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The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food Paperback – April 7, 2015

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,027 ratings

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“Not since Michael Pollan has such a powerful storyteller emerged to reform American food.” —The Washington Post

Today’s optimistic farm-to-table food culture has a dark secret: the local food movement has failed to change how we eat. It has also offered a false promise for the future of food. In his visionary
New York Times–bestselling book, chef Dan Barber, recently showcased on Netflix’s Chef’s Table, offers a radical new way of thinking about food that will heal the land and taste good, too. Looking to the detrimental cooking of our past, and the misguided dining of our present, Barber points to a future “third plate”: a new form of American eating where good farming and good food intersect. Barber’s The Third Plate charts a bright path forward for eaters and chefs alike, daring everyone to imagine a future for our national cuisine that is as sustainable as it is delicious.
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Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
1,027 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and insightful. They appreciate its food philosophy and the author's writing style. The book explores the connection between ecology, farming, and cuisine. Readers appreciate the entertaining stories and cultural aspects.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

101 customers mention "Readability"101 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They recommend it as an important read that changes their views on food. The book provides plenty of stories and arguments for integrating food and nature, inspiring readers to follow up with others.

"...Overall the book delivers, it provides plenty of stories and arguments for other ways of farming our food...." Read more

"...A great book!" Read more

"...he as written this as though it is almost a novel but is actually a text book, concerning horticulture, agriculture, forest gardening / permaculture..." Read more

"The Third Plate is a tremendously interesting book about the future of food...." Read more

78 customers mention "Insight"78 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful and informative. They appreciate its well-researched and thought-out content. The book provides an engaging tour of people who have discovered new environmental solutions.

"...The author also goes into detail to explain the different processes and systems that need to exist for a farm-to-table movement to be mainstream -..." Read more

"An insightful and hopeful approach to delicious and wholesome food, produced by an environmentally/economicaly sustainable food production system,..." Read more

"...It also really does a great job in explaining exactly what happens with Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) and Genetically Engineered (GE) seeds..." Read more

"...Barber gives some great personal examples of ways to stop the slide...." Read more

39 customers mention "Food philosophy"39 positive0 negative

Customers find the book's food philosophy engaging. They say it explores the love for whole foods and changes their views on food. The book is a must-read for foodies and those interested in sustainable food choices. Readers mention the story about foie gras and how delicious lamb came to Louis Palladin.

"An insightful and hopeful approach to delicious and wholesome food, produced by an environmentally/economicaly sustainable food production system,..." Read more

"...In The Third Plate he takes you on a journey of self discovery and food discovery. Where does it come from? Why are our methods so wrong?..." Read more

"This book is about food, farming and ecology. I'm a plantsman training to be a farmer and I loved The Third Plate...." Read more

"Wonderful book! It really changed my outlook on food. Dan is very candid and humble, I completely disagree with the reviewers who felt him elitist...." Read more

35 customers mention "Writing style"32 positive3 negative

Customers find the writing style clear and readable. They appreciate the author's lucid presentation of complex information.

"...There is the added advantage of the fact that he writes well. And tells an engaging story...." Read more

"...His personality and work ethic enhances his writing and work as a chef, it doesn't detract. Every reader will reap the benefits." Read more

"...His most recent book: The Third Plate is intelligent, very well written, insightful, educational and emotionally tied to his philosophy of cooking..." Read more

"It was beautifully written. I have admired this man for years. The respect he gives to the many people in their craft is obvious in this book...." Read more

34 customers mention "Environmental impact"34 positive0 negative

Customers find the book informative about sustainable and healthy living. They appreciate its coverage of soil health and the connection between ecology, conservation, and cuisine. The book offers sustainable food options that benefit both the environment and animals.

"...and wholesome food, produced by an environmentally/economicaly sustainable food production system, one based on free enterprise, not our destructive..." Read more

"...as though it is almost a novel but is actually a text book, concerning horticulture, agriculture, forest gardening / permaculture, and the..." Read more

"...He is also an incredible environmentalist and should be as famous if not more than Michael Pollen!..." Read more

"This book is about food, farming and ecology. I'm a plantsman training to be a farmer and I loved The Third Plate...." Read more

18 customers mention "Storytelling"18 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the engaging and interesting stories in the book. They find the storytelling entertaining and exciting, with fascinating stories about people and places. Readers appreciate the book's fun and challenging content.

"...job of presenting most of the present day issues but does so in an entertaining and very informative way as though he is speaking directly to..." Read more

"...his our personal autobiography into the book which personally kept me engaged...." Read more

"...This book is wonderfully informative, and superbly entertaining at the same time...." Read more

"...that are possible. Fun book, challenging." Read more

9 customers mention "Culture"9 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's cultural insights. They find the stories of unique people and their impressive projects engaging. The people in the book are described as passionate and driven by food quality.

