Book Club Review From Scratch: Inside the Food Network

I took a break in March but am back in April, especially since the book was one I had recommended, From Scratch: Inside the Food Network  by Allen Salkin. I read this book and am writing this Book Review From Scratch: Inside the Food Network as part of the online book club the Kitchen Reader.

I first found out about this book during Feast, at the Feast Cookbook Social event where I met Allen Salkin and we chatted for a bit, and when I ordered the book he promised to autograph for me (which he did!).  The description of the book promises “Big personalities, high drama—the extraordinary behind-the-scenes story of the Food Network, now about to celebrate its twentieth anniversary: the business, media, and cultural juggernaut that changed the way America thinks about food.”

In October 1993, a tiny start-up called the Food Network debuted to little notice. Twenty years later, it is in 100 million homes, approaches a billion dollars a year in revenue, and features a galaxy of stars whose faces and names are as familiar to us as our own family’s.

But what we don’t know about them, and the people behind them, could fill a book.

Based upon extensive inside access, documents, and interviews with hundreds of executives, stars, and employees all up and down the ladder, Allen Salkin’s book is an exhilarating roller-coaster ride from chaos to conquest (and sometimes back). “

The first thing you have to keep in mind is that this is not a book about food. It is a book about the Food Network. Based on that premise, it is going to focus a lot more on the business that is Food Network, and not about necessarily loving food or the Food Network stars.

Those elements are scattered in there as there certainly are Food Network stars that are the face of Food Network to the public, and there are drivers there at the network that do love food. But ultimately, both for better and for worse, the network rolls up into an entity that is more than its individuals and has it’s own identity and story.

This book is definitely focused on the story of the Food Network as a corporation. The book also is strongly about history – with a few interesting stories scattered in. This historical reporting does end up with areas that can be very dry or confusing in trying to track some of the behind the scenes players without stronger narratives to impress all the involved people into a reader’s memory. It is a bit like a documentary series that still needed a little more editing and organizing because it forgot that it was airing in episodes over a season and not all at one sitting.

I did learn a lot though. I never will look at Food Network or the Cooking Channel the same now. As much as they advertise themselves about being about food and loving food, the truth I took away from the book is that they are at its core middlemen peddlers. They are a business that showcases and sells to those who love food, but they are a business. It’s those in the trenches who are making the food on the shows that are the food lovers with passion, working their butt off to know food and educate and entertain. But, these same food lovers are also tasked to know and work the corporate game that is the modern Food Network.

In many ways the Food Network seemed like destiny. It did a lot of stumbling into itself and success often backwards and through luck and the perseverance of a few people at the right place at the right time who didn’t give up on Food Network despite its fumbling around.

Back at its founding (some of the stories of the immature programming seemed literally and amusingly skunkswork garage level), and the book argues even now (with most shows under a theme of undercover/fixing reality show or competition and many of its original and classic stars now “graduated” away) , the Food Network highest level management had/has a surprising lack of insightful vision. The book seems to imply that this is due to not understanding its audience and its own food experts or the current culinary scene because of a conservative parent company and somehow finding presidents that are business experts with no pulse line themselves to the food culture.

The book walks through in detail the shift over time from less and less education and more entertainment and marketing. Food Network had ridden the rising food culture wave from food and cooking being a chore hopefully outsourced to kitchen staff to dining and cooking being a leisure activity actively pursued. By being the window into the wave at the beginning, Food Network has even participated in influencing and forming the current culinary scene. However, as more players have now since been born from that wave,  it’s unclear where Food Network is going next and if is now in the falling action part of the story or about to rise, redefined, again.

This was a very interesting read,  but I would say the big personalities and high drama promised are not a strong thread to make this the engaging reading you may think it is. Set your expectations that this is more history book that has a few sidebar stories, and that you will learn more and be entertained less than the book description markets.

In honor of reading this book, I decided to try one of the top 30 most highly ranked recipes on the Food Network site. In my next cooking post tomorrow, I will be doing a Food Network chef guacamole bar with 3 guacamole, 1 recipe each from classic celebrity chefs Alton Brown, Bobby Flay, and Rick Bayless.

