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The Seasoning of a Chef: My Journey from Diner to Ducasse and Beyond
 
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The Seasoning of a Chef: My Journey from Diner to Ducasse and Beyond [Hardcover]

Doug Psaltis (Author), Michael Psaltis (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 13, 2005
The fascinating diner-to-Ducasse true story of a young New Yorker's meteoric rise from his grandfather's Greek diner in Queens to the kitchens of some of the world's greatest restaurants.

Meet the man Alain Ducasse called “the best cook in my kitchen”—Doug Psaltis, a culinary Horatio Alger, whose stubborn passion for perfection and dogged idealism propelled him from humble beginnings to the pinnacle of the food world. Doug began working at his grandfather's diner in Jamaica, Queens, when he was just ten years old—barely big enough to haul a sack of potatoes. His next real restaurant job, following a brief stint in college and some time spent in Colorado kitchens, was in Huntington, Long Island, his hometown. Drivingly ambitious and hardworking, he would travel into Manhattan on his days off to work, often for twelve hours or more without pay, in some of New York’s premiere restaurants.

He eventually was offered a regular job at David Bouley's new restaurant, Bouley Bakery, where he worked six days a week with double shifts at one of New York’s hottest and most acclaimed restaurants, often leaving the house before dawn and returning home to grab a couple of hours of sleep before taking the train back into the city. From there he went to Alain Ducasse New York, which eventually won four stars from the New York Times. Doug caught Ducasse's eye and was selected as the first American chef in the Ducasse empire and the chef to lead the next Ducasse restaurant in New York, Mix. Running the kitchen of Mix was both a dream job and a formidable challenge. Doug guided the restaurant through many crises in the face of mounting pressure and tension from all sides—before an explosive conclusion. After leaving Mix, Doug was offered a job working for Thomas Keller at the French Laundry, arguably America's restaurant mecca, where he helped lead the kitchen with Keller. Today, just past thirty, he is starting a whole new chapter in a remarkable career—a seasoned chef at last.

Filled with rampant egos, cutthroat kitchen politics, and settings ranging from Monte Carlo to Paris and Napa Valley, The Seasoning of a Chef is a real and rare glimpse into the food industry. More than anyone until now, Doug Psaltis reveals vividly and honestly the hardships, sacrifices, and dreams of glory that are all part of becoming a great chef.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Hot stoves, sharp knives, insanely long hours, low pay and no formal training—Psaltis pursued a relentless apprenticeship, parlaying each kitchen opportunity into another, including spending his few days off working unpaid in other restaurants, until he reached the culinary world's major leagues, working at Bouley Bakery in New York, the French Laundry in California and, most notably, for Alain Ducasse in New York and Monte Carlo, and as the original chef at Ducasse's restaurant Mix in New York. Written in the first person with assistance from his brother, Michael, Psaltis's story focuses on the professionalism and perfection required in the best restaurants. Like any great insider account, it brims with intriguing tidbits about various players and politics in the restaurant world, reveals some lesser-known practices and relays firsthand accounts of high-stakes mishaps and blunders. Details about the opulence and drive for excellence in the Ducasse restaurants, as well as Psaltis's opinionated account of practices in the "talent deficient" kitchen at the French Laundry are particularly eye-opening. Required reading for those considering culinary careers, this memoir is an appetizing indulgence for anyone who's ever wondered about the workings of a world-class kitchen.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

Adult/High School–From his inauspicious beginning as an emergency substitute emptying the garbage and hauling sacks of potatoes from the basement of his grandfather's diner, Doug Psaltis rose to the heights of the gourmet culinary world to become the American protégé of Alain Ducasse and chef of his New York restaurant Mix. He describes each of his jobs in kitchens in bagel bakeries, one-person delis, fine restaurants on Long Island, and three- and four-star restaurants in New York and France. He explains how each type of kitchen is organized and how the arduous work is done. Yet, despite the poor working conditions, poor pay, and poor communications among the restaurant owners and managers and the kitchen staff, Psaltis relishes his work as a chef. The politics of each establishment, the passion to achieve, the anxiety of this high-stress occupation, and Psaltis's almost constant shift from one kitchen to another make this book a suspenseful read. Teens considering such work will gain insight into a potential career.–Jane S. Drabkin, Chinn Park Regional Library, Woodbridge, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway; 1st ed edition (September 13, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0767919688
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767919685
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.9 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #955,822 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A chef's perspective - like it or not, April 17, 2006
By 
This review is from: The Seasoning of a Chef: My Journey from Diner to Ducasse and Beyond (Hardcover)
Other readers seem to have come to this book with an odd set of expectations. You don't read a book by a working chef for detailed descriptions of gorgeous meals. While the best chefs have a deep appreciation of food, they don't spend hours rhapsodizing over the food they make; in fact, you might be surprised how seldom they even taste it. Unless they're heading the kitchen, they seldom see the food being made at stations other than the one they're working. People who want to read about eating (as opposed to cooking) would do better to seek out the works of Calvin Trillin, Jeffrey Steingarten, M.F.K. Fisher, Ruth Reichl, and others who've spent more time in the dining room than the kitchen.

