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Anthony Bourdain

A​​nthony Michael Bourdain was an American chef, author, broadcaster, and travel documentarian who starred in programs focusing on the exploration of international culture and cuisine. Born in New York he was one of the world’s first and most influential celebrity chefs. He became known for his bestsellers Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (2000) and A Cook's Tour: In Search of the Perfect Meal (2001).

Bourdain's first book, a culinary mystery Bone in the Throat, was published in 1995. He paid for his book tour but was not successful. His second mystery book, Gone Bamboo, also performed poorly in sales. By that time he was already an established professional and became an executive chef at Brasserie Les Halles in Manhattan in 1998.

After two published crime novels Bourdain also began contributing magazine articles. A piece for the New Yorker, Don’t Eat Before Reading This (1999), formed the basis of his breakthrough book, the bestseller Kitchen Confidential (2000).

The book itself is more a collection of essays than a solid narrative. "For all the rock’n’roll, the easy, sleazy charm, the guy wrote like a poet and, as he got older, he just got better."

Bourdain's career followed the success of the book. He began working with television producer Lydia Tenaglia and broadcasted A Cook's Tour on The Food Network in 2002, when his next book of the same title, combining food and travel, came out.

Anthony Bourdain went on to write books: a collection of anecdotes and essays, a historical investigation, and even the graphic novel Get Jiro! which he co-wrote with Joel Rose. All of them were quite successful.

His articles and essays also appeared in many publications, including The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Observer, Gourmet, Maxim, Esquire, etc. His blog for the third season of Top Chef was nominated for a Webby Award for Best Blog in 2008.

Anthony Bourdain also was the host of the popular Emmy and Peabody Award-winning television show Parts Unknown.

But there was another side to Bourdain's life.

Bourdain was born in New York and grew up in New Jersey. His mother, Gladys, was an editor at the New York Times, and his father, Pierre, an executive at Columbia Records. By his own account, they exposed him to great music, film, and literature, and holidayed in France where his interest in food was sparked.

Bourdain was a 1978 graduate of The Culinary Institute of America and a veteran of many of New York city’s kitchens during his career. Most of that time he was addicted to drugs and moved among the semi-criminal community that characterized the restaurant scene of the time. The chef's relationship with money was also complicated.

“I don’t want to sound like I’m bragging about this,” he told Wealth Simple, “but the sad fact is, until 44 years of age, I never had any kind of savings account. I’d always been under the gun. I’d always owed money. I’d always been selfish and completely irresponsible.”

So, as many notes, Kitchen Confidential was the original handbook for toxic masculinity in the kitchen. But with the appearance of this book, Bourdain tried to be the best version of himself, and he succeeded.

However, Anthony Bourdain ended his life by committing suicide in a hotel room in Paris.
years of life: 25 June 1956 8 June 2018

Voice

Series

Quotes

Anahas quoted2 years ago
Line cooking done well is a beautiful thing to watch. It's a high-speed collaboration resembling, at its best, ballet or modern dance. A properly organized, fully loaded line cook, one who works clean, and has 'moves' - meaning economy of movement, nice technique and, most important, speed - can perform his duties with Nijinsky-like grace. The job requires character - and endurance. A good line cook never shows up late, never calls in sick, and works through pain and injury.

What most people don't get about professional-level cooking is that it is not at all about the best recipe, the most innovative presentation, the most creative marriage of ingredients, flavors and textures; that, presumably, was all arranged long before you sat down to dinner. Line cooking - the real business of preparing the food you eat - is more about consistency, about mindless, unvarying repetition, the same series of tasks performed over and over and over again in exactly the same way. The last thing a chef wants in a line cook is an innovator, somebody with ideas of his own who is going to mess around with the chef's recipes and presentations. Chefs require blind, near-fanatical loyalty, a strong back and an automaton-like consistency of execution under battlefield conditions.
Anahas quoted2 years ago
You want loyalty from your line cooks. Somebody who wakes up with a scratchy throat and slight fever and thinks it's okay to call in sick is not what I'm looking for. While it's necessary for cooks to take pride in their work - it's a good idea to let a good cook stretch a little now and again with the occasional contribution of a special or a soup - this is still the army. Ultimately, I want a salute and a 'Yes, sir!'. If I want an opinion from my line cooks, I'll provide one. Your customers arrive expecting the same dish prepared the same way they had it before; they don't want some budding Wolfgang Puck having fun with kiwis and coriander with a menu item they've come to love.
Anahas quoted2 years ago
Women line cooks, however rare they might be in the testosterone-heavy, male-dominated world of restaurant kitchens, are a particular delight. To have a tough-as-nails, foul-mouthed, trash-talking female line cook on your team can be a true joy - and a civilizing factor in a unit where conversation tends to center around who's got the bigger balls and who takes it in the ass.

I've been fortunate enough to work with some really studly women line cooks - no weak reeds these. One woman, Sharon, managed to hold down a busy saute station while seven months pregnant - and still find time to provide advice and comfort to a romantically unhappy broiler man. A long-time associate, Beth, who likes to refer to herself as the 'Grill Bitch', excelled at putting loudmouths and fools into their proper place. She refused to behave any differently than her male co-workers: she'd change in the same locker area, dropping her pants right alongside them. She was as sexually aggressive, and as vocal about it, as her fellow cooks, but unlikely to suffer behavior she found demeaning. One sorry Moroccan cook who pinched her ass found himself suddenly bent over a cutting board with Beth dry-humping him from behind, saying, 'How do you like it, bitch?' The guy almost died of shame - and never repeated that mistake again.

Another female line cook I had the pleasure of working with arrived at work one morning to find that an Ecuadorian pasta cook had decorated her station with some particularly ugly hard-core pornography of pimply-assed women getting penetrated in every orifice by pot-bellied guys with prison tattoos and back hair. She didn't react at all, but a little later, while passing through the pasta man's station, casually remarked. 'Jose, I see you brought in some photos of the family. Mom looks good for her age.'
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