Restaurant reviews, foodies and food criticism have all become a major part of the culture. I sit here writing this, at the epicenter of American Food, Wine and Celebrity Chiefs. But this wasn't always the case. There was a time before food critics, before the rise of quality ethnic food, before celebrity, before Craig Claiborne came to the New York Times.
Craig Claiborne invented professional restaurant criticism, and was also the man who introduced the American palate to arugula, balsamic vinegar and chef's knives; leading us out of a vast culinary wasteland.
Thomas McNamee, who previously wrote about Alice Waters, takes us inside
The Man Who Changed the Way We Eat: Craig Claiborne and the American Food Renaissance
My conversation with Thomas McNamee:
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