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Tom Colicchio

Author of Think Like a Chef

5+ Works 783 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Tom Colicchio is chef & co-owner, with Danny Meyer, of the Gramercy Tavern in New York. He has taught at the Aspen Food & Wine Classic, Macy's De Gustibus, Williams-Sonoma, & cooking schools across the country. He lives in New York City. (Bowker Author Biography)

Includes the name: Tom Colicchio (Author)

Image credit: Photo by DC Central Kitchen http://www.flickr.com/photos/dccentralkitchen/3993797018/

Works by Tom Colicchio

Associated Works

The Oxford Companion to Beer (2011) — Foreword — 225 copies, 2 reviews
The Smurfs [2011 film] (2011) — Actor — 201 copies, 2 reviews
How I Learned To Cook: Culinary Educations from the World's Greatest Chefs (2006) — Contributor — 192 copies, 3 reviews
The Last Course: The Desserts of Gramercy Tavern (2019) — Foreword, some editions — 190 copies, 1 review
Try This at Home: Recipes from My Head to Your Plate (2013) — Foreword, some editions — 61 copies, 1 review
Le Pigeon: Cooking at the Dirty Bird (2013) — Foreword, some editions — 53 copies
A Place at the Table [2012 film] (2013) — Narrator — 23 copies, 1 review
Personal Favorites: The Chefs of Las Vegas (2010) — Contributor — 8 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Colicchio, Thomas Patrick
Other names
COLICCHIO, Thomas Patrick
COLICCHIO, Tom
Birthdate
1962-08-15
Gender
male
Occupations
restaurateur
chef
Organizations
Crafted Hospitality
Relationships
Silverbush, Lori (wife)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Elizabeth, New Jersey, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New Jersey, USA

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
Speaking for myself, a decent baker and fledgling (read bungling) cook, I found this book to be both entertaining and educational. Even as the tough critiquing Head Judge of the reality cooking show Top Chef, restaurateur Tom Colicchio is known for his sage-like comments and straight shooting advice, which is found here in abundance.

The book begins with an introduction, explaining why he includes basic definitions and techniques, and doesn't apologize for the lack of a thousand and one show more recipes.

The next section was my personal favorite, having terms broken down into simple everyday cooking instructions that were easy to follow. Almost as helpful as learning to ask where the restroom is in a foreign tongue. In order to immerse oneself into a new language, cooking, one first has to learn beginning phrases of chef-speak. At least there was no conjugating of verbs or trying to remember past/present or any other wibbly-wobbly, timey-whimey, mumbo jumbo. And, for those already familiar with the language, think of it as a quick brush up review.

Then Chef Tom gets to the substance of the book. Ingredients, ingredients, ingredients, and what to do with them. He preaches quality, freshness, seasons, and thinking outside the box. Offering past insights into his own life he leads the reader through the kitchen and basically says, don't be afraid to experiment and play. Start simple, learn the basic techniques which builds a foundation, then go forth and have fun with a few components and only your imagination limiting you. There is no right or wrong, only different ways to satisfy a palette and the pleasure of creating exciting new meals.

I'd highly recommend this book to anyone who spends any time near a stove, or is simply curious about cooking. The information may seem rather basic at first glance, but I believe that everyone who reads the material and follows the guidelines will find themselves, thinking like a chef.
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This is my favorite cookbook. From it, I learned to pan-roast vegetables to the most delicious flavor. Try the mushrooms, the asparagus ... almost anything in this book is instantly obvious, not overly step oriented and delicious.
This is a book for the intermediate cook. The principles are both basic, and essential. The book is really what the title says it is, a book about thinking.

Colicchio wrote this well before Top Chef. It's a book about building meals, balancing flavors. Colicchio runs restaurants, and production thinking is quite different from doing a meal at home, but some of it does apply. How, and when to salt, what flavors blend together, and which stand hard apart from each other.

Coliccho says, "I show more learned to cook to get away from recipes", and that is the purpose he's working toward. The reader, he hopes, will learn the ways of seeing that make it possible to work in the kitchen without a net.

There are other technique books out there; and they are useful, but learning how to break a chicken down into parts, or how to make pate a choux, won't make one a "chef", because those are how, this is about what, and why.

If you are already comfortable without recipes this may not be the book for you. I enjoyed it. The prose is clean, the style engaging. I can't say as I learned a great deal from it, because many of the lessons, I'd already learned.

And that may be the books greatest weakness, it's neither basic, nor terribly advanced. It's a great stepping-off point, but the people who will gain the most from it are probably not the people likely to buy it (though with since Top Chef this may not be quite the case: anyone who is interested in how he judges food will find this illuminating).
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This is more of a book for a serious cook to read for a higher level of cooking-planning instruction than it is a "cookbook". The recipes are tasty, but few. It has somewhat of a restaurant bent to it, more than a home chef, but I enjoyed the perspective.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
5
Also by
11
Members
783
Popularity
#32,505
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
9
ISBNs
11
Favorited
1

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