Skip to content

The New York Times 60-Minute Gourmet

The New York Times 60-Minute Gourmet Paperback - 2000

by Franey, Pierre

  • Used
  • very good
  • Paperback

Description

Paperback. Very Good.
Used - Very Good
NZ$30.24
NZ$18.05 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 7 to 40 days
More Shipping Options
Ships from World of Books Ltd (West Sussex, United Kingdom)

Details

  • Title The New York Times 60-Minute Gourmet
  • Author Franey, Pierre
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition 1st
  • Condition Used - Very Good
  • Pages 338
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Clarkson Potter Publishers
  • Date 2000-04-04
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Bookseller's Inventory # GOR003317523
  • ISBN 9780812933024 / 0812933028
  • Weight 1.08 lbs (0.49 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.19 x 6.15 x 1.04 in (23.34 x 15.62 x 2.64 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Cookery, Quick and easy cookery
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 99054255
  • Dewey Decimal Code 812.54

About World of Books Ltd West Sussex, United Kingdom

Biblio member since 2007
Seller rating: This seller has earned a 2 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.

In 2002, World of Books Group was founded on an ethos to do good, protect the planet and support charities by enabling more goods to be reused. Since then, we've grown into to a global company pioneering the circular economy. Today, we drive the circular economy through three re-commerce brands: - Wob: Through Wob, we sell. We provide affordable, preloved books and media to customers all over the world. A book leaves our collection of over seven million titles and begins a new chapter every two seconds, enabling more goods to be reused. - Ziffit: Through Ziffit, we buy. We give people around the world the opportunity to contribute to the circular economy, earn money and protect the planet, by trading their unwanted books and media. - Shopiago: Through Shopiago, we help others. By sharing the technology that has grown World of Books Group into the business it is today, we're helping charities increase revenue and reduce waste through re-commerce.

Terms of Sale:

If you are not completely satisfied with your purchase for any reason, simply email customerservice@worldofbooks.com and we will quickly resolve any issues you may have. If you have any other queries about your order, please email customerservice@worldofbooks.com. Our goal is to deliver to our customers the best possible service and we hope your experience of dealing with us lives up to our promise. If for whatever reason we fail to meet your expectations then please let us know.

Browse books from World of Books Ltd

From the publisher

Pierre Franey learned the basics of cooking from his French mother and grandmother, and at fourteen was sent to Paris to become a chef. He published more than a dozen cookbooks in his distinguished career, including several collaborations with Craig Claiborne. Franey died in 1996, leaving an enduring legacy of fine food and good taste.

Craig Claiborne was for many years a food writer at The New York Times. He wrote many cookbooks, including The Best of Craig Claiborne and The New York Times Cookbook.

Edward Brown is the chef at The Sea Grill in New York's Rockefeller Center.

Categories

Excerpt

Pierre Franey was my mentor. People use the term loosely nowadays to describe almost any relationship involving guidance, but that doesn't really exhaust the word in relation to Pierre.  I thought I understood the word myself, but it wasn't until Pierre had passed away in 1996 that I truly knew what a mentor does and what Pierre meant to me.
            
I first met him in 1984, when I was a cook at the restaurant Maurice in Manhattan. I knew that Pierre was considered the "godfather" of French chefs in America--he was in fact one of the first, bringing the legendary Le Pavillon to great culinary heights--and I was very shy when we met. I needn't have been; he embraced me immediately, in every sense, as he did with anyone who came across as straightforward, as I evidently did. I learned very quickly that for Pierre, being above board was vital--he couldn't stand phoniness.
            
We became good friends, a world-established chef and a kid hoping to be one himself. When I was put in charge of fish preparation at Maurice, Pierre was genuinely enthusiastic; we shared a love for all seafood, and we would talk for hours about its preparation. Food-talk was always a great bond for us (it began almost the minute I met him and continued to the end) and I never ceased to be excited by the clarity of Pierre's approach to all things culinary. His cooking reflected this clarity and his great integrity, as do his recipes, which are always true to their ingredients. Everything in them belongs, nothing is ever superfluous.

Pierre and I not only talked food--we cooked it. He would invite me to his home in East Hampton where we'd cook and drink Burgundy and I continued to learn from him.  One thing I saw was that Pierre always had his finger on the pulse of contemporary American cuisine. Though he was the country's elder statesman of French cooking, he instinctively understood American food and the needs of modern American cooks. It's no accident that one of his most beloved dishes was a wonderful chili whose simple deliciousness was only equaled by the perfect roast chickens he'd make. Pierre knew that great cooking wasn't about fancy ingredients--I would have been surprised to have been served even lobster in his house--but about fresh ingredients, organization and proper technique. If you've got these, then you cook, move along with ease and create memorable food.

When it came time for me to leave Maurice, Pierre very kindly helped me get another job. He did this in the most thoughtful way possible--he told me what not to do. Pierre counseled against the most "glamorous" jobs I was offered, and thanks to him, I went as chef to Marie Michelle, a then-new restaurant whose reputation I could help build. With his support, and that of his community of friends, I was able to make a success there, which set the stage for other forward career moves I made. Pierre always pointed me in the right direction then stepped back, so I could earn a place for myself, or not. Pierre's wise and compassionate advice--his mentoring--continued when I joined Restaurant Associates and became the chef at Tropica and at The Sea Grill, my current cooking home. We did many things together professionally, TV shows among them, and Pierre wrote the foreword to The Modern Seafood Cook, the book I published with Arthur Boehm in 1995.

Throughout, Pierre counseled me with his characteristic lack of ego--and it was that quality, that ability to remove himself and let the work speak for itself, that makes his books so valuable. The New York Times 60-Minute Gourmet is a perfect example. It was instrumental in helping a generation of Americans cook French-style food in a timely fashion. Many's the time I relied on the book myself; for example, Pierre's Soupe de Poisson found here on page 99--a simple layering of ingredients done with utmost culinary intelligence--has been a blessing to me when I wanted something wonderful to serve in short order. More to the point, I learned that simple ingredients when properly combined can create a finished dish that's greater than the sum of its parts.  You will have a similar experience, I'm sure, when you make it!

When Pierre died I was devastated. I felt that I'd lost a father--and in a way I had. It was then I fully realized not only how much he'd given me, but how much he'd continue to give. Back when first I met Pierre, he already knew, and told people, that the next generation of important chefs in America would be Americans--a novel idea then. As Pierre supported my work, so he supported that of other American chefs for the purpose of furthering American cuisine.  He was not only my mentor but a guide to other up-and-coming cooks, professional and amateur alike. And his work goes on, witness the book you're holding. I am grateful for that, for all he gave to me and still gives to cooks everywhere.

Edward Brown
Chef, The Sea Grill
New York City
October 1999
        

Media reviews

"Pierre always had his finger on the pulse of contemporary American cuisine. Though he was the country's elder statesman of French cooking, he instinctively understood American food and the needs of modern American cooks. . . . Pierre knew that great cooking wasn't about fancy ingredients -- I would have been surprised to have been served even lobster in his house -- but about fresh ingredients, organization, and proper technique. If you've got these, then you cook, move along with ease, and create memorable food."
---from the new Foreword by chef Edward Brown