Heat

by Bill Buford
Heat  
published 2006 by Jonathan Cape
binding Hardcover
isbn 022407184X   (isbn13: 9780224071840)
pages 336
description Bill Buford's funny and engaging book Heat offers readers a rare glimpse behind the scenes in Mario Batali's kitchen. Who better to review the ...more
date added
12-05-06



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 2909)



Tom
03/29/08

Read in April, 2007
Book Review

Heat by Bill Buford
Reviewed by Tom Carrico

Bill Buford is a former editor of the “The New Yorker” magazine, founding editor of “Granta” magazine and publisher of Granta Books. His hobby was cooking. He cooked for friends and business associates and on one occasion for the renowned chef Mario Batali. That occasion prompted Mr. Buford to quit his job at “The New Yorker” and sign on as an unpaid intern at Batali’s three star Italian restaurant Babbo in New York ...more
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Sherrie
bookshelves: 2006booklist
Read in December, 2006
recommends it for: cooks and food lovers.
Mr. Buford, a writer for the New Yorker, had Mario Batali, celebrity chef, as a dinner guest. After Batali (a well-known partier) leaves his house at 3:00AM, Buford decides to do a piece on Batali. To get up close and personal, Buford decides to work as a “kitchen slave” in one of Butali’s NY restaurants. The author learns about the inner workings of a 4 star restaurant. The character’s he meets are so over the top, they are almost fictional. The kitchen world is filled with betraya...more
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Jenny
04/24/07

Read in December, 2006
I have to admit I picked this up because Anthony Bourdain was reading it on his show "No Reservations" (and he wrote Kitchen Confidential). This is the story of an editor for the New Yorker who ends up in the kitchens of Mario Batali - it is an encounter of his experiences in the kitchen, plus a biography of Mario, plus a history of food - all at the same time. I really enjoyed this. It took me back to my restaurant days, expressing the outrageous kitchen culture that you would not bel...more
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Carol
01/14/08

Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: No one.
When I first started this book, I asked my friend Jen what she thought of it. Not much, apparently; she didn't find the author "compelling". It was just boring, even for an amateur cook like me. He describes things (like when egg was first introduced as an ingredient in pasta) that he says most people would not be interested in, and then goes on and on ad nauseum about them. If you know they are not interesting to people, then why go into detail about them? It is odd that he was a...more
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Tony
03/27/08

Read in March, 2008
When I first heard about HEAT, I was under the impression that it was about an untrained kitchen enthusiast who somehow finds himself learning about culinary techniques from celebrity chef Mario Batali. I was intrigued by this book for several reasons. I spent a few years in the "food service" industry, so the subject was interesting to me. I like to cook, and I thought I might pick up some things from a celebrity chef's teachings. I knew Buford was a renowned writer/editor/journali...more
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Meghan
01/28/08

bookshelves: food, nonfiction, own
Read in January, 2008
recommended to Meghan by: Charlie E.
recommends it for: all foodies
As food critic said about Babbo, I say about this book, I would have given it four stars but...

I felt that the story lagged when he worked with the Butcher in Tuscany. But some of the most hilarious adventures happened there two.

"I had concerns....The other was that my apron, which was floor-length, would catch on fire. I rehearsed in my mind the possible scenario. The apron is secured around the waist with a string belt....So that was the first thing--untie it. If I didn't, it coul...more
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Amanda
10/05/07

Read in October, 2007
A must-read for foodies and Slow Foodies.

In one passage of the book, Bill Buford becomes preoccupied with researching when, in the long history of food on the Italian peninsula, cooks started putting eggs into their pasta dough. He decides to go on a quest to Italy and meets with the cook at La Volta, a small restaurant in the town of Porretta Terme. Mario Batali lived and worked here during an internship before going to New York and opening Babbo. He considers the cook, Betta, and all the ...more
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Anna
08/04/07

Read in September, 2006
recommends it for: Compulsive Food Network Watchers
This was such an awesome book. I brought it with me to read on a trip back east last year, and could barely tear myself away from it to buy one of the stupid snack boxes the airlines now try to pass of as an "in-flight meal." I think I survived on ginger ale alone for those 10 cumulative hours spent on the plane out to NY and back, mostly because of the "deliciosity" of this book.

Bill Buford is an editor for the New Yorker who ends up apprenticing for Mario Batali in th...more
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Scott
03/10/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in July, 2007
Few pieces of writing have made me physically salivate like Bill Buford's New Yorker article 'The Secret of Excess', a 2002 profile about master chef Mario Batali, who rewrote the rules on cooking Italian food in America. Reading about Batali's exploits moved me to be a fan of his Food Network show 'Molto Mario' and eventually to make the pilgramage to Babbo in Greenwich Village and sample Batali's fare for my own self, in the form of a scrumptious 9-course pasta tasting menu which I will never...more
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Justine
Read in October, 2007
Delightful. The humor of a writer of the Times with the intelligence of a writer of the New Yorker-- with the passion of someone who loves to cook. And really cook-- the Italian (real) food that is serious in a way we'd never see it. I found this to be thoroughly entertaining.

