers 158 By Kim Severson Two Food Writers in a Kitchen Smackdown 162 By Frank Bruni Dairy’s Queen,from O! The Oprah Magazine 165 By Michelle Wildgen Eggs Enough and Time,from eGullet.org 170 By Margaret McArthur 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/15/09 12:11 PM Page vii Contents|vii Deep in the Heart of Texas, We Bread Steak, from the Washington Post 176 By Joe Yonan The Best Chocolate Chip Cookie I’ve Ever Had, from epicurious.com 179 By Raphael Kadushin They Remember Home,from Saveur 182 By Annia Ciezadlo What Is Real Cooking?,from Modern Spice 189 By Monica Bhide Someone’s In the Kitchen Mac ’n’ Jeez,from The Hunger 194 By John DeLucie How Not to Hire a Chef,from the Washington City Paper 200 By Tim Carman A Beautiful Mess,from Gourmet 208 By Charles Montgomery Back to the Old World, 1962–1967,from Amarcord 215 By Marcella Hazan What We Hunger For,from Tin House 221 By Douglas Bauer Dining Around The Last Time I Saw Paris,from Gourmet 234 By Ruth Reichl English Oyster Cult,from Sex, Death & Oysters 242 By Robb Walsh Tokyo, Cocktail Capital of the World,fromBon Appetit 248 By Hugh Garvey Eternal City,from Saveur 254 By Josh Ozersky Bridging the Chasm,from theOxford American 259 By John T. Edge 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page viii viii|Contents FoiX GraX,from The Foie Gras Wars 267 By Mark Caro Eat Your Damn Dessert,from San Francisco Magazine 278 By Scott Hocker Should Fine Dining Die?,from Food & Wine 289 By Anya von Bremzen The Family Table The Grapes of Wrath, In Three Episodes,from eGullet.org 296 By Steven Shaw Picky-Picky,from Hungry Monkey 303 By Matthew Amster-Burton Beating Eggs,from the New York Times Magazine 314 By Pete Wells Getting to Know Him,from Gourmet 319 By Francis Lam An Uncalculating Science,from A Homemade Life 325 By Molly Wizenberg The Last Meal,from washingtonian.com 330 By Todd Kliman The Eggs and I,from Saveur 335 By Francine Prose Recipe Index 341 Permissions Acknowledgments 343 About the Editor 349 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:49 AM Page ix Introduction by Holly Hughes (cid:2) This summer, I got the itch to eat my way across America. I’d re- cently wrapped up months of working on a travel guide— Frommer’s 500 Places for Food and Wine Lovers—on top of my usual routine of poring over stacks of magazines, newspapers, books, and food blogs to select candidates for this tenth anniversary edition of Best Food Writing. I had food on my mind more than ever, and I had a yen to visit some of those restaurants I’d written about.But it wasn’t the temples of haute cuisine I yearned for, the Alineas, French Laundries, Fat Ducks, and El Bullis of this world. No, I wanted to eat fresh crab cakes at a waterside shack in Maryland, or pulled pork at a North Carolina roadside barbecue joint; I wanted to sample chicken-fried steak in Texas and fish tacos in San Diego. If being a locavore (the hot buzz word from last year’s edition) was so desirable, how much better to be a locavore in a string of differ- ent localities? Just before I left, I got another kick of inspiration by attending two nights of events honoring Craig Claibourne, organized here in New York City by the New School and the Southern Foodways Alliance. Hearing about how Claibourne had “democratized”food writing in his years at the New York Times by covering obscure little eateries as well as high-end restaurants, I was eager to go out and score some finds of my own. Well, you know what they say about best-laid plans. My cross- country odyssey was a family vacation and instead of following a gas- tronomic trail we ended up choosing a route that took us to as many baseball stadiums as possible. Still, even though half the time we were eating ballpark food, along the way I worked in a few of the regional specialties I’d been longing for. There was the lake trout I savored at a restaurant we discovered by chance in Morgantown, West Virginia, 738213699-text.qxd:Layout 1 9/3/09 9:50 AM Page x x|Introduction and the memorable homemade chicken noodle soup at the only joint still open when we pulled into Silverton, Colorado. I made a point of dragging the family—even the non-meat eater—to experi- ence Arthur Bryant’s delectable barbecue in Kansas City. And who’d have expected that a Hampton Inn on the Navajo tribal lands near Monument Valley would serve a green chile stew I’m still dreaming about? Even the ballpark food had its highlights, like the Skyline Chili coney at the Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati and the Fatburger at Chase Field in Phoenix. Yes, the trip was a success. Why does food always taste so good on vacation? I suspect it’s because it’s such a pleasure to eat a meal I haven’t had to cook my- self.The pleasures of cooking are easily lost in the scramble of daily life, especially with three teenagers’ crazy schedules and weird food moods to account for. Many days, I feel less like a cook than a jug- gler, just trying to lay something on the table that’s edible and mar- ginally nutritious. It’s especially frustrating when I’m in the middle of editing each year’s Best Food Writing anthology. Here I am, im- mersed all day in reading about wonderful food—like Eric LeMay’s lush French cheeses (p. 48), Kathleen Purvis’s succulent Carolina country hams (p. 125), Robb Walsh’s gleaming oysters on the half shell (p. 242), John DeLucie’s melt-in-your-mouth mac ’n’ cheese (p. 194), or Raphael Kadushin’s divine chocolate chip cookies (p. 179) (one of several loving odes to the chocolate chip cookie that tempted me this year)—and all I could look forward to was another evening of hastily grilled turkey burgers and cello- pack salad.The way I was going, I was even salivating over Katie Liesener’s celebration of Marshmallow Fluff (p. 67) and Rachel Hutton’s feature on Spam (p. 76); a perfectly soft-boiled egg (Mar- garet McArthur, p. 170, and Francine Prose, p. 335) seemed a very welcome alternative. Ironically, I kept discovering wonderful essays by various food writers about the shared food memories that bound their families together—from Steven Shaw’s riff on grape cravings (p. 296) to Francis Lam’s quest for his grandfather’s food legacy (p. 319) to the tender eulogies to their fathers written by Molly Wizenberg (p. 325) and Todd Kliman (p. 330). All I can do is hope that someday my family’s meals together—those few precious moments carved out of

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