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Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (edition 2007)

by Anthony Bourdain

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5,866157647 (3.93)163
Member:lkloda
Title:Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly
Authors:Anthony Bourdain
Info:Harper Perennial (2007), Edition: Updated, Paperback, 352 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:non-fiction

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Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly by Anthony Bourdain

2007 (17) American (22) Anthony Bourdain (36) autobiography (199) biography (225) Bourdain (18) chef (156) cookbook (22) cookery (34) cooking (519) cooks (22) culinary (56) ebook (18) essays (30) food (687) food and drink (17) food writing (90) Gastronomy (17) humor (74) kitchen (24) memoir (503) New York (63) New York City (26) non-fiction (640) own (26) read (98) restaurants (174) to-read (29) travel (28) unread (20)
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English (155)  Finnish (1)  Spanish (1)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (158)
Showing 1-5 of 155 (next | show all)
I really wanted to like this, but I didn't. ( )
  katemo | May 16, 2013 |
interesting... i appreciated learning about the field. ( )
  julierh | Apr 7, 2013 |
This took me a lot longer to read than I expected. I think I got a little caught up in the technical cooking terms and concepts that I wasn't familiar with. Otherwise, pretty enjoyable. ( )
  JessieP73 | Apr 6, 2013 |
The first half (funny and interesting) was much better than the second half (self-indulgent and boring). Brought back a lot of memories. I've worked with the characters Bourdain describes. I would recommend the audiobook. Bourdain, in addition to being a deadpan laugh riot, reads very well. ( )
  InDreamsAwake | Apr 5, 2013 |
An interesting look behind the scenes and some scary warnings: no more mussels in a restaurant or fish on Monday for me. The beginning chapters felt slow and a bit awkward and I am still not sure that I needed a chapter on the rules surrounding crude kitchen talk, but again that may be just me. ( )
  MichelleCH | Apr 5, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 155 (next | show all)
This is one bitter, nasty, searing, hard-to-swallow piece of work. But if you can choke the thing down, youll (sic) probably wake up grinning in the middle of the night. Bourdain is a force of unruly nature, a lifelong misanthrope and currently the executive chef at the Brasserie Les Halles, whose clientele, now that this book is out, must be accounted among the more courageous diners in New York.
 
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Don't get me wrong: I love the restaurant business. Hell, I'm still in the restaurant business -- a lifetime, classically trained chef who, an hour from now, will probably roasting bones for demi-glace and butchering beef tenderloins in a cellar prep in a cellar prep kitchen on lower Park Avenue.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0060899220, Paperback)

Most diners believe that their sublime sliver of seared foie gras, topped with an ethereal buckwheat blini and a drizzle of piquant huckleberry sauce, was created by a culinary artist of the highest order, a sensitive, highly refined executive chef. The truth is more brutal. More likely, writes Anthony Bourdain in Kitchen Confidential, that elegant three-star concoction is the collaborative effort of a team of "wacked-out moral degenerates, dope fiends, refugees, a thuggish assortment of drunks, sneak thieves, sluts, and psychopaths," in all likelihood pierced or tattooed and incapable of uttering a sentence without an expletive or a foreign phrase. Such is the muscular view of the culinary trenches from one who's been groveling in them, with obvious sadomasochistic pleasure, for more than 20 years. CIA-trained Bourdain, currently the executive chef of the celebrated Les Halles, wrote two culinary mysteries before his first (and infamous) New Yorker essay launched this frank confessional about the lusty and larcenous real lives of cooks and restaurateurs. He is obscenely eloquent, unapologetically opinionated, and a damn fine storyteller--a Jack Kerouac of the kitchen. Those without the stomach for this kind of joyride should note his opening caveat: "There will be horror stories. Heavy drinking, drugs, screwing in the dry-goods area, unappetizing industry-wide practices. Talking about why you probably shouldn't order fish on a Monday, why those who favor well-done get the scrapings from the bottom of the barrel, and why seafood frittata is not a wise brunch selection.... But I'm simply not going to deceive anybody about the life as I've seen it." --Sumi Hahn

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 19 Apr 2011 08:04:03 -0400)

(see all 6 descriptions)

A New York City chef who is also a novelist recounts his experiences in the restaurant business, and exposes abuses of power, sexual promiscuity, drug use, and other secrets of life behind kitchen doors.

(summary from another edition)

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