"...I thought this phrase captures the deep cultural link that the author is trying to portray about the local villages and their relation with nature,..." Read more

"...chef to be inspired by, especially with his overwhelming passion for great products, where they come from and how to produce them...." Read more

"..._a lot_ about food, the natural world, agriculture, and several regional cultures (rural New York, Spain and the Southeast US) ." Read more

"...His stories are not only amusing but also humbling and passionate. Although I'm not one to re-read, I just may with this book." Read more

8 customers mention "Knowledge level"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the book informative and well-written. They describe the author as knowledgeable, passionate, and an important voice in the space.

"First, Chef Dan Barber is innovative and taking how we should raise our food to a whole new level...." Read more

"...Barber is passionate without crossing over into being a fanatic and he left me wondering how to create a high-yield farm without sacrificing soil..." Read more

"...Extremely important read for all chefs, upcoming and seasoned professionals." Read more

"...Barber is brilliant and an excellent writer. Engaging stories abound in this book. Worth the time to plow through it (pun intended)." Read more

Not A new book, as advertised
1 out of 5 stars
Not A new book, as advertised
This is a review of the book as a product, not of the book as a book. only a few pages in, there’s a sizable chunk missing from the bottom of a page. Being that this is a new book, that’s simply unacceptable.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 2, 2016
    I've started reading this book after having read multiple others on the same topic - books about crop rotation, impact of mono-cultures on soil, impact of soil in the relationship between fertilizers and the lack of in organic farming. I've also read books about aquaculture, that explain why tuna catching is bad, why some fish are better for farming than other and why the ocean really is the perfect example of the tragedy of the commons - something everyone can use but you can never regulate it as it belongs to everyone.

    Reading one negative review of this book (a 3 star review on Amazon) that depicted the book as a neo-hippie wishful thinking for rich people also put me in a different state of mind than I would have wanted. Truth be told, I think it was the perfect way to start the book - a bit skeptical, thinking I will fast forward through chapters.

    I was taken aback multiple times on the amount of research that went into this book. The personal relationships that this book forged span over decades. I've learned a great new deal of things that the previous books I've read haven't captured:
    • Dehesa - the acorn forests where the jamon iberico is farmed, rotational grazing and fattening of the animals on acorns, the people that use it, the love for the animals and the lifestyle that leads to one of the most expensive cuts of pork.
    • Alhambra fishing in Cadiz - a fishing method that the locals think it's centuries old, that actually started in the 80s once the Sushi frenzy started. Before that, anchovies were the main catch in the region. The region also has a strong seasonal wind, called levante. The locals say it's strong enough to bring ghosts from the grave, if it blows over a cemetery. I thought this phrase captures the deep cultural link that the author is trying to portray about the local villages and their relation with nature, overarching with the main theme of the book.
    • I've learned of farmers that are able to make foie gras without force feeding. The paragraph with Eduardo (the geese farmer) calling his geese "Hola bella!" and talking daily to them is something that I will probably always have in mind remembering about this book.

    Although I feel books like this one increased in popularity after the great success of Pollan's Omnivores Dilemma, I have found this book to be on par with that.

    The author also goes into detail to explain the different processes and systems that need to exist for a farm-to-table movement to be mainstream - all of this through the different characters and people he has visited over the years - wheat farmers that went organic and expanded their model to their entire community, grain farmers that created grain mills for organic grains, seed farmers that helped the community through buy-back schemes for seeds and other by-products; rice farmers that are experimenting with 40 thousand(!) varieties of rice.

    Sometimes the, what I suspect, faked ignorance of the author to push the story line further seems out of place. When juggling with multiple story lines, timelines and characters you would expect to have plenty of natural reasons to explain the topic. However, the author is a famous chef, not an experienced writer and this is just a personal observation that doesn't take away from the main topic.

    Overall the book delivers, it provides plenty of stories and arguments for other ways of farming our food. When eating meat, cooking nose-to-tail means using everything from the animal, not just the good parts - something that probably I am guilty of as well. When cooking with vegetables, the equivalent is cooking with all the grains and vegetables that are not as popular as the main ones. The book makes a great case for why, as I believe there are multiple flavors and variances by doing just that.

    Now I understand the 3 star review that influenced my initial mood - I will probably have a hard time using anything from this book to have a better ecological or environmental impact. While the book isn't an advocacy book, it does encourage change - what type of change can I have an impact on? Hard to say. I won't be buying organic fish from Spain as much as I won't be able to convince my local farmers to start experimenting with different breeds of grains that I will mill myself into a perfect bread that tastes like nuts or chocolate (as it does in the book).

    I do, however, believe that this sort of push will have an impact that will trickle down at some point. For how long or when? Even the author thinks it might be 2050 or it might be for other generations. He quotes the Mennonites in the book: "A person starts raising his children even before they are born." The quote is used to advocate for building long lasting and self-sustaining change in the way our food is grown, in the way our food is cooked and in the way we allow this alternate system to gain roots. If the focus is exclusively on shelf life and yield as it is now with the mainstream farming industry, the flavor will decline as this is the main trade-off.

