Have Tongue,
Will Travel: Garlic and Sapphires
Review
by Bruce Collier June 16, 2005 Issue
The subtitle of this book is “The Secret Life of
a Critic in Disguise.” If you take an interest in food,
particularly the big league stuff— celebrity chefs, hot
spot restaurants, and culinary trends—the author will be
a familiar name, though possibly not a familiar face.
Ruth Reichl
is currently editor-in-chief of Gourmet magazine, the Sports Illustrated
of food fans. Prior to that dream gig, she held another dream
gig, as restaurant critic for The New York Times. This book, which
covers her hitch there in the 1990s, indicates that the dream
wasn’t always a sweet one.
The book starts
with two chapters that drag a bit while explaining how she got
the job. Reichl admits to having taken “liberties”
with characters and situations. Still, the dialogue sounds like
a Woody Allen screenplay before an editor got to it. The point
of the first two chapters is, simply, “Ruth Reichl is one
heck of a food writer, New York is one heck of a town, and The
New York Times is one heck of a paper.”
Once she gets
past this point, she, and the book, take off. The New York fine
dining scene is as brutal and competitive as any business in which
the risks are as high as the payoffs. Combine that with ego, hype,
and lust for fame and fortune, and you get the idea. The New York
Times is the most influential paper in New York, if not the country,
and the word of its food critic can literally close the most revered
palace of cuisine overnight. Or raise an obscure little dive to
food Valhalla in the same amount of time.
Naturally,
reasons Reichl, a restaurant is going to be on the lookout for
said critic. Said critic, once spotted, will be treated like the
power broker she is. This is unfair, because in a just world,
everyone should be treated equally well at any restaurant. Reichl
resolves to dine in disguise, in order to receive the same treatment
as Jane Doe. To this end, she employs various friends—an
acting teacher, a wig seller, and sundry clothing advisors—to
create a stable of alter egos. Each has its own; you should pardon
the expression, flavor.
Among the
cast of diners in disguise are mild-mannered Molly, a retired
Michigan schoolteacher, sexy siren Chloe, warm and lovable free
spirit Brenda, and Miriam, a somewhat weird reincarnation of Reichl’s
mother. Reichl dispatches these characters to some of New York’s
most hallowed dining establishments.
The results
are pretty much all the same. In one celebrated case, Reichl dined
twice at Le Cirque, arguably the most high-class joint in town
at the time, and a shoo-in for a four-star review. Her first time,
as Molly, was a study in disappointment. Later, as Ruth Reichl,
she feasted like a queen. Only the intervention of her editor
kept her from writing two separate reviews. Instead, she wrote
one combination review, detailing both experiences and withholding
the fourth star.
Diners responded
with anger, contempt, and a call for her dismissal. This becomes
a pattern throughout the book. Only the occasional call of support
from the commonality, as well as her faithful husband and son,
keeps her at it. Still, one gets the impression from Reichl that
the Times is a perilous place to work, and the life of a “hired
mouth” resembles that of a permanently sitting duck.
Not every
chapter is about dining disappointment, though. Reichl makes a
number of eating and shopping tours, finding obscure delights
in out-of-the-way places. In a chapter on reviewing the city’s
famous steak houses, she reflects on her New York childhood, and
her father’s weekly ritual of selecting, cooking, and savoring
a butcher-cut steak. Her descriptions of food border on the erotic,
and she throws every ounce of her considerable passion into her
work. The book is laced with restaurant reviews, and with recipes
from Reichl’s collection, most of them dishes made for her
family.
In the end,
however, the pressures, and the jerks, take their toll. In one
chapter, titled “Food Warrior,” a charity auction
requires her to take a guest along on a “working dinner,”
to Windows on the World. The guest, who calls himself a “food
warrior” (surely one of the lamest titles ever self-bestowed),
makes himself thoroughly obnoxious, the personification of a trivial,
indulgent food snob. This is only one of a series of wake-up calls
that lead Reichl to a reassessment, and ultimately a new job.
If you love
food, you’ll love this book. If you think of dining as simply
a daily chore, or a waste of money, best leave it alone, because
Reichl is not trying to make converts. Not many people can match
her zeal for food, but it’s always a pleasure for me to
read someone writing about something they truly love. And if reading
this book doesn’t make you ravenously hungry, you’ve
been dieting too long.
Garlic and
Sapphires, Penguin Press, 333 pages, available at online and local
bookstores and local libraries.
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