Journalist, author, and seasonal resident of Chilmark, Joanne Nathan holds a unique position in American letters and kitchens as America’s leading authority on Jewish culinary traditions from around the world.
A well-traveled author and chef, he has expanded his reach into the Jewish culinary diaspora through print reporting, television documentaries, and 11 cookbooks, including the James Beard Award-winning classic Jewish Cooking in America. I’ve been exploring.
Nathan’s 12th book, My Life in Recipes, was released this month to rave reviews in national newspapers and sold out author events on the East and West Coasts.
“I was very happy with the reception,” Nathan told the Gazette by phone from Los Angeles the morning after a rooftop party to celebrate his new book.
Many people help Chara make bread — gabriella herman
Part cookbook and part memoir, My Life in Recipes tells the story of how a young girl from Providence, Rhode Island, became an accomplished journalist, a widely respected food historian, and a go-to for generations of home cooks. It depicts the story of how it became a source of kitchen wisdom, with recipes included.
“This is a depiction of what happened to me,” Nathan said. Her fascinating book chronicles the stages of her life and career in 35 short chapters, each accompanied by more than 100 recipes and cooking tips.
“How the food is prepared is important,” she said.
My Life in Recipes can also be read as a how-to book for people like Nathan who want to make the most of life’s opportunities, from exploring family history to venturing into new jobs and cultures. Masu.
Writing with warmth and personality, Nathan enriches her memoir with diary entries, letters to friends and family, and excerpts from her early work, all of which shed further light on her reminiscences and recipes. I’m guessing.
It’s not always a happy light. “I cooked dinner, and everything was on fire,” the future food writer for the New York Times and Boston Globe confessed in 1956, when she was still a teenager.
But Nathan says mistakes are part of progress as a chef, and her memoir also includes a candid admission of past publishing mistakes and how she dealt with them. ing.
Shabbat dinner in the vineyard. — gabriella herman
“Everyone makes mistakes, but not everyone talks about them,” she told the Gazette. “I think it’s important to tell those stories. You learn more from your mistakes.”
My Life in Recipes follows Nathan’s journey from Providence and Long Island to studying in France and the United States, earning a master’s degree in French literature and then a master’s degree in public administration. It involves eating, cooking, and keeping records of where you go. .
Her time in Israel, where she worked for Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Korek and met her future husband, Allen Gerson, helped Nathan open her eyes to the full scope of Jewish culinary culture in the Middle East. For many years to come, she would travel the world, discovering new cuisines, Jewish and otherwise, everywhere she went.
Mr. Garson, whom he married in 1974, and his children were among the early recipe tasters of Mr. Nathan’s career. Ever since her family began summering in Chilmark nearly 50 years ago, the vineyard has become a testing ground for her summer recipe development.
Among the many recipes (such as rugelach) are also life stories centered around food and family. — gabriella herman
“You always cook a lot on the Vineyard. It’s very expensive when you go to restaurants. [and] “There are a lot of great chefs on the Vineyard,” she said.
Some of the Vineyard’s cooks and bakers appear in the book, along with the fishermen and farmers Nathan relies on for fresh, local ingredients.
The chapter titled “Summers on Martha’s Vineyard” includes a recipe for molasses muffins by Ross Lamkin, a former 7A Foods baker now with Pie Chicks. New York-style black and white cookies by Rachel Fox, founder of Behind the Bookstore, and five other dishes, including cod cakes and fish with rhubarb-tomato sauce.
Nathan said he also perfected Hungarian chicken livers with onions and red peppers, using chicken livers from Good Farms, which has since moved from the Vineyard to Connecticut.
“My Life in Recipes” follows Joan Nathan’s path from Providence and Long Island to her studies in France and to the vineyards. — gabriella herman
Her favorite island producer is Mermaid Farm.
“I love picking raspberries with Caitlin and just talking to her,” Nathan said, also praising North Tabor Farm.
“I love what North Tabor is doing,” she said. “Last year, their farm was the only one I actually planned to go to for dinner. I also took my grandkids to try the mushrooms, and they loved it.”
As a book so full of the warmth of family meals, My Life in Recipes was written in the midst of Mr. Nathan’s deep grief after Mr. Garson passed away from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in 2019. Began.
The shock of the unexpected loss was quickly followed by the pandemic, and Nathan took to riding his bike through the vineyard, mostly with his children. She said her interactions with them and her work in writing this book allowed her to keep Mr. Gerson’s presence with her despite her grief.
“I was lucky to be able to work on this book, and it allowed me to bring my husband into my life,” Nathan said, noting that she wasn’t talking about Gerson’s disappearance for 45 years. I explained that I wanted to write about it. they shared.
“I wanted to write about including him in my life,” she said.
Joanne Nathan is scheduled to perform July 12 at the Martha’s Vineyard Hebrew Center and August 1 at the Chilmark Community Center.
