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Care and Feeding by Laurie Woolever

Memoir

Care and Feeding

by Laurie Woolever

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Quick take

A delectable tell-all detailing the triumphs and blunders of an ambitious writer’s journey through the NYC food world.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Marriage_Issues

    Marriage issues

  • Illustrated icon, Writers_Life

    Writer’s life

  • Illustrated icon, NYC

    NYC

  • Illustrated icon, Foodie

    Foodie

Synopsis

In this moving, hilarious, and insightful memoir, Laurie Woolever traces her path from a small-town childhood to working at revered restaurants and food publications, alternately bolstered and overshadowed by two of the most powerful men in the business. But there’s more to the story than the two bold-faced names on her resume: Mario Batali and Anthony Bourdain.

Behind the scenes, Laurie’s life is frequently chaotic, an often pleasurable buffet of bad decisions at which she frequently overstays her welcome. Acerbic and wryly self-deprecating, Laurie attempts to carve her own space as a woman in this world that is by turns toxic and intoxicating. Laurie seeks to try it all—from a seedy Atlantic City strip club to the Park Hyatt Tokyo, from a hippie vegetarian co-op to the legendary El Bulli—while balancing her consuming work with her sometimes ambivalent relationship to marriage and motherhood.

As the food world careens toward an overdue reckoning and Laurie’s mentors face their own high-profile descents, she is confronted with the questions of where she belongs and how to hold on to the parts of her life’s work that she truly values: care and feeding.

Content warning

This book contains scenes that depict sexual assault.

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Get an early look from the first pages of Care and Feeding.

Care and Feeding

Chapter 1: Hayseed

“You look like a complete fucking hayseed,” said the man conducting the job interview. “What’s your story?”

My story is fuck you, I thought, then forced a polite little laugh and said, “I guess my story is that I just graduated from college, and I want to be a writer.”

It was 1996: the Unabomber was in custody, the US economy was unstoppable, and all the girls were dancing to the AOL dial-up modem sound, wearing WonderBras and clear acetate pumps. I didn’t think I was a hayseed until this man said it, but then it felt painfully true.

Sitting in this man’s office, I was unaware of the actual, visible seeds in my hair, picked up earlier that day on the sprawling campus of Brooklyn Botanic Garden (BBG), where I was an intern. I wore an ill-fitting navy-blue pantsuit, which constituted the entirety of my job interview wardrobe. Each morning, while I raked and mulched and mowed and weeded outdoors, the suit’s synthetic fabric greedily absorbed all the complicated scents inside the BBG employee locker room.

In college, I had tried to obscure my small-town roots with various gestures of world-weariness (reading Anaïs Nin, smoking unfiltered cigarettes, getting diagnosed with mild clinical depression), but here in midtown Manhattan, the man across the desk saw me for who I was: a shy, soft-bodied twenty-two-year-old with a limited skill set. He may not have seen that I loved getting drunk and high and watching cable television, that I wanted a creatively fulfilling career and to be passionately loved (or at least lavishly validated), and had no idea what to do about it.

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Why I love it

Anyone who knows me well knows that if there’s one thing I love more than books, it’s food. In another life you could probably catch me authoring an amateur cookbook or attempting to make my mark on the culinary world in a chef’s uniform. I actually worked in food service for a few years, and I’ll never forget all of the unique, hidden qualities that distinguish restaurant kitchens—the energy, the humor, and of course, the frequent disasters.

In the memoir Care and Feeding, author Laurie Woolever delivers all of these elements in spades, describing her journey from NYC college grad to chef to successful food writer. She serves as assistant to the notorious Mario Batali and the revered Anthony Bourdain; she writes cookbooks, travels the world, and gets herself into a fair amount of trouble along the way. I haven’t read a memoir this honest, entertaining, or gritty in a very long time. It hit all the right notes, reminding me of the joys and hazards of one of the world’s most famous—and infamous—industries.

While reading this epic story, I alternated between fits of laughter, shock, and extreme hunger. I expect you’ll experience the same. Above all, I highly recommend stocking your refrigerator before digging into this one.

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Care and Feeding