Photo de l'auteur

Raymond A. Sokolov

Auteur de Why We Eat What We Eat

14+ oeuvres 1,050 utilisateurs 14 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Raymond Sokolov, former restaurant critic and food editor of the New York Times, served as the editor of the Wall Street Journal's "Leisure and Arts" page for twenty years and continues to write about food for national publications. Sokolov has written several cookbooks, He also wrote a column on afficher plus America's foodways for Natural History magazine Mr. Sokolov lives in New York City afficher moins
Crédit image: Photo by Stephen Shore, NYT

Œuvres de Raymond A. Sokolov

Oeuvres associées

Best Food Writing 2007 (2007) — Contributeur — 112 exemplaires
Liebling Abroad (1981) — Introduction, quelques éditions74 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1941-08-01
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Detroit, Michigan, USA
Lieux de résidence
Detroit, Michigan, USA
New York, New York, USA
England, UK
Études
Harvard University (Harvard College)
Oxford University (Wadham College)
Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills, Detroit, USA
Professions
journalist
Organisations
Newsweek
The Wall Street Journal
Courte biographie
Raymond Sokolov (born 1 August 1941 in Detroit, Michigan) is a journalist who has written extensively about food. He wrote the "Eating Out" column for The Wall Street Journal's weekend edition from 2006 until March 2010.

Sokolov grew up in the city of Detroit, and, while still in elementary school, finished 26th then 2nd in consecutive years in the National Spelling Bee in 1952 and 1953. He attended secondary school at Cranbrook, in suburban Detroit (Bloomfield Hills), whence he graduated in 1959. After graduating from Harvard College summa cum laude in classics, and spending a year as a Fulbright Scholar at Wadham College, Oxford, Sokolov spent two years back at Harvard pursuing a doctorate in classics. In 1965 he passed his orals and went to work as a foreign correspondent for Newsweek Magazine in its Paris bureau.

Sokolov returned to the U.S. in the summer of 1967 and worked for Newsweek as an arts writer until he became restaurant critic and food editor of the New York Times in 1973 where his pieces covered the decor, lore, and politics of New York restaurants as well as the productions of their kitchens. His reviews first noted the arrival of Sichuanese and Hunanese food in North America. He was the first writer in English to notice nouvelle cuisine in France. In 1975 he left the Times to pursue a career as a freelance writer from his home in Brooklyn Heights. In 1980 he married Johanna Hecht, a member of the curatorial staff of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and in 1981 became editor of Book Digest, then the founding editor of the Wall Street Journal's daily Leisure and Arts page, a post he held until 2002. He continues to write about food for national publications.

Sokolov has written several cookbooks, including The Cook's Canon: 101 Classic Recipes Everyone Should Know, which includes recipes from the world's cuisines that Sokolov terms as being necessary to "culinary literacy," as well as brief essays. Other works include The Saucier's Apprentice (1976), a highly regarded cookbook on the hierarchy of French sauces, Why We Eat What We Eat: How the Encounter between the New World and the Old Changed the Way Everyone on the Planet Eats (1991), and a biography of A. J. Liebling, Wayward Reporter (1980).

His long-running column "A Matter of Taste," on the Americas' foodways for the American Museum of Natural History's Natural History injected some researched facts and logical deduction into the highly fanciful traditional histories of cooking and helped lead to the revival of interest in American regional specialties. Some of the columns have been collected as Fading Feast: A Compendium of Disappearing American Regional Foods (1981).

Membres

Critiques

Sokolov says that Columbus greatly influenced our eating habits when such New World delights as tomatoes, chocolate, green beans, chili peppers, and maize were introduced into cuisine throughout the world and when the delicacies of the Old World found their way into the cooking pots of America. Sokolov is the Leisure & Arts Editor of The Wall Street Journal.
 
Signalé
riselibrary_CSUC | 4 autres critiques | Aug 5, 2021 |
Excellent, clear recipes; delicious dishes; wonderful, well-written, interesting commentary; beautiful photos. As my Jewish mother would say, how could it be bad? The stuffed cabbage recipe, for instance, is foolproof, delicious, with easy and successful instructions on how to make the cabbage packages.
 
Signalé
oatleyr | 1 autre critique | Aug 22, 2020 |
This is a comical take on the Peace Corps experience with a mash-up with "Heart of Darkness" written before "Apocalypse Now" by the way. In the end the American realizes everything the First World is trying to do for the Third World is only making the situation worse. Must reading for Bill and Melinda Gates.
 
Signalé
JoeHamilton | Jul 21, 2020 |
How the encounter between the new world and the old changed the way everyone on teh planet eats. Read. Not great.
 
Signalé
jhawn | 4 autres critiques | Jul 31, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Aussi par
2
Membres
1,050
Popularité
#24,544
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
14
ISBN
30
Langues
1
Favoris
2

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