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It Must've Been Something I Ate: The Return of the Man Who Ate Everything
 
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It Must've Been Something I Ate: The Return of the Man Who Ate Everything [Hardcover]

Jeffrey Steingarten
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Books in Canada

Jeffrey Steingarten has been conducting a one-man campaign against culinary xenophobia for twenty years. He’s been around long enough-and is respected enough in culinary circles-to have been made a Chevalier in the French Order of Merit for his writing about French Gastronomy in 1994. He’s also the long-time food writer for Vogue Magazine, something that surprised me more than a little: who knew the haute couture crowd ate food at all, or that Vogue published articles that aren’t as emaciated as their models? It Must’ve Been Something I Ate is a collection of 38 of the Vogue columns, and a sequel to his The Man Who Ate Everything (1997). Both books are marvelously written and constructed, and make for highly informative reading, not just on the subject of cooking.
Steingarten, while a fine writer, doesn’t pretend to be a chef, even though he provides a few choice recipes within the text. He’s an investigator of phobic culinary habits and behaviors and a food enthusiast, and like any enthusiast, his prose is florid, and occasionally breathless. If you’re interested in food, where it comes from, and how it is prepared at its best, he’s as good as you could hope for. If you want to rid yourself of your culinary conservatisms, he’s better, because he’s not writing to frighten you with all the terrible dangers of putting foreign things in your mouth. He’s there to entice your senses.
Included is a fascinating essay on designer salt-the current rage amongst foodies. In it, Steingarten determines that none of the designer salts, once dissolved in water, taste any different from common table salt, but that the different forms of delivery-the flat flakes of Maldon salt or the fluffy crystals of Fleur de Sel-have a substantial impact on taste, provided that they’re sprinkled on something relatively dry, like a steak, and not on a tomato. In addition, trace elements like magnesium, with which Fleur de Sel is loaded, elevate the flavour of sodium, and makes things taste saltier.
Other surprises abound, like the fact that MSG isn’t the problem it has been made out to be. The 1% of people who are sensitive to its active ingredient, glutamate, had better stay away from Parmesan cheese, ripe tomatoes and fresh peas, and generally speaking, eat better before they whine about Chinese food, because the problem lies in what they’re not eating before they go to the Chinese restaurant, not with MSG, which is present naturally in many foods.
As an aficionado of Japanese cuisine, I was astounded at finding out that the Japanese used to toss out tuna belly for being too oily until about 1960, and that even today, many commercial fishermen feed it to their dogs. Other startling revelations abound in the book: I didn’t know, for instance, that Caesar salad was invented in Tijuana, Mexico, (although I confess to some resistance at discovering that it isn’t supposed to include anchovies). I did suspect that there is no humane way to kill a lobster, and his description of how lobsters mate is almost enough to make me stop eating them-or at least to propose them, instead, as human sex therapists and models for post-coitus solicitude.
But I don’t want to give away all the secrets in Steingarten’s book. If you’re seriously interested in learning where really good food comes from, and in reducing your level of food aversion, buy and read this man’s book. I can say without exaggeration that I’ve learned more about good food from him than I have from any food writer I’ve read since I discovered Julia Child when I was about 19. Other writers-many writers, actually-are better than Steingarten on the subject of cooking food, but on source, taste and pointless gastronomic phobias, this man is wonderful breaker of bad habits and silly prohibitions, and as intrepid an explorer of the cornucopia as Roald Amundsen was of the Arctic ice floes.
Brian Fawcett (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Vogue magazine food writer Steingarten picks up where The Man Who Ate Everything left off, offering foodies a mouthwatering collection of nearly 40 obsessive essays. "Sometimes, I feel like a giant bluefin, my powerful musculature propelling me around the world in search of food," he explains in an essay about toro, the tender tuna belly used in Japanese cuisine. Equal parts travelogue and investigative reporting, Steingarten's writing is funny, fast-paced and clever. Whether re-creating a perfect plate of coq au vin using rooster procured from a live poultry market, braising ribs for his dog or taste-testing espresso in his Manhattan loft cum laboratory ("Right now there are 14 brand new, state-of-the-art, home espresso makers in my house...."), Steingarten proves himself a true gastronome. Of course, his interest in food goes beyond haute cuisine-freeze-dried foods, hot dog buns, even his beloved Milky Way bars do not escape scrutiny. A few essays aren't even about food. One follows the author's south-of-the-border search for phen-fen; another contemplates New York City's "reservation rat race." Recipes-and only Steingarten could add humor to the form-appear throughout. Devoted readers will savor this collection (many of the essays have won awards from the James Beard Foundation and the International Association of Culinary Professionals); those unfamiliar with the author will be clamoring for more.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Witty, humourous - delicious!, Jun 28 2004
By 
Megami (Darwin, Australia) - See all my reviews
In an age where everyone who has ever had a meal anywhere seems to think they can write about food (just as anyone who travels to the south of Europe thinks that the public wants to read a book about it) Steingarten's writing stands out. He may be obsessive beyond what is considered normal - the measures he takes to fulfill notions about what he wants can take him to different continents or result in him cooking way too many batches of dog food - but you can't help but cheer him on as he writes about it in such a wry, acerbic style. His chapter on people who claim they have food allergies should be required reading for everyone for a start. Yes, he can be snobbish, demeaning, and plain rude, but the fact is he knows what he is writing about, and in the comfort of our own home, over a well prepared snack or a good drink, we can laugh along, partly due to the humour, and partly glad we are not the intended target.

In neat little self-contained chapters, each story in this book is witty and entertaining, and educational. This is a book that no food lover should deny themselves.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Written by the love child of Bill Bryson and Alton Brown, Jan 13 2004
By 
Margot Vigeant "Mom, engineer, and cook" (central PA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a wonderful book, as was the first. Encompassing, more or less at random: travel and food, history and food, science and food, technology and food and a healthy helping of the sociology of eating, it was a fast and funny read. There are books devoted to each of these topics which does a more rigorous job at it, but no one else rolls them all into so fun and informative a package. And, as opposed to a book which deals strictly with, say, the science of food and cooking, you can use this one to learn the names of the best French cooks and the names of their and countless other worthy restaurants.
I haven't previously found anyone willing to discuss the merits of caviar AND cricket tacos within the same volume.
I'd recommend the purchase of this at the same time as "The Man who ate Everything" - you won't be able to read only one.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Just as good as "The Man Who Ate Everything", Aug 26 2003
By 
Avid Reader (Franklin, Tn) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: It Must've Been Something I Ate: The Return of the Man Who Ate Everything (Hardcover)
These two books should be considered as a pair - they are both of the same structure (small articles), same style (witty yet informative), same approach to knowledge (always trying to instill some) and goal (entertaining to the extreme). The only problem is that they tend to overlap in my mind....

For example, which one had the hilarious French Eatathon, which one had the article on ripening fruit, where was the essay about cheese? Regarless, both of these are just excellent works for quick reads. Unlike MFK Fisher, whose ouevre reads like novels, Steingarten seems to have found his gait as the food reviewer in Vogue. The articles seem somehow "Magazinish" and this is not necessarily a bad thing. He takes a fresh approach to food and eating in general - not reverent but certainly serious.

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