Heat

Heat

by Bill Buford (Author)

Synopsis

"Heat" is the story of an amateur cook surviving - or, perhaps more accurately, trying to survive - in a professional kitchen. Until recently, Bill Buford was an enthusiastic, if rather chaotic, home cook. His meals were characterized by two incompatible qualities: their ambition and his inexperience at preparing them. Nevertheless, his lifelong regret was that he'd never worked in a professional kitchen. Then, three years ago, an opportunity presented itself. Buford was asked by the New Yorker to write a profile of Mario Batali, a Falstaffian figure of voracious appetites who ran one of New York's most successful three-star restaurants. Batali had learned his craft by years of training - first, working in London with the young Marco Pierre White; then in California during the Food Revolution; and finally in Italy, being taught how to make pasta by hand in a hillside trattoria. Buford accepted the commission, if Batali would let him work in his kitchen, as his slave. He worked his way up to being a 'line cook' and then left New York to apprentice himself under the very teachers who had taught his teacher: preparing game with Marco Pierre White, making pasta in a hillside trattoria, and finally, in a town in Northern Italy, becoming an Italian butcher. "Heat" is a marvellous hybrid: a memoir of Buford's kitchen adventure, the story of Batali's amazing rise to culinary fame, a dazzling behind-the-scenes look at a famous restaurant, and an illuminating exploration of why food matters. It is a book to delight in, and to savour.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Jonathan Cape
Published: 13 Jul 2006

ISBN 10: 022407184X
ISBN 13: 9780224071840
Book Overview: In the tradition of Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London and Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential, a brilliant book about working in the kitchen of one of New York's most fashionable restaurants and with one of its most charismatic chefs. 20031017

Media Reviews
Praise for Among the Thugs:
An important, perhaps prophetic, book. . .both exciting and sad at the core. . . . [Buford is] a superbly talented reporter.
-- The New York Times Book Review
Brilliant. . . . One of the most unnerving books you will ever read.
-- Newsweek
Animated, witty, and so pungent you can taste the stale lager.
-- Washington Post Book World
Praise for Among the Thugs :
An important, perhaps prophetic, book. . .both exciting and sad at the core. . . . [Buford is] a superbly talented reporter.
-- The New York Times Book Review
Brilliant. . . . One of the most unnerving books you will ever read.
-- Newsweek
Animated, witty, and so pungent you can taste the stale lager.
-- Washington Post Book World

From the Hardcover edition.


Praise for Among the Thugs :
An important, perhaps prophetic, book. . .both exciting and sad at the core. . . . Buford is a superbly talented reporter.
-- The New York Times Book Review
Brilliant. . . . One of the most unnerving books you will ever read.
-- Newsweek
Animated, witty, and so pungent you can taste the stale lager.
-- Washington Post Book World

From the Hardcover edition.


A GLOBE & MAIL BEST BOOK OF 2006
A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK OF 2006
Sharing Buford's table talk is a pleasure not to be passed up. -- Michael Redhill, The Globe and Mail

Heat is a book about obsession, written by a man in the grip of one. It is fuelled by food, but food is not its only subject -- love, sex, comradeship, terror and pain are all part of the story too. -- The Telegraph
A dazzling and funny account of two magnificently mad years. -- The Guardian
[Buford] excels at vibrantly colourful descriptive writing. . . . What shines through is the story of Bill Buford falling in love with food, and his passionate journey of learning. -- Vancouver Sun
it is clear that Buford can hold his own with anyone in the foodie pedantry stakes.... Heat is a subtle, expletive-heavy, genuine account of a writer's engagement with food.... [an] ultimately nourishing book. -- Times Literary Supplement
A messy, brilliant book,
Author Bio
Bill Buford is a staff writer and European correspondent for the New Yorker, where he was previously the fiction editor for eight years. He was the editor-in-chief for Granta magazine for sixteen years and was also the publisher of Granta Books. He is the author of Among the Thugs. He lives in New York City.