The Chef Who Saved My Life
The author was living in a friend’s basement after a bad breakup, unable to eat. Then he had lunch with Jacques Pépin.
The author was living in a friend’s basement after a bad breakup, unable to eat. Then he had lunch with Jacques Pépin.
Brett Martin GQ Jul 2015 20min Permalink
On mayonnaise.
Ottessa Moshfegh Lucky Peach May 2015 10min Permalink
On keeping the place where ethically raised animals are killed open.
Heather Smith Grist Apr 2015 15min Permalink
The complicated class politics of American eating habits.
Chris Offutt Oxford American Apr 2015 Permalink
On loving Taco Bell, as a half-Mexican. A James Beard Award nominee.
John Devore Eater Nov 2014 10min Permalink
The origins of Lagunitas are laced with THC.
The train to flavortown hits some speedbumps as an edgy Food Network host meets his match.
Tabitha Blankenbiller The Mondegreen Jan 2015 Permalink
A woman bonds with her terminally ill sister over food, memories, and shaky lives.
"When Ava won the middle school election, there was peach cobbler with a filling so warm it burnt my tongue. When I failed chemistry, she silently let me lock myself in my room, but I came down for dinner to lasagna with short ribs that fell apart at the slightest nudge. Mom would only speak to us seriously once our mouths were full; with blueberry-banana pancakes the morning of the SATs, chicken-stuffed bell peppers after soccer games, and over spaghetti carbonara for high school heartaches. We came to interpret her innermost thoughts in meticulous meals culled from Julia Child and the Rombauers. It was like she needed something to distract us when she was fully there."
Kyle Lucia Wu Joyland Nov 2014 30min Permalink
A prison cook reflects on her daughter as she prepares a prisoner's last meal.
"See what I mean? Fussiness knows no bounds. Not even for inmates. We don’t serve shit-on-a-shingle, but sometimes you’d never believe it. Last week Brenda and me whipped up fifteen pans of German chocolate cake and don’t you know some idiot come up to Brenda complaining about the “presentation,” said his mama always made German chocolate cake in two layers, not in a sheet pan. Everybody’s a critic."
Debra S. Levy Little Fiction Oct 2014 20min Permalink
From Norwegian waters to European plates.
Franz Lidz Smithsonian Aug 2014 10min Permalink
An overweight teenager's psychological test with an unhappy neighbor.
"Mrs. Butler never commented on my weight. I wanted to believe she didn’t see my layers of fat or hear how my breathing quickened if I exerted much physical effort. My neighbor wasn’t gorgeous like a supermodel, but she moved her long graceful limbs with an elegance I could only envy."
Miranda Stone Pithead Chapel Mar 2014 10min Permalink
Comic miscues ensue at a private family dinner.
"Also, I’m a pretty big guy, so I often find myself appointed the unofficial bouncer on these sorts of occasions. It was Dumpling Night. I know that because when I walked past the steam table, a teenage girl was there with tongs and she said, 'Dumpling?'"
Jessica Westhead Taddle Creek Dec 2012 Permalink
The Giant Pacific Octopus is, in the words of a Seattle conservationist, a “glamour animal.” It is also tasty. Therein lies the conflict.
Marnie Hanel New York Times Magazine Oct 2013 10min Permalink
The fight to save a “delicious gold mine.”
Oliver Bullough Roads & Kingdoms Jul 2013 Permalink
A woman enters a casual relationship with a butcher.
"He was lazy about it. He told me he couldn’t that night but could he give me a call? It was two weeks and one — almost two — skipped Five Dollar Fridays later that he called and demanded why I had not come in yet. I arrived at a quarter to nine. He grinned and dug his knife into pork liver. Then a plucked duck. I ate the spinach rolls he set out for me and watched him slice away. Finally I told him I was starving and he looked up from his bloodied counter and grinned some more. He put his meat in the giant freezer behind him, hung his apron and walked out to me. It was the first time, I realized, that I’d seen his legs. I could tell they were brawny behind his jeans. In fact he looked like a hockey player and I wished he did that instead of dismembering dead animals all day."
Caroline Beaton Necessary Fiction May 2013 Permalink
Creation of a fast food phenomenon.
Austin Carr Fast Company May 2013 10min Permalink
A boy roams a bleak dystopia, seeking fruit.
"The boy had never tasted fruit in his whole life. When his mother grew too sick to work, he tied a bandanna around his head and waited in the slog farm lines. He was underage but passed through the checkpoint with her ID and no one looked."
Joe Fassler Boston Review Mar 2013 Permalink
For New Year's Eve, a Times Square encounter chronicled by the author of Open City.
"Low and I stood under the cold blazing lights of Times Square, smoking, and I asked him what he had eaten. Oysters, he said, the pleasure coming back into his voice, in a row on a ridge of ice, eager to be eaten. Fluke, caviar, octopus, some champagne but not a lot."
Teju Cole The Financial Times Jan 2012 10min Permalink
On a business that sells packaged pre-sliced apples as snack food.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Feb 2006 20min Permalink
Los Angeles’ Wolvesmouth and the unlicensed dining industry.
Dana Goodyear New Yorker Dec 2012 25min Permalink
The future of beer behemoth AB InBev.
Devin Leonard Businessweek Oct 2012 15min Permalink
Trying to fix the Atlantic Ocean’s food chain.
Alison Fairbrother Washington Monthly May 2012 35min Permalink
An interview with Pulitzer-winning food critic Jonathan Gold.
Andrew Simmons, Jonathan Gold The Believer Sep 2012 15min Permalink
The history of Kraft Dinner, Canada’s “de facto national dish.”
Sasha Chapman The Walrus Sep 2012 25min Permalink
“The squirrels may take my tomatoes and spit them back, but they would not go unanswered. The time had come to close the circle of life.”
Mike Sula Chicago Reader Aug 2012 Permalink