Six on Food: Anthony Bourdain: Don’€™t Eat Before Reading This, New Yorker, 1999; Bourdain: The Last Gasp of CNN’s Original V

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Jun 11, 2018, 9:05:14 PM6/11/18
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Six on Food: Anthony Bourdain: Don’€™t Eat Before Reading This, New Yorker, 1999; Bourdain: The Last Gasp of CNN’s Original Vision; The Gentrification of New York's Chopped Cheese; Soldier at Brooklyn Military Base Called ICE on Pizza Delivery Man; White manager admits to enslaving black worker at Conway restaurant; Umberto Eco: How to Travel with a Salmon

Anthony Bourdain: Don’€™t Eat Before Reading This, New Yorker, 1999

A New York chef spills some trade secrets.


"Good food, good eating, is all about blood and organs, cruelty and decay. It’s about sodium-loaded pork fat, stinky triple-cream cheeses, the tender thymus glands and distended livers of young animals. It’s about danger—risking the dark, bacterial forces of beef, chicken, cheese, and shellfish. Your first two hundred and seven Wellfleet oysters may transport you to a state of rapture, but your two hundred and eighth may send you to bed with the sweats, chills, and vomits.

Gastronomy is the science of pain. Professional cooks belong to a secret society whose ancient rituals derive from the principles of stoicism in the face of humiliation, injury, fatigue, and the threat of illness. The members of a tight, well-greased kitchen staff are a lot like a submarine crew. Confined for most of their waking hours in hot, airless spaces, and ruled by despotic leaders, they often acquire the characteristics of the poor saps who were press-ganged into the royal navies of Napoleonic times—superstition, a contempt for outsiders, and a loyalty to no flag but their own.

A good deal has changed since Orwell’s memoir of the months he spent as a dishwasher in “Down and Out in Paris and London.” Gas ranges and exhaust fans have gone a long way toward increasing the life span of the working culinarian. Nowadays, most aspiring cooks come into the business because they want to: they have chosen this life, studied for it. Today’s top chefs are like star athletes. They bounce from kitchen to kitchen—free agents in search of more money, more acclaim.

I’ve been a chef in New York for more than ten years, and, for the decade before that, a dishwasher, a prep drone, a line cook, and a sous-chef. I came into the business when cooks still smoked on the line and wore headbands. A few years ago, I wasn’t surprised to hear rumors of a study of the nation’s prison population which reportedly found that the leading civilian occupation among inmates before they were put behind bars was “cook.” As most of us in the restaurant business know, there is a powerful strain of criminality in the industry, ranging from the dope-dealing busboy with beeper and cell phone to the restaurant owner who has two sets of accounting books. In fact, it was the unsavory side of professional cooking that attracted me to it in the first place. In the early seventies, I dropped out of college and transferred to the Culinary Institute of America. I wanted it all: the cuts and burns on hands and wrists, the ghoulish kitchen humor, the free food, the pilfered booze, the camaraderie that flourished within rigid order and nerve-shattering chaos. I would climb the chain of command from mal carne (meaning “bad meat,” or “new guy”) to chefdom—doing whatever it took until I ran my own kitchen and had my own crew of cutthroats, the culinary equivalent of “The Wild Bunch.”







Anthony Bourdain: The Last Gasp of CNN’s Original Vision









White manager admits to enslaving black worker at Conway restaurant | News | postandcourier.com

https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/postandcourier.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/6/42/6422016a-6992-11e8-8eba-170a12c58494/5b17f7fdc458d.preview.jpg?crop=470%2c331%2c9%2c202&resize=470%2c331&order=crop%2cresize

The restaurant manager has admitted to using violence, threats and intimidation to force an employee with an intellectual disability to work over 100 hours a week without pay.  hat tip to Mr. Jolin

https://www.postandcourier.com/news/white-manager-admits-to-enslaving-black-worker-at-conway-restaurant/article_6422016a-6992-11e8-8eba-170a12c58494.html











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