Publishers Weekly Mobile
Log In  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to Publishers Weekly Magazine

Cooking the Books with Thomas Keller

The chef and cookbook author talks about his latest book

By Lynn Andriani -- Publishers Weekly, 10/12/2009 2:00:00 PM

Chef Thomas Keller may be known for his high-end cooking (miniature salmon tartare ice cream cone, anyone?), but his newest book, Ad Hoc at Home, is his most accessible yet. Keller took a few minutes on a recent afternoon to sit in the yard outside The French Laundry in Napa Valley, California, to talk about why he loves comfort food. (Photo credit: Deborah Jones)

PW: Why did you write this book? 

TK: Number one, the people that I'm involved with. David Cruz at Ad Hoc, Susie Heller, Michael Ruhlman and Deborah Jones are such an amazing team. I really like being involved with a team and collaborating on projects. The second reason was that I really felt that this type of food resonates with me. I don't want to say it's my favorite restaurant here in Yountville, because I don't want to play favorites, but I find myself drawn to Ad Hoc over and over again, for a number of different reasons: not just the quality of the food, but the simplicity of the menu.

PW: Was it easy to adapt Ad Hoc's recipes for home cooks?

TK: It's so hard writing a cookbook because you don't know two things. It doesn't matter if it's the simplest cooking or the most complicated cooking: it's about product and execution. And the product goes beyond the food. Product also has to do with equipment. I've baked chocolate chip cookies at my sister's house in Florida and they're just terrible, because the oven's terrible. So it's really hard to write a cookbook because you don't know what products and equipment people have. I'm sure there's a woman in Florida who buys my cookbook and makes the chocolate chip cookies in an oven just like my sister's and they come out terrible and she says, "This damn cookbook sucks." One of the things I tried to do in the book was talk about that. I think we always have to understand that the quality of our efforts is really going to be defined by the products that we have, whether it's the butter or the eggs, the peas, the carrots, whatever--and our ability to cook it.

PW: What kind of culinary environment did you grow up in?

TK: I grew up in a single-parent household. My mother worked at night. I had older brothers who would be responsible for cooking or reheating the dinner and I was the youngest of the group so I had to fight for my food. So I have no romantic memories of sitting on my grandmother's knee stirring pots of polenta. It was about hot dogs, hamburgers, pizza, baloney, mac and cheese, peanut butter and jelly, whatever was around. The times my mother cooked, she made wonderful beef stroganoff using Campbell's Cream of Mushroom Soup and sour cream.

PW: So where do the recipes in Ad Hoc at Home come from?

TK: It's more of a collective memory; a group effort as relates to the people in involved. There's Jeffrey Cerciello, the executive chef for all the casual dining restaurants; David Cruz; Josh Drew, who's the sous chef [at Ad Hoc]; the pastry chef; even the chef de partie. We all have an opportunity to impact the restaurant [and the book] in a significant way. So if David has a memory of a dish that he had when he was a child--it's not always about me. It's about us. It's a collective and collaborative memory of food that we had.

This story originally appeared in Cooking the Books, PW's e-newsletter for cookbooks.

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

There are no other articles written by this author.

PW PARTNERS




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs

  • Josie Leavitt
    ShelfTalker: A Children's Bookseller's Blog

    August 3, 2009
    It's Called Spongy Tissue
    Sometimes, the bookstore is a confessional of sorts. Last fall I had two moms in the store, giggling...
    More
  • Elizabeth Bluemle
    ShelfTalker: A Children's Bookseller's Blog

    May 25, 2009
    Drool (+ Let the Children's Book Art Bidding Begin)
    The Internet has been very good to us this weekend, serving up three different sources of artistic d...
    More
  • » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

Advertisements





SUBSCRIBE to PW


Virtual Edition
NEWSLETTERS

PWDaily
Children's Bookshelf
PW Comics Week
Cooking the Books
Religion BookLine
Booksmack
LJXpress
LJ Academic Newswire
LJReview Alert
LJ Criticas Review Alert
SLJ Extra Helping
Curriculum Connections
SLJTeen
Please read our Privacy Policy

©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites