Hello, Guest! [Login] [Register]
Rural Intelligence: The Online Magazine for Eastern New York, Western Connecticut and the Southern Berkshires
Search Archives:
Sign up for our weekly e-newsletter:

Berkshire Grown

Red Lion Inn

Whippoorwill Farm Grassfed Beef

Guido's Marketplace

Red Devon Restaurant

Moon in the Pond Farm

The Guru of Indian Cooking Comes to Cornwall

[review full article]

Posted by: Dan Shaw
Posted on: Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Comments

IMPORTANT: You must be a member of Rural Intelligence and logged into the site to post comments.

If you are already a member please login below. If you want to become a member click here to register.



Auto-login on future visits

Show my name in the online users list

Forgot your password?

Bold, italics, strong, emphasis, and block quote tags are allowed in comments.

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Comment Guidelines

As we believe it promotes responsibility, civility and neighborliness, we encourage Commenters to use their real names unless there is compelling reason not to. In any case, profanity, personal attacks and unsubstantiated or excessive criticism of people or places will not be tolerated and will be deleted. By completing this form you are agreeing to abide by these rules and all terms laid out in the Rural Intelligence User Agreement.

For questions concerning the use of personally identifiable information, please refer to our Privacy Policy.

IMPORTANT: You must be a member of Rural Intelligence and logged into the site to post comments. Already a member? Click here to login. Want to become a member? Click here to register.

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


Full Article

In a world where the term “celebrity chef” is used to describe anyone who has ever cooked in front of a TV camera, Madhur Jaffrey is the real deal. Since publishing her first book, An Invitation to Indian Cooking (Knopf) in 1973, she has earned her celebrity by cooking (winning five James Beard Awards), writing (more than 15 books including, most recently, Climbing the Mango Trees: A Memoir of a Childhood in India), and acting (appearing in more than 20 films, including Merchant Ivory’s Heat and Dust.) She is the featured speaker at the Cornwall Library’s Food Glorious Food Festival on Saturday, June 20, at 2 PM. ($20 admission benefits the library)

If you’ve cooked Indian food at home or gone to a curry-themed dinner party, you owe a debt to Jaffrey. As Jonathan Reynolds wrote in The New York Times in 2003, “People who I thought knew nothing about cooking enjoy a hands-on relationship with her food. If Julia Child almost single-handedly brought serious French food into American homes, and Marcella Hazan brought other-than-meatballs Italian, and Jane Grigson miraculously salvaged some British food from unpalatability, then there is no question that Madhur Jaffrey not only changed the way this country views Indian food but also affected the way restaurants do, too—more than anyone.”

Food Glorious Food is an all-day affair that begins at 9:30 AM with a sale of cookbooks and used “batterie de cuisine” as well as the de rigueur silent auction (you can bid on a lunch for four at the Conde Nast cafeteria with Gourmet editor in chief Ruth Reichl, the ever-generous Austerlitz weekender.) You can bring your knives to be professionally sharpened by Nick Jacobs, shop the Cornwall Farmers’ Market, and attend a cocktail party ($20) with hors d’oeuvres prepared by local residents who will have the recipes available for sharing.

Food, Glorious Food Festival
June 20
Cornwall Library
30 Pine Street, Cornwall, CT