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Where Are Seattle’s Copies of Modernist Cuisine Stashed?

Tomorrow we find out if this locally created book wins a James Beard award. Today we ask people where they keep it.

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Chefs and cooks who use Modernist Cuisine’s volumes say a game-changing culinary tome like this comes along once a century. Those lucky enough to own a copy stash them in a variety of places, usually where it can be easily admired.

Photo via Modernist Cuisine

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Scott Heimendinger
Blogger at seattlefoodgeek.com and, as of January, Business Development Manager for Modernist Cuisine

“There’s one in my office, but I’ve got my personal copy at home, which is perhaps my most coveted possession. When I first got it I kept it on a shelf near the dining room…it was pretty much visible from anywhere in the downstairs of out house. It was there for five months or so then my wife moved it to the guest room/home office…I think it had had enough glory.”

“I cook a ton out of it. In fact, I’m cooking out of it as we speak. The beef cheek pastrami, which may be the best food on earth, is brining in my fridge. But I’m careful when I’m cooking out of it—the book has to stay pristine. In fact…I was one of the first people outside the MC team to actually physically have a copy of the book . I got a review copy…and I was so excited and crazy and I literally brought the books to bed every night. After some time, the review period was up, but I made arrangements that I could buy that specific copy. That’s the one that I’ll give to my great grandchildren, that first copy from the first printing…I don’t let people touch them with dirty hands.”

Photo Credit: Scott Heimendinger

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Canlis

The restaurant has an extensivee cookbook library, and the entire staff has access to it. Canlis also has an education fund dedicated to purchasing new books, and will buy any volume a staff member requests—as long as the employee does a book report on it in front of the class. I mean, staff.

Photo Credit: Brian Canlis

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Of course, MC is part of Canlis’s collection. But because of its preciousness, it’s not kept with the rest of the lowly books. Instead, it usually lives in the office, where it’s just a little more difficult to check out. (We hope the book report was a team effort for this one…)

Photo Credit: Brian Canlis

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Thierry Rautureau
Executive Chef of Rover’s and Luc

“Half is on my desk in the office, the other half is in the kitchen at Rover’s,” says Rautureau, who contributed a recipe to the tome. “How many people have said they keep it in the bathroom?”

Rautureau has traveled to Spain, arguably the molecular gastronomy motherland, with Nathan Myhrvold, visiting El Bulli and El Celler de Can Roca. (In fact, Myhrvold spent two years in Rautureau’s kitchen as a stagiaire.) The chef has one of the first copies, and he and his staff have fun playing with the books in the back recesses of the Rover’s kitchen.

“I think mostly we look at ideas then, of course, we try to mess with them,” he says. “We have a lot of discombobulated people in this job because you can just create without measuring anything; and true, that’s part of what makes the job attractive. But actually, to me, it’s so fascinating to understand certain things that have never before been explained…to really understand and realize ‘I can mess with this, I can change this.’”

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Scott Carsberg
Chef at Bisato (formerly Lampreia)

Carsberg first met Nathan Myhrvold when he was a customer at Lampreia. He contributed three recipes to Modernist Cuisine and showed Myhrvold’s team several unusual techniques, including how to butcher a geoduck. Chefs that contributed to the book received copies of their own, and Carsberg confesses that MC coauthor Maxime Bilet recently came to dinner and ribbed him for the uncracked volumes, which sit on a sideboard in the restaurant’s dining room.

“I do enjoy the science of cooking, but I believe a carrot should be a carrot,” says Carsberg. “What the book has done for me personally is taught me how to organize recipes, and how to better teach certain types of techniques.”

Photo Credit: Andrew Fawcett

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William Belickis
Chef and owner of MistralKitchen

Parties that reserve the restaurant’s chef’s table get to dine with Modernist Cuisine just over their shoulders. “We don’t really treat it that differently; I want it to be accessible to guests and staff,” says Belickis. Well, that and the acrylic-encased volumes are too big to fit on the nearby shelves that hold the rest of MistralKitchen’s cookbook library. The books are clearly well-thumbed; Belickis says the kitchen staff uses them as references for tasks like agar base clarification (obviously, doesn’t everyone do that?), and when the chef’s table is unoccupied, other diners come by to marvel at the books.