    The book tells us it's a trade-off that exists by chance. However it's not coincidental, it ended like that by design with the purpose of reducing starvation. However it came with a cost, a big environmental cost and a big flavor-deficient one as well. The elusive aromas and flavors that the author describes leave one in a state of never ending day-dreaming. Is this enough for a rallying cry, for us to push the industry in a place where we get flavor and affordability? Most experts think it's not possible, at least the ones cited in the book. It's definitely not easy and the flavor comes with a big trade-off of itself - seasonal variance and lack of uniformity. If that sounds like a paradox, you are correct.

    But having your daily bread have a different taste every morning, based on the type of grain and the location of where it was farmed, might put away a lot of risk-averse food enthusiasts. This is where the author got the title of the book, The Third table, as he realizes there is a need for a change, but it can and should mostly come in the form of an alternate parallel system that will exist with the mainstream agricultural one.

    What will be the entry price to get into that system as a consumer? Right now it's high, as access to these goods is mostly at 2 and 3 star restaurants. After reading the book, I feel that is well deserved - as it will take a lot of creativity and work to put all these new tastes to work.

    I think the area left to explore, from an economical and cultural point of view, is something that the book mentions very briefly at the end - the current wave of microbreweries. Their risk-embracing culture, their relentless experiments with a simple recipe, the appeal it has and the culture it has created. Most importantly, the economics and the market it has around it. It is exactly The Third plate, but for beer.

    As with every movement, it will need to reach critical mass for it to be walking on its own feet, people like Barber and this book explains beautifully the most important questions in this: why should we change it?
    17 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2016
    An insightful and hopeful approach to delicious and wholesome food, produced by an environmentally/economicaly sustainable food production system, one based on free enterprise, not our destructive, wasteful, subsidized system dominated by a few giants.

    This book is about healthier, better-tasting food. Basic food like bread, corn, rice, vegetables, beef, chicken, pork, etc.

    There is resistance to such common sense ideas, apparently by both by liberal/progressives and so-called ‘free-market’ proponents. These are reflected in some of the dismissive reviews posted (“snobbery”, “just for the rich” etc). These show how brainwashed we have become to accept Big Ag’s misrepresentation that the only way we can feed ourselves is to ‘commoditize’ food and treat America consumers as if they are like livestock.

    As a rancher, I ask how to insure that our cattle turn into beef that tastes better. As Barber points out, corn, rice and wheat farmers could again think about getting their customers better tasting bread, rice and tortillas. Its not just something for the fancy restaurants: The the simplest burger stand owner connects the dots between better taste and better income. And as Barber explains, better nutrition comes for free with better taste.

    The American public should insist on quality. That higher-quality food would cost too much is bogus. If we want to eat better than cattle, we should quit thinking like cattle, and in this regard, cooking, economics and politics turn out to be inseparable!

    A great book!
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2015
    Being as this is my business too, but from a different direction (as a grower), I have been recommending this book to everyone that I talk with. I have several times placed it on my Facebook page business page (Mizz Tizzy's Weeds and Seeds, LLC), with a description of what he is writing about, and recommendation for its many wonders on who and what it will benefit, with a link to it's Amazon page. And I have also placed the link to this book (through the Amazon link) on my personal FB page - I probably need a commission. I love that he as written this as though it is almost a novel but is actually a text book, concerning horticulture, agriculture, forest gardening / permaculture, and the conservation of the earth, and on and on. He has done an amazing job of presenting most of the present day issues but does so in an entertaining and very informative way as though he is speaking directly to you.

    I feel this book has done a fantastic job in helping people understand exactly how this all works in order to preserve Historic, Heirloom, and Ancient seeds, but also explains the many plusses in growing smaller acreage of crops rather than the giant monocultural crops. It also really does a great job in explaining exactly what happens with Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) and Genetically Engineered (GE) seeds and the very poor soil management of today. This is a fascinating field and is becoming more and more important for all to know about.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Rahuld13th
    5.0 out of 5 stars The best
    Reviewed in India on July 26, 2019
    An eye opener for everyone, especially those in the field of hospitality, must buy if you come across this. Loads to learn.
  • farmerX
    5.0 out of 5 stars Important book, joyful journey
    Reviewed in Germany on June 30, 2020
    An amazing odyssee that might give hope, that changes are possible in the sector of agriculture and food production. Dan Barber meets top producers, breeders, conservationists. I would love to visit Steve and his bread lab and I would love to try some of his breeds at home in Austria.
  • Victoria Houssay
    5.0 out of 5 stars Really interesting
    Reviewed in France on November 5, 2015
    I really like Dan Barber's point on view. I highly recommend this book. Definitively worth reading !
    Not difficult to read and very interesting
  • E. C
    5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting read!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 7, 2021
    Lovely, easy to read writing from a very knowledgeable chef who cares about the future of our food & environment.
  • Berwin McElhiney
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in Australia on September 15, 2015
    Its a must read if you care about the food you eat and the world we live in!!