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Cooking for kings : the life of Antonin Carême, the first celebrity chef / Ian Kelly.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Walker & Co., 2003Description: 301 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0802714366
  • 9780802714367
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 641.5092 22
LOC classification:
  • TX649.C37 K44 2003
Contents:
1 A Feast for Epicures 9 -- 2 Pastry Boy 30 -- 3 Breakfast at Talleyrand's 44 -- 4 Gastronomy: A cult in want of a priest 57 -- 5 Chateau Valencay: A year in the Loire 67 -- 6 Napoleon's wedding cake 81 -- 7 The Russians in Paris 92 -- 8 The cook, his book, his wife and his lover 102 -- 9 The Brighton Pavilion 121 -- 10 Viennoiserie 155 -- 11 The Winter Palace 164 -- 12 'Right good judges and right good stuffers' 183 -- 13 Chateau Rothschild 199 -- 14 Last Orders 212 -- From the Recipe Books of Antonin Careme 227.
Review: "A unique feast of biography and Regency cookbook, Cooking for Kings takes readers on a culinary tour of the palaces of Britain and Europe in the ultimate age of gastronomic indulgence, when, for the first time, chefs became celebrities and the modern restaurant was born." "Drawing on the legendary cook's rich memoirs, Ian Kelly traces Antonin Careme's meteoric rise from a child abandoned on the streets of revolutionary Paris to international celebrity and provides a dramatic below-stairs perspective on one of the most momentous, and sensuous, periods in European history - First Empire Paris, Georgian England, and the Russia of War and Peace - when emperors, kings, and princes wielded Careme's gastronomy as a diplomatic tool." "Careme was much more than the inventor of the chef's hat, the vol-au-vent, and the souffle. He had an unfailing ability to cook for the right people in the right place at the right time. He knew the foibles and the favorite dishes of the Romanovs, the Rothschilds, and Rossini. He worked for the gourmet-king George IV, the Viennese court, and even made Napoleon's wedding cake. But Careme's reputation rested ultimately on a novel idea that changed cooking forever: by marrying food and glamour in his books - which transported readers to the tables of the famous households for whom he cooked - he was the first chef to become rich and famous by publishing cookbooks."--Jacket.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 641.5092 CAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A261483B

Orginally published: England : Short Books, 2003.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 278-283) and index.

1 A Feast for Epicures 9 -- 2 Pastry Boy 30 -- 3 Breakfast at Talleyrand's 44 -- 4 Gastronomy: A cult in want of a priest 57 -- 5 Chateau Valencay: A year in the Loire 67 -- 6 Napoleon's wedding cake 81 -- 7 The Russians in Paris 92 -- 8 The cook, his book, his wife and his lover 102 -- 9 The Brighton Pavilion 121 -- 10 Viennoiserie 155 -- 11 The Winter Palace 164 -- 12 'Right good judges and right good stuffers' 183 -- 13 Chateau Rothschild 199 -- 14 Last Orders 212 -- From the Recipe Books of Antonin Careme 227.

"A unique feast of biography and Regency cookbook, Cooking for Kings takes readers on a culinary tour of the palaces of Britain and Europe in the ultimate age of gastronomic indulgence, when, for the first time, chefs became celebrities and the modern restaurant was born." "Drawing on the legendary cook's rich memoirs, Ian Kelly traces Antonin Careme's meteoric rise from a child abandoned on the streets of revolutionary Paris to international celebrity and provides a dramatic below-stairs perspective on one of the most momentous, and sensuous, periods in European history - First Empire Paris, Georgian England, and the Russia of War and Peace - when emperors, kings, and princes wielded Careme's gastronomy as a diplomatic tool." "Careme was much more than the inventor of the chef's hat, the vol-au-vent, and the souffle. He had an unfailing ability to cook for the right people in the right place at the right time. He knew the foibles and the favorite dishes of the Romanovs, the Rothschilds, and Rossini. He worked for the gourmet-king George IV, the Viennese court, and even made Napoleon's wedding cake. But Careme's reputation rested ultimately on a novel idea that changed cooking forever: by marrying food and glamour in his books - which transported readers to the tables of the famous households for whom he cooked - he was the first chef to become rich and famous by publishing cookbooks."--Jacket.

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