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A Conversation with Cookbook Author Barry Bluestein

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By Cheri Sicard
Posted August 6th, 2007
FabulousFoods.com Recommends: Guilt-free frying hc, by Barry Bluestein, (1999, HP Trade)
Guilt-free frying hc
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BookCheri Sicard: I know you you used to own a cook book store. What do you think is the most essential cookbook, at least in your library? Besides your own of course, which are wonderful.
Barry Bluestein: Thank you. The most essential...I think everyone must have a basic cookbook of some sort. I would recommend to always have one of two, one being the Doubleday Cookbook, which I think is essential because it tells you how to do anything and everything, including how to set a table correctly. The other one would probably be Julia Child's The Way To Cook. For simple "how do you roast a whole fish"? What do you do? Probably the third book, for timing only, Julia Child's taste combinations you can trust and go with, but for timing The James Beard Book Of American Cookery. To this day I don't think there is a book that is as precise and correct as that book. I just find the recipes a little...they're from the 1950s and a little bland.

Cheri Sicard: Now if you have a cook book store, I imagine you get into food books beyond cook books. How about food writers?
Barry Bluestein: I am going to recommend someone who has a brand new book, but she's not a brand new writer. She is a cook book writer for at least twenty-five years that I'm aware of. Her last name, I always have tremendous problems with, her name Betty Fussell as in Russell.

Cheri Sicard: I have that book. I just got it.
Barry Bluestein: My Kitchen Wars.

Cheri Sicard: I just read the intro a few nights ago. I haven't been able to get into it more, but I'm looking forward to it.
Barry Bluestein: That opening two paragraphs of the actual book is beautifully written. Another book for the importance of the kitchen, and this is going to be a very strange recommendation, Anna Quinlan's, One True Thing. Have you read it?

Cheri Sicard: I haven't.
Barry Bluestein: It is the story of a young woman who turns her back on the kitchen because she believes, as most feminists do, that strong women don't cook. Smart women don't cook, smart women become writers or lawyers. Her mother is the 1960s version of, well -- Martha Stewart wishes she was as good as this woman. Her mother gets cancer and she goes home and has to take care of her mother. She realizes what fun it really is to feed people and how rewarding and how good it is to be in the kitchen. Those are the books that I have always enjoyed more, even though yes I do like...I love M.F.K. Fisher. The concept of the role of food and kitchen and life and using the kitchen and food as an analogy for life has always appealed to me tremendously. There is a wonderful wine book I've got to recommend. First wine book I have read in I don't know how many years that is simple.

Cheri Sicard: I wonder if we're going to say the same book again!
Barry Bluestein: The Wall Street Journal Guide To Wine.

Cheri Sicard: Yes, it's fabulous. I'm reading it right now.
Barry Bluestein: It is fabulous. Not only is the book fabulous, but they are fabulous. Kevin and I started a radio show, here in Chicago about five weeks ago, on public radio. The radio station is WILL, as in Illinois. The name of the show is Stirring It Up With Barry And Kevin. We are on WILL 580 at 10 a.m. every Sunday morning. We come on before Car Talk. We had John (Brecher) and Dorothy (J. Gaiter) on. Not only is their book good, but they are a delightful couple.

Cheri Sicard: That really comes across in their writing. It's just like having your friends tell you about wine. It's not stuffy. It's just a really great book.
Barry Bluestein: Their recommendations, we have taken them and we have used them, and they are right. Usually with wine books, they are stuffy, they talk down to you, you are made to feel like you're a moron that you've picked this book up. Why are you reading this? You should know this. Here is a couple who obviously have discovered wine and enjoy it, and they are passing on the information. The wine recommendations are inexpensive and great.

Cheri Sicard: How do you and Kevin work together? Obviously, very well, but how do you divide the duties?
Barry Bluestein: We have a rule. When we started writing, which was twelve years ago now, we set a rule. I cook, he writes. He doesn't pick up a pan, I don't sit at the computer. We started once doing both and there were fights. Everyone thinks they are right. We realized that he is a much better writer than I, and I am a much better cook than he. So we go with our strengths. We feel it's one of those cases where the sum of the parts are greater than equal.

Cheri Sicard: That's evident in your books. They are really wonderful. Thank you so much for taking the time to talk with us.
Barry Bluestein: Thank you for having me.



 

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