Sort of Book Review
The Guardian food magazine has been doing a column where chefs write about their favourite, or the one that influenced them, cook book.
I read this column by Russell Norman - https://www.theguardian.com/food/2018/a ... ny-shopsin - on the 'Legendary New York Chef Kenny Shopsin".
I'd never heard of Shopsin but the article interested me enough to order the book Eat Me - The Food & Philosophy of Kenny Shopsin from Amazon.co.uk. It was published in 2008. It is a hardback with colour throughout and colour photo's on most pages. It's the American edition, so there's no conversions to Celcius or metric measures, or explanations of American things (example: make your hamburgers 'the size of a Martin's potato bun'.
Shopsin is more a short order cook than chef. He has 900 dishes on his menu - the 8 page menu is shown with columns of dishes in tiny print, multiple variations. There's about 80 main soups, and some come with variations, such as 22 types of chicken soup.
And all the dishes he reckons he can get in front of the customer within 5 minutes of him getting the order. Soups he makes when ordered. He says he doesn't like soups that have been cooked long as their flavours all meld together.
Anything that takes longer than 5 minutes to cook he makes in advance and either freezes or keeps in fridge, such as stock and rice.
He's a number of time saving tricks, one is to premix salt and pepper (80/20) so he needs only one shaker to season.
He's has a tiny number of covers and a number of rules, such as turning away any group larger than 4 (he can't prepare and get more than 4 dishes on a table at the same time. If a group offers to split over 2 tables, he won't allow them because they'd take over the restaurant and he wants people to talk to other tables)
There's a number of other rules, - no requests, no allergies, no substitutions are some.
He hates the press, bans those who have allowed the name of the restaurant to appear in magazines.
Yet - he's inconsistent. He complains bitterly that in a list of the best hamburgers in New York, his don't get a mention yet he says he makes every sort (even steamed) and he says his are the ******* best.
Certain dishes came about because people asked for them, or asked for a modification to one he had.
So.…..
Overall, I think he is on the cusp of being a jerk, of being deliberately rude and awkward because it makes good theatre, because people go there expecting to see others not in the know to be cursed and booted out.
The cover says there's more than 100 recipes in the book, but I've not seen one that makes me want to make it.
Then I found from Wikipedia that he died in 2018 so I feel uncomfortable about criticising him, and Trip Advisor shows his restaurant is still in operation by his sons who are carrying on the tradition of being rude. Two reviewers tell how they got a dish they did not order and they were told to eat it as although it was the restaurants mistake they weren't going to cook the ordered dish.
What I find really irritating is that in this well produced book, there isn't an index.
And I am intrigued that one of the variations on hamburgers is called the Ploughman ("named after the classic British sandwich which is not a hamburger"*) which comes with Branston pickle and cheddar cheese on white toast. He nevers says where he can get Branston pickle - I thought it was unknown in the USA.
Anyway, I'd like to hear from anyone who has read the book or visited Shopsins restaurant..
*it's not a sandwich either