Main takeaways
1) Mario Batali of Molto Mario is not hateable (who knew?); in fact, that television persona is just wrong.

2) I don't want to be a chef.

3) Some people have an insane capacity to eat and drin...more
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Sarah
03/26/08

Read in March, 2008
recommended to Sarah by: colleague
recommends it for: foodies, anyone who enjoys looking at life from a different angle
What I liked about this book was that it gave me an insight into a world that I know very little about. Although I come from a foody family and try to keep up on culinary issues, I knwo very little about the inner workings of a restaurant or about the psychological/learning process of the upcoming chef. I never realized before how driven these people are and how similar their experience is to artists.

What troubled me about this book was how narrow the author's experience was. This book is...more
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Shane
05/05/08

bookshelves: non-fiction, unowned-and-read
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: Most anyone, foodies
Bill Buford, perhaps not coincidentally, writes exceptionally well about the major themes in this work: the glory of ingredients and their transformation into food, the sociopolitical environment of the kitchen, and the origins of food and the methods used to create it. The work is framed around Buford's mission to understand how to create great food, working in Mario Batali's restaurant Babbo and working his way through most of the stations in the kitchen. Along the way, he takes a number of tr...more
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Lindsay
bookshelves: recommended
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: foodies, New Yorker readers
I decided to check out yet another foodie book as a hangover from my recent obsession with Anthony Bourdain. Bill Buford, a relatively well-mannered, even professorial, alternative to the mayhem of Bourdain's prose, entertained me just as much as any drug-related, profanity-laced anecdote in my beloved Kitchen Confidential. I was entranced by Buford's transformation from urbane New Yorker editor to kitchen slave under the oversight of celebrity chef Mario Batali. Soon, Buford is...more
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Aimee
04/06/07

bookshelves: non-fiction
If you like the Food Network or ever had a secret desire to become a chef, I think you'll like this book. I read Anthony Bourdain's "Kitchen Confidential" about a year ago, and thought this was a great follow-up read. The two books give a great insight into the culture of restaurant kitchens.

I personally felt this book was better written than "KC" (the author is a journalist while Bourdain is a chef who likes to write). Since it was from an outsider's perspective it prov...more
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Kim
07/02/07

bookshelves: finished
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: culinary adventurers
I had mixed feelings on this one. It started out swimmingly--I was howling with laughter as the author detailed the highs (including the extracurricular highs) and the lows of the Babbo employment experience. I was shocked (in a highly amused way) by the author's description of Batali. Surely, the soft-spoken, well-mannered guy I cheer for on Iron Chef America could not be telling his servers to "pistol-whip" unruly customers with their unmentionables behind Babbo's closed doors! (If t...more
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Rachel
01/01/08

Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: foodies, cooks, waiters, anyone who likes Italian food
The true story of a man's obsessive-compulsive quest to master gourmet Italian cooking. Bill Buford quits his job at The New Yorker and convinces celebrity chef Mario Batali to take him on as a novice kitchen slave. He suffers through the social, physical, and psychological demands of the chef's world for one year -- all to feed his weird fascination with cooking and the secret inner workings of the professional kitchen. He then proceeds to Italy, apprenticing for pasta makers and butchers.

...more
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Sara
08/10/07

Read in August, 2007
This book had a double interest for me. Being completely addicted to those reality TV cooking shows like Hell's Kitchen, I was fascinated to learn about the workings of one of my favorite restaurants, Babbo. And about the bigger than life personality of its owner. What interested me even more was the intimate look at Italian cooking as done by real Italians. Much of what Bill Buford wrote about was instantly familiar to me from my childhood. I grew up with an Italian grandfather who kept an...more
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Matthew
bookshelves: misc-non-fiction
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in July, 2007
recommends it for: writers, foodies, everyone
some reviews say this book takes too long to get where it does, which is a review of a kitchen experience. i think those reviews miss the point, bc the book is NOT just about food, and thus NOT just for foodies, among whom i do not myself count. its about the culture of preparing food, and bill buford's (ex new yorker fiction editor) experience and insights as he learns professional food preperation. its very skilfully written, as might be expected, and weaves many elements - his comic disasters...more
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Karen
09/07/07

What a neat book!

Buford starts this book out with a profile of Mario Batali. He quits his day job and begins as an intern in Batali's kitchen. From there, we get first hand perspective on what it's like to be in a 3* kitchen, the personalities, the dynamics, the pressures. But what's really fun is the description of the process of HOW to cook.

Buford then becomes obsessed in the history of pasta and makes several pilgrimages to Italy to learn to cook pasta, pork and beef. We get de...more
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Laurie
03/12/08

Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: foodies, people who like to cook
I read this book based on tons of reviews that just thought it was an amazing read. And yes, it was pretty good. I learned what soppressata was (I had eaten it awhile ago but didn't really know what I was eating) and that was fun. But the first part of the book kind of got on my nerves. I thought the book was supposed to be about Bill Buford on his quest to learn cooking and food. And it is. But the first part of the book is also all about the life and times of celeb chef Mario Batali. I didn't ...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.86 (2113 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.70 (61 ratings)
number of reviews: 555






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