This recipe I thought was a perfect example of what this book was pointing out. This recipe is from Aarti Sequeira, who won the 2010/Season 6 series The Next Food Network Star. This recipe is one of the fan favorites, with more than 600 comments from fans, and is simple, approachable, but yet opens up a whole new world of flavor – kale is a relatively recent ingredient to home kitchens, as before it was most used as a decorative element at Pizza Hut salad bars! If her name isn’t familiar… well now you understand the dilemma of Food Network in nurturing and developing the next generation and planning programming.

Aarti Sequeira’s Massaged Kale Salad

Ingredients:

  • 1 bunch kale (black kale is especially good), stalks removed and discarded, leaves thinly sliced
  • 1 lemon, juiced
  • 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling
  • Kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoons honey
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 mango, diced small (about 1 cup)
  • Small handful toasted pepitas ( pumpkin seeds), about 2 rounded tablespoons

Directions:

  1. In large serving bowl, add the kale, half of lemon juice, a drizzle of oil and a little kosher salt. Massage until the kale starts to soften and wilt, 2 to 3 minutes. Set aside while you make the dressing.
  2. In a small bowl, whisk remaining lemon juice with the honey and lots of freshly ground black pepper. Stream in the 1/4 cup of oil while whisking until a dressing forms, and you like how it tastes.
  3. Pour the dressing over the kale, and add the mango and pepitas. Toss and serve.

For May the Kitchen Reader book club selected reading is A History of the World in 6 Glasses by Tom Standage. For our casual online club there is a new book selected for every month, each book is related to food, and members write a review on their blog during the last week of that month. If you are interested in joining, check out the website.

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Mid Jan-Feb Chefwich at Lardo

I know, it’s shocking that this time I actually got to the Lardo chefwich and am reporting back on it when there is more than 1 week of time left for you to go get it. When I saw on Instagram that Gregory Gourdet of Departure was collaborating on the next Chefwich, I knew I had to go try this one right way.


Chefwich #3 with Lardo and Gregory Gourdet of Departure: Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo Chefwich #3 with Lardo and Gregory Gourdet of Departure: Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo

I adore GG- the creative things he’s doing with the Departure menu of modern Asian cuisine to make it a dining destination not just for the cool view and “eating in a spaceship in the future” feel inside a restaurant are spectacular. To begin your crush on GG, if you don’t already have one, check out this profile on Portland Monthly. PS, he was also voted Eater Portland’s Hottest Chef 2012. Whenever I see him at a festival doling out samples himself, I can’t even speak and only gaze at glow, both physical and metaphysically in the positive energy he passes on through his food and just his good cheer to everyone around him. Let me stop the fangirling and get to the food… and I will try not to think about how the one time I attempted to exchange words with him all I did was babble nonsensically.
Chefwich #3 with Lardo and Gregory Gourdet of Departure: Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo Chefwich #3 with Lardo and Gregory Gourdet of Departure: Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo

The chefwich he created with Rick is a Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo. Part of the proceeds of this Chefwich, available until mid February, will benefit Our House of Portland.

Chefwich #3 with Lardo and Gregory Gourdet of Departure: Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo Chefwich #3 with Lardo and Gregory Gourdet of Departure: Chicken Tonkatsu yuzu jalapeno slaw, Japanese pickles, and sweet vinegar mayo

As always, almost any sandwich can be made into a salad. In my case, although I enjoyed half of it in sandwich form, I admit that for the second half I discarded the bread to just enjoy the crispy chicken with the pickles and the bit of that mayo with its sour undertone unencumbered. Keep in mind that this is chicken, not the traditional pork that is used for Tonkatsu, in case you are comparing it to previous Tonkatsu. I was hoping that the yuzu jalapeno slaw would have had more spicyness to it, but settled for the strong citrus flavors it offers to cut the deep frying here. This is a sandwich enjoyed as fresh as possible.

I can’t leave without one last squee and share to try to convince you of the awesome of GG.