It's also fairly superfluous to criticize a head chef -- or someone who aspires to be a head chef -- for being a snob. Egalitarian cooks usually end up as journeyman cooks working in inferior kitchens, since they've never developed a stringent set of standards for themselves. Sure, Anthony Bourdain tells amusing stories with plenty of sex and drugs, but he has described himself as a journeyman. Here is the story of a cook who aspires to be more than that, and who's more interested in the work itself than the after-work debauchery. KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL was a terrific book, but in the wake of its tiresome imitators looking to top one another with tales of restaurant excess, I found Doug Psaltis' single-minded work ethic refreshing. It is seen too seldom, both in restaurant kitchens and in the body of literature that has begun to emerge from them.

THE SEASONING OF A CHEF is a convincing and seemingly honest look at the inner workings of several kitchens, and, more broadly, at the development of one serious cook. I won't deny that Psaltis comes off as a bit insufferable at times, as when he declares that cooks who have families and children aren't really dedicated to the business -- most of the finest chefs I've known have had significant others and/or families -- but he's young yet and one hopes he will find someone able to share an admittedly hard life. The tale of the debacle that was Mix is particularly entertaining, especially if you've had occasion to deal with corporate front-of-the-house pinheads who didn't understand how a kitchen works, or if you are close to someone who has. I look forward to hearing about -- and from -- Doug Psaltis again in the future.
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14 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Becoming a chef, but why?, November 2, 2005
This review is from: The Seasoning of a Chef: My Journey from Diner to Ducasse and Beyond (Hardcover)
There has been controversy about this book , which has been described as being less than truthful and exaggerates the author's contributions to the restaurants he worked in. That has been discussed extensively elsewhere, so I am basing my opinion on what is actually in the book.
The author/chef has undoubtedly worked very hard to get where he is, and much of the book describes how long and hard a chef must work to become great. What is missing is what inspired this chef to devote himself to this demanding work.
There is a curious lack of discussion about food in a book that about the training of a chef. While the mechanics of creating great food are discussed extensively, food itself gets little mention, and this undermines the story the author is trying to tell. After reading this book I have no idea what kind of food the chef loves to cook or what flavors or styles inspire him to create.

In the book Mr Psaltis comes across as being driven to cook rather than loving what he creates. At times he questions why he is doing what he does, and this is question is never really answered for the reader, a serious flaw in a book about becoming a chef.

The people the author worked with at various restaurants rarely come alive on the page, with many people being dismissed as " not there to learn" and the author comes across as believing he is better and more hard-working than almost everyone in every kitchen he enters, and this attitude wears thin quickly.
As an insider's view of the restaurant world, there are some interesting tidbits, but overall this is a passionless and not terribly informative look at one man's experience in some specific restaurants . Therefore this book is most likely to appeal to NYC food world insiders and restaurant professionals than the general reader. Instead, I recommend The Soul of Chef and Kitchen Confidential for two very different but interesting and informative takes on becoming a chef.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars From a professional Cook., April 4, 2007
By 
J. Neuman (seattle, wa usa) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Seasoning of a Chef: My Journey from Diner to Ducasse and Beyond (Hardcover)
This book is really the most entertaining for industry professionals, or people who are interested in the inner workings of the restaurant business. There is no talk about specific dishes really, or recipes, or taste profiles. This is the story of one cooks rise from the bottom of the kitchen, to the top of it. Its a very candid and entertaining ride that many cooks go through, including me. Any professional cook can relate to this book and will be glued to it. Most people don't understand the type of dedication required to cook at this level, and ones who have read about, don't seem to believe it. But Chef Psaltis' story is wonderfully executed, and is a true enjoyment. To see the journey of a Chef, buy this book, if you're looking for food facts, don't.
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