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Marc Schermerhorn
Blogger at baketard.com, Microsoft employee when not roasting suckling pig at home

As the proud owner of around 1,000 cookbooks, of course Marc Schermerhorn has a copy of MC. The self-confessed cookbook hoarder displays the art volumes in the pass-through between his kitchen and living room, but the companion kitchen manual, “the actual cookbook” lives on his nightstand. Schermerhorn, known to many Seattle food folk for his engagingly foul-mouthed Twitter presence, has done most of his Modernist cooking with his friend Scott Heimendinger, most notably a failed attempt at gin and tonic spheres. But he’s eager to try again soon, because, hey: “What’s more cool than a portable gin and tonic?”

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Jason Wilson
Chef at Crush

Wilson was “a giddy school boy” when he got his copy of MC. To add to the excitement, he attended at dinner at the lab around the same time as the book came out and was thrilled by the meal. Now the set lives in his bookcase, minus whichever volume he’s working through, which gets the prime real estate of the bedside table. Wilson’s thoughts on the book: “It’s the most important piece of information on gastronomy that has been written, definitely a game changer for everyone."

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Jethro Odom
Blogger at jetcitygastrophysics.com, Neuromonitoring Technician when not making liquid-center eggs

“I keep it on top of a low bookcase, where you can see it. Our kitchen and dining room are connected, so when I cook from it, I definitely leave it safely on the dining room table…I’m working through the books, I’m just about halfway through the second volume.”

Odom tells a story of being over at Heimendinger’s house with fellow food nerd, Eric Rivera (who now works at Alinea in Chicago), gawking at MC just after he’d picked it up. The next day, Heimendinger realized the books were gone. “I didn’t know what happened to them—I freaked out,” he recalls. “This was when they were in short supply and you couldn’t just get them.” He called his wife in a panic, convinced that someone had heard he had the books, found his address, and broke in to steal them. “But of course, Jethro and Eric just put it in the other room.”

Photo Credit: Jethro Odom

Modernist Cuisine, the 2,438-page, 40-plus-pound, five-volume, $625, gastronomic opus created by the Bellevue-based team of mad chef-scientists sold out before it even came out back in March of 2011. Creator Nathan Myhrvold, his team, his lab, and his book were the center of the food world’s attention, and everyone wanted to get their paws on a copy of the book. Now, more than a year later, the waiting list for the library’s copies remains in the triple digits, a reported 45,000 people have bought the books, generating $20 million in sales, and those who own the tome guard it with a reverence usually reserved for diamond jewelry and family heirlooms.

Tomorrow, May 4, we find out whether Modernist Cuisine will bring home a James Beard award for Best Cookbook: Cooking from a Professional Point of View. We were curious where the proud Seattle owners keep their copies. Also, what does one actually do with a cookbook like this? (You don’t keep it in the kitchen, that’s for sure.) Inspired by those annual stories about where Oscar winners keep their golden trophies; we bring you a slideshow of where local chefs (think Bisato, Canlis, Crush, MistralKitchen and Rover’s), and food nerds (one of whom describes it as his "most prized possession) keep their copies of Modernist Cuisine.

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Tags: Crush, Modernist Cuisine, Bisato, Canlis, MistralKitchen, Rover's

Deals and Discounts

Bisato Offering 520 Toll Discount

Transit-based deals have inched their way into fine dining.

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Scott Carsberg’s startlingly beautiful plates now come with a $5 comp for toll-payers. Photo: Lindsay Borden

These aren’t easy times for any of our local restaurants, but establishments in our downtown core are having a particularly tough go of it these days. Those 8pm extended parking hours can be a nasty surprise, or a dissuading factor. And for destination restaurants eager for Eastside clientele, the three-month-old 520 toll isn’t helping matters either. Add to that the perception (or the reality) that a nighttime walk through Belltown might feature drug deals, fisticuffs, or at the very least some dude peeing in an alley.

Today Bisato becomes the latest high-end restaurant to wade into the transit-based monetary enticement fray. James Beard–winning chef Scott Carsberg will knock $5 off your bill if you mention to your server that you came across the 520 en route to dinner. Bisato is operating on the honor system here, people, so don’t be shady about it. This little deal is good any time the restaurant is open.

Aqua by El