 

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Lardo Chefwich with Country Cat Lamb Burger

Until the middle of this month,  at both Lardo locations you can experience the sandwich that won the People’s Choice at Feast 2013 Sandwich Invitational in September (previously recapped by yours truly here)!
Lardo Chefwich with Adam Sappington of Country Cat's Lava Lake Lamb Burger. It is dressed with smoked tomato jam, fennel slaw, and havarti cheese. Lardo Chefwich with Adam Sappington of Country Cat's Lava Lake Lamb Burger. The Country Cat Lamb Burger is dressed with smoked tomato jam, fennel slaw, and havarti cheese

Among all the dozen sandwiches that evening, Adam Sappington of Country Cat offered the award winning (and now #2 in the current Chefwich Series) Lava Lake Lamb Burger. It is dressed with smoked tomato jam, fennel slaw, and havarti cheese. Part of the proceeds of this sandwich benefit the Humane Society.
Lardo Chefwich with Adam Sappington of Country Cat's Lava Lake Lamb Burger. The Country Cat Lamb Burger is dressed with smoked tomato jam, fennel slaw, and havarti cheese Lardo Chefwich with Adam Sappington of Country Cat's Lava Lake Lamb Burger. The Country Cat Lamb Burger  is dressed with smoked tomato jam, fennel slaw, and havarti cheese.

Again, the Country Cat Lamb Burger is available only until the middle of January!

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The Lardo Chefwich Series is Back!

So, I covered during most of this year the 6 chefwiches of Lardo. Each month usually around the 15/16th, there would be a new collaboration sandwich on the menu between Rick Gencarelli of Lardo and a guest chef, aka, a chefwich. Each chefwich has been rotating into the Lardo menus (either of the two Lardo locations, Lardo West in SW downtown or in Lardo East in the SE) over the past 6 months. For all the chefwiches a portion of the proceeds benefited a charity of the guest chef’s choice, and each chefwich was a limited time sandwich offer, only available for a month.  Each chefwich could also net you a stamp on the chefwich card, and if you collected them all it offered you VIP access to the Chefwich Party (though you can also purchase a ticket in- and the party brought back all the chefwiches all at one time for an ultimate chefwich faceoff!)! I covered all the previous 6 sandwiches here at this blogpost.

Well, the Lardo Chefwich party has come and gone, but the Chefwich series continues! Starting off with #7 and going to #13 apparently, which means the next chefwich party will be in May?

The chefwich  series continues on by kicking off with The Chris DiMinno, formerly of Clyde Common. This sandwich has apparently been dubbed “Arthur Avenue Called” and is comprised of breaded chicken, marinara, mozzarella, parm sauce, soft hoagie… essentially a chicken parmesan. The charity of Chris’s choice is The Bicycle Transportation Alliance which works to promote bicycle use and improve bicycling conditions to make bicycling safe, convenient and accessible.

Update 12/17 The next chefwich is out: Adam Sappington of Country Cat‘s chefwich of a Cattail Creek Lamb Burger with smoked tomato jam, fennel slaw, and havarti cheese will benefit the Oregon Humane Society. Goddamit, Lardo you are making me a sandwich addict.

But let’s just get to the sandwich photo porn from chefwich #1 shall we?

The next Chefwich, featuring chef Chris DiMinno, formerly of Clyde Common. This sandwich has apparently been dubbed Arthur Avenue Called and is comprised of breaded chicken, marinara, mozzarella, parm sauce, soft hoagie... essentially yes a chicken parmesan sandwich! Lardo's signature Pig Out in holiday colors The next Chefwich, featuring chef Chris DiMinno, formerly of Clyde Common. This sandwich has apparently been dubbed Arthur Avenue Called and is comprised of breaded chicken, marinara, mozzarella, parm sauce, soft hoagie... essentially yes a chicken parmesan sandwich! The next Chefwich, featuring chef Chris DiMinno, formerly of Clyde Common. This sandwich has apparently been dubbed Arthur Avenue Called and is comprised of breaded chicken, marinara, mozzarella, parm sauce, soft hoagie... essentially yes a chicken parmesan sandwich!

Rick Gencarelli hasn’t just been collaborating on sandwiches however. Oven & Shaker is also now doing a chef series, but with pizzas. The first chef pizza at Oven & Shaker was in collaboration with Rick, and turned Lardo’s mortadella sandwich into pizza form with a Mortadella pie. This pizza started with an olive oil, oregano, and garlic base topped with provolone picante, Mama Lil’s peppers, and mortadella, and then was topped after the wood fired oven with shredded lettuce and dressing. Their schedule is different than Lardo’s by doing beginning-end of the month rather than Lardo’s mid-month change-up. Oven & Shaker doesn’t have a punchcard, but they also donate some of the proceeds to the collaborating chef’s charity of choice. Last month, November, it was Ecotrust’s Farm to Schools.

