A cook's tour Global adventures in extreme cuisines

Anthony Bourdain

Book - 2002

From Japan where he eats traditional fugu, a poisonous blowfish that can only be prepared by specially licensed chefs, to a delectable snack in the Mecong Delta, follows the author as he embarks on a quest around the world to find the ultimate meal.

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Subjects
Genres
cookbooks
Cookbooks
Livres de cuisine
Published
New York : Ecco 2002.
Language
English
Main Author
Anthony Bourdain (author)
Edition
First Ecco edition
Online Access
Publisher description
More Info
Item Description
Originally published: New York : Bloomsbury, 2001.
Physical Description
x, 274 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780060012786
  • Where food comes from
  • Back to the beach
  • The burn
  • Where the boys are/where the girls are
  • How to drink vodka
  • Something very special
  • Highway of death
  • Tokyo redux
  • Road to Pailin
  • Fire over England
  • Where cooks come from
  • Can Charlie surf?
  • West coast
  • Haggis rules
  • Very, very strong.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this paperback reprint, swashbuckling chef Anthony Bourdain, author of the bestselling Kitchen Confidential (which famously warned restaurant-goers against ordering fish on Mondays), travels where few foodies have thought to travel before in search of the perfect meal: the Sputnik-era kitchen of a "less-than-diminutive" St. Petersburg matron, the provincial farmhouse of a Portuguese pig-slaughterer and the middle of the Moroccan desert, where he dines on "crispy, veiny" lamb testicles. Searching for the "perfect meal," Bourdain writes with humor and intelligence, describing meals of boudin noir and Vietnamese hot vin lon ("essentially a soft-boiled duck embryo") and 'fessing up to a few nights of over-indulgence ("I felt like I'd awakened under a collapsed building," he writes of a night in San Sebastian hopping from tapas bar to tapas bar). Goat's head soup, lemongrass tripe, and pork-blood cake all make appearances, as does less exotic fare, such as French fries and Mars bars (deep fried, but still). In between meals, Bourdain lets his readers in on the surprises and fears of a well-fed American voyaging to far-off, frugal places, where every part of an animal that can be eaten must be eaten, and the need to preserve food has fueled culinary innovation for centuries. He also reminds his audience of the connections between food and land and human toil, which, in these sterilized days of pre-wrapped sausages, is all too easy to forget. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved