FoodReference.com Logo

FoodReference.com - Recommended Books Section
Recommended Cookbooks, Recipe Books; Culinary Biographies; Food Reference Books, History & Science

  Home  |   Articles & Features  |   Food Trivia  |   Cooking Tips  |   Recipes  |   Quotes  |   Who's Who  |   Food Timeline  |   Videos  |   Food Trivia Quizzes  |   Food Fun  |   COOKBOOK REVIEWS  |   Food Posters  |   Magazines  |   Marketplace  |   Recipe Contests  |   Key West  |   Gourmet Tours  |   Cooking Schools  |   Festivals & Shows  |

You Are Here >  Home

 BOOK REVIEWS  >  Culinary Biographies  >  Comfort Me With Apples  >

Next

 

Search for Books etc
 

 

Free Food Magazine Subscriptions

 

 BOOK REVIEWS
 Newest Book Listings
 Cookbooks: pg 1, 'A'
 Cookbooks: Back to Bro
 Cookbooks: Cake to Cul
 Cookbooks: Dave to Exp
 Cookbooks: Fall to Fro
 Cookbooks: Gary to How
 Cookbooks: Ice to Lun
 Cookbooks: Mc to Out
 Cookbooks: Pan to Rob
 Cookbooks: Sai to Swe
 Cookbooks: Tas to Zov
 Culinary Biographies
 Food Reference Books
 F&B Reference Books 2
 Food History Books 1
 Culinary History Books 2
 Food Science Books
 Other F & B Books
 By Hrayr Berberoglu

 

 

 

Comfort Me with Apples:
More Adventures at the Table

 

by Ruth Reichl
   

This is the second part of the memoirs of the former New York Times restaurant critic and editor in chief of Gourmet magazine. More about food than her first volume, Tender at the Bone.
 
 Ruth Reichl's first book, the autobiographical Tender at the Bone, disarmed readers with its droll candor. The former restaurant critic of The New York Times and editor in chief of Gourmet magazine told great stories about growing up and loving food. Comfort Me with Apples begins where the first book ended, tracing Reichl's evolution from chef to food writer while detailing the dissolution of her first marriage, the start of a second, and motherhood at the age of 40. The book also limns a sensual journey, Reichl's awakening to the pleasures of sex as well as food, and also to love. Reichl interweaves her diverse coming-of-age narratives with passion (especially on the subject of food), wit, and a no-nonsense grace, all of which add up to a wonderful read--entertaining, but moving, too.

The story begins when Reichl, living in a '70s Berkeley commune, gets her first real job as a restaurant reviewer. Despite the incredulity of her in-the-movement roommates ("You're going to spend your life telling spoiled, rich people where to eat?" asks one), Reichl persists, traveling widely to polish her palate. In the doing she meets food luminaries such as Wolfgang Puck (a mad encounter in a produce market), M.F.K. Fisher (lunch and sweet reminiscences), and Alice Waters (a garlic feast), among others. Her trip to China, which includes clandestine dealings with a former chef, is particularly well handled. The ungluing of her first marriage is depicted in adroit emotional counterpoint to her soaring career, as is her discovery of love with her second husband, unspooled against her father's death. Reichl also provides recipes, such as Fall Mushroom Soup (made to comfort herself and her mother) that, unexpectedly and delightfully, deepen the narrative.
--Arthur Boehm, Amazon.com

  Culinary Biographies  |   Julia Child: A Life  |   Alice Waters and Chez Panisse  |   Appetite for Life  |   The Apprentice  |   Becoming A Chef  |   Between Bites  |   Comfort Me With Apples  |   Cooking for Mr. Latte  |   Eating My Words  |   The Fourth Star  |   From My Side of the Table  |   Heirloom Tomatoes  |   I'll Have What She's Having  |   Kitchen Confidential  |   Let Us Eat Cake  |   Made from Scratch  |   The Making of a Chef  |   The Reach of a Chef  |   The Sharper Your Knife  |   Tastes Like Cuba  |   Tender at the Bone  |   Trail of Crumbs  |   Typhoid Mary  |   Waiting: The True Confessions of a Waitress  |   Wife of the Chef  |


  Home  |   About & Contact  |   Recipes  |   Cooking Tips  |   Food Posters  |   Free Food Magazines  |   Today in Food History  |   Link Directory  |


Please feel free to link to any pages of FoodReference.com from your website.

For permission to use any of the content on this website please contact:  james@foodreference.com

All contents of this website are copyright © 1990--2010 James T. Ehler and  www.FoodReference.com  unless otherwise noted.
All rights reserved.

You may copy and use portions of this website for noncommercial, personal use only. Any other use of the materials in this website without prior written permission is prohibited.

 


3 Young Chefs at Cooking School

 

Click on the
3 Young Chefs
for the best
Culinary Schools
Restaurant, Hospitality
& Hotel Management Schools

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get a FREE trial issue of
SAVEUR
SAVEUR Free Trial Issue

 

The award-winning magazine for
those passionate about food, drink, travel & adventure.