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Author - Jeffrey Steingarten ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Vintage was reviewed on 6-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:0375702024 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. The Man Who Ate Everything Reference Book. Classifications : Essays Gastronomy Cooking, Food & Wine Subjects Books General Gastronomy Cooking, Food & Wine Subjects Books General Cooking, Food & Wine Subjects Books Cooking Humor Entertainment Subjects Books Pape . Click the following link to view the cover of The Man Who Ate Everything. Related topics: Essays. Gastronomy. Subjects. Books. General. Gastronomy. Subjects. Books. General. Subjects. requestid: 622b7270-dc1c-40f4-b8ed-b7f545e69209requestprocessingtime: 0.0467770000000000 salesrank: 45082 edition: Vintage Books ed numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 11079085520 1) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. A wonderful book by the senior judge of Iron Chef America.Steingarten as food editor for Vogue has had the opportunity to explore many cuisines and has praises and problems for all of them. Well written the book is often humerous and always informative. There is the almost ever present happy attitude in the book that seems to say "they pay me for doing and generally enjoying all of this, life is sweet." There is also the logical training he has had as a lawyer that gives the book a unique perspective missing in most food books. I think the logic of his approach is often stymied by the very subjective and emotional topic that is food. This built in conflict is often the source of the books humor. Well worth reading if you never watch Iron Chef but an absolute must read if you do.¤ 2) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. Mr. Steingarten should be awarded for writing this book.
3) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. This book of short articles is just the thing for bedside reading. Charming,witty, and lots of fun in the world of food. It´s a "pick-up put-down" book to settle you down for a great nights sleep.¤ 4) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. This may be a mildy entertaining and informative book on food around the world, but to make such wide claims as salad consumption leading to death is absurd. Steingarten obviously loves food and food high in fat, calories and cholesterol so this book will certainly make you, and himself, feel better about eating these foods, that is until you keel over from a heart attack. His advice on nutrition is out-dated, selectively researched and all together wrong in many areas. Please use caution when taking health advice from somone who spends days, weeks and a lifetime searching for the best french fry or ice cream cone.¤ 5) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. Though I´ve followed Jeffrey Steingarten´s column in Vogue magazine ever since I first came across it, I hadn´t realized that he´d published two books, both compilations of his essays in Vogue. I must say, I´m addicted. Having read both The Man Who Ate Everything, and It Must Have Been Something I ate, I am reduced to "googling" to find more Steingarten gems. Alas, the closest thing was his Q&A on egullet.com
6) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. Winner of the Julia Child Book Award 7) Paperback Book The Man Who Ate Everything by Vintage. When Jeffrey Steingarten was made food critic of Vogue in 1989, he began by systematically learning to like all the food he had previously avoided. From clams to Greek food to Indian desserts with the consistency of face cream, Steingarten undertook an extraordinary program of self-inflicted behavior modification to prepare himself for his new career. He describes the experience in this collection´s first piece, before setting out on a series of culinary adventures that take him around the world. It´s clear that Vogue gave Steingarten carte blanche to write on whatever subjects tickled his taste buds, and the result is a frequently hilarious collection of essays that emphasize good eating over an obsession with health. "Salad, the Silent Killer" is a catalog of the toxins lurking in every bowl of raw vegetables, while "Fries" follows a heroic attempt to create the perfect French fry--cooked in horse fat. Whether baking sourdough bread in his Manhattan loft or spraying miso soup across a Kyoto restaurant, Steingarten is an ideal guide to the wilder reaches of gastronomy, a cross between M.F.K. Fisher and H.L. Mencken.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 3-Nov-2008, 03757020249780375702020, 200-240-130-771-C6B-MOB-RWB-8
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