Rick Bayless
Article Abstract:
Chef Rick Bayless regularly visits Mexico to learn more about the ingredients and the preparations that are distinctly Mexican. He is concerned that the Western aspirations of many countries will result in the loss of indigenous cuisines. Fewer Mexican families roast their foods outdoors, and the complexity and richness of their foods suffer. He understands that he still has much to learn. He does not see cooking as artistry, but referring to chefs as craftspeople does not capture the emotional component that is central to exceptional cooking.
Publication Name: Aperture
Subject: Arts, visual and performing
ISSN: 0003-6420
Year: 1996
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
What was the most delicious thing you ever ate, or the most delicious you ever cooked?
Article Abstract:
Several renowned chefs share their best food experiences, either dishes they have had or made themselves. Ismail Merchant and Daniel Boulud favor dishes that they had with their families. Rose Laevy Beranbaum and Sylvia Weinstock prefer desserts that they make themselves. Copeland Marks recalls a Persian dish called fesenjan. Jeremiah Tower most enjoyed a tart with woodcock, foie gras and black truffles.
Publication Name: Aperture
Subject: Arts, visual and performing
ISSN: 0003-6420
Year: 1996
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Esthetic utilitarianism and the Balanchine style. Balanchine's apotheosis. Balanchine and the moderns
- Abstracts: Dance, difference, and racial dualism at the turn of the century. Dance with us: Virginia Tanner, Mormonism, and Humphrey's Utah Legacy
- Abstracts: Bronislava Nijinska and the Polish Ballet, 1937-1938: missing chapter of the legacy. Hanya Holm
- Abstracts: Recent acquisitions of the Dance Collection of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. Living history, performing memory: Devadasi women in Telugu-speaking South India
- Abstracts: Banes and Carroll on defining dance. Dance research in Canada