This month, December, the collaboration chef is Greg and Gabrielle Denton of Ox with a Clam Chowder Pie with split bone marrow and jalapeno. Clearly the Oven & Shaker series is going after some signature dishes with the guest chef.  I’m planning to go there next week, so stay tuned!

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The Final Chefwich at Lardo, from Greg Denton of Ox

So, I’ve finally had them all! Collection complete! As a recap, there have been six sandwiches created which are all collaborations between Rick Gencarelli of Lardo and a guest chef, aka, a chefwich. Each chefwich has been rotating into the Lardo menus (either of the two Lardo locations, Lardo West in SW downtown or in Lardo East in the SE) over the past 6 months. For all the chefwiches a portion of the proceeds benefited a charity of the guest chef’s choice, and each chefwich was a limited time sandwich offer, only available for a month.  Previously, I had…

  1. The Cathy Whims (of Nostrana and Oven & Shaker) and her Straccetti sandwich featuring bavette steak, provolone cheese, roasted asparagus, and horseradish creme fraiche. Beautiful, messy, delicious richness. Her chosen charity was Friends of Family Farmers which promotes responsible farming (covered here in this previous blog post)
  2. The Scott Snyder (of Levant), with Morroccan Lamb Meatball and black olive mayo, harrisa carrot slaw, feta. This chefwich benefits Urban Gleaners, whose mission is to eliminate waste of surplus food by redistributing to the hungry (covered here in this previous blog post)
    Lardo, chefwich, Scott Snyder, Levant, Morroccan Lamb Meatball and black olive mayo, harrisa carrot slaw, feta
  3. The Aaron Barnett (of St. Jack)- #3 in Chefwich Series, a sandwich of Fried Calamari – caper & red onion mayo, marinated tomatoes, lettuce. Mmm, that crispy crispy calamari which was perfectly executed to be crunchy but not overdone or greasy would have been excellent even on its own, but bonus! You get a whole squidwich! Proceeds go to the Special Olympics and their support their mission to provide sports training and athletic competition in a variety of Olympic-type sports for children and adults with intellectual disabilities (covered here in this previous blog post)
    Lardo, chefwich, Aaron Barnett, St Jack, Squidwich sandwich, Fried Calamari - caper & red onion mayo, marinated tomatoes, lettuce
  4. The Anthony Cafiero (of Ración) a Serrano Ham bocadillo, with pepper & onion saor, manchego cheese, smoked paprika aioli. A portion of the proceeds from this Chefwich benefit Portland Food Bank. (covered here in this previous blog post)
    The Anthony Cafiero collaboration sandwich- #4/September sammie in Chefwich Series at Lardo PDX, Serrano Ham bocadillo - pepper & onion saor, manchego cheese, smoked paprika aioli. A portion of the proceeds from this Chefwich benefit Portland Food Bank.
  5. Jenn Louis (of Lincoln Restaurant and Sunshine Tavern), a grilled cheese with fontina cheese, plum conserva on Grand Central Bakery sour rye. A portion of the proceeds from this Chefwich benefit the Oregon Food Bank. (covered here in this previous blog post)
    From Lardo, the Jenn Louis chefwich, a grilled cheese with fontina cheese, plum conserva on Grand Central Bakery sour rye. The plum conserva comes in a container on the side, so I suppose you could choose to dip it. But, I decided to just spread it like a jam on top.

Finally, the last sandwich comes from Greg Denton of Ox, with an offering of a sandwich called “Blame Canada” because apparently he didn’t want the sandwich to just be called “The Greg Denton”. It has roasted turkey, French fries, cheese curds, and foie gras gravy.

The proceeds of this sandwich go to an animal welfare organization called Guardians of Rescue, and is available now through October 14. Very decadent end!
Lardo chefwich. The last sandwich comes from Greg Denton of Ox, with an offering of a sandwich called Lardo chefwich. The last sandwich comes from Greg Denton of Ox, with an offering of a sandwich called

Although this is the sixth and supposedly last chefwich (based on the stamp card having 6) , I also hope that Lardo will continue to offer a chefwich in the future where they do continue to collaborate with chefs.

Have you had any or all the chefwiches? Which do you think you would call your favorite?

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