Nothing elicits mock pity at cocktail parties faster than when I complain, “Food writing is a really hard job.” Until the head-on assault of the Food Network a decade ago, food writing made even soft journalism, such as fashion and gardening, look butch. But average Americans now know their chefs and writers like they know the members of their favorite rock bands or sports teams. The best dish at the dinner table these days is usually the fight that breaks out over the latest restaurant review.
Nonetheless, despite the boost up the food chain, so to speak, I still maintain being a “hired belly,” as James Villas refers to our kind in Between Bites: Memoirs of a Hungry Hedonist, should come with hazard pay. Yes, all of my jealous friends are partly right; I have been invited to my fair share of ultra-chic restaurants. But for every Daniel Boulud and Alain Ducasse, there are dozens upon dozens of chefs, cooks, and desperately clueless people wielding spatulas who think their creations should be adored by the newly ensconced dining class. Needless to say, acid indigestion is my constant companion.
“It’s all in the name of education,” I gamely tell myself as I walk into yet another bakery searching for the elusive perfect chocolate-chip cookie or haul myself into one more restaurant in hope of finding paradigmatic braised veal shanks to be fodder for my next column.
Another reason for ranking food writing right up there with coal mining and small-plane aviation is that few other jobs pose such a peril to your health. Every day that I go to work is one day farther away from being able to wear flat-front khakis. Many writers I know stuff their freezers to bursting with Lean Cuisines for those times when they aren’t recipe testing or restaurant hopping. I’ve adopted that plan, along with the idea—if rarely the practice—of afternoon walks. But when deadlines loom, I’m parked in my chair for the better part of the day. And while I won’t divulge how much weight I’ve gained, let’s just say I’ve moved several suit sizes to the right on the clothes rack at Brooks Brothers.
Back home you avoid the scale for a week, and when you finally check, you’re still up 11 pounds
Although most of my friends look at me with thinly veiled contempt when I say it, it’s still an immutable truth: Travel food writing is the hardest of all. How can being paid to eat in a fabulous foreign city and stay at a cushy five-star hotel be hard? they glare. Put yourself in my shoes, I suggest. There you are in, say, Siena, and your job is to write an article for a national food magazine. You’re armed with a list of restaurant recommendations given to you by the culinista underground—a group made up of food professionals, online foodies, and your neighbor’s cleaning lady, who happened to grow up in the city in question. And to top if off, someone else is picking up the tab. This should be a cakewalk, you brag. You’ll knock off the restaurants in two days and have the rest of the time to sightsee.
You visit the first place, a small, overpriced ristorante now overrun with tourists, where you pay for the spectacular view of the Tuscan hills, certainly not the food. So you try the second place. The dainty, family-run trattoria wedged between a cobbler and a tinsmith is not so twee as to be annoying, but not particularly worth writing home about, either. And so it goes; most of the restaurants get crossed off the list for sundry reasons. Finally you have only two days left, and no story. Niente. You accost the concierge at your hotel, hoping he has a special place that would be a perfect hook. You speak in a flurry of pidgin Italian, broken French, and cobbled-together Spanish as you try charming favorite spots out of the locals. Your guidebooks, filled with carefully annotated Post-It Notes of all the art you planned to take in, lie on the bed, neglected.
Out of desperation, you start eating two lunches and two dinners a day. One night you find yourself facing a 15-course paean to hill-town cooking that finally gives you the central theme to your piece. Unfortunately, you pick at your food because not 30 minutes earlier you were done in by a marvelous but mammoth seven-course meal. Back home you avoid the scale for a week, and when you finally check, you’re still up 11 pounds.
And still no compassion.
Of course, this same group of my friends without pity is the first to treat me like a walking food encyclopedia or a human Zagat Survey. I was at dinner recently with a fellow writer from Geneva who put several questions to me: Why are french fries called French when they originated in Belgium? Why is the main course in America called an entrée when that’s the French word for starter? Why do Americans use the term maître d’ by itself when you have to be a maître of something, such as a maître d’hôtel? Suddenly I was mentally hopscotching from Antwerp to France to the dining rooms at the Plaza Athénée, when all I wanted to do was enjoy my plate of tasty Memphis barbecued ribs.
Hands down, though, the most dreaded part of my job is when someone asks, “Where’s a good place to eat in _______?” My answer: How do I know? Floating between the ever-widening synapses in my brain are more important thoughts like, Did I turn off the gas this morning on the way out? Is my new cat having an epileptic seizure? Can cats have seizures? Why did I write “Charlotte loves shallots in Devon” on my palm? (Later in the day, I’ll remember that I need to look up a charlotte recipe and buy shallots and Devon cream.)
But all the badgering has offered up one benefit: I’ve found a failsafe way of putting the skids to the inquisition when it gets out of hand. I simply ask, “Didn’t you read my last article? It was all in there.” An awkward pause and a wan smile usually follow, affording me enough respite to make it through dinner uninterrupted.
Opinions
Confessions of a Hired Belly
Roaming Italy for a perfect risotto, or sampling the new Bordeaux while staying in four-star resorts—the life of a food and travel writer rarely evokes pity. But is that only because its hardships haven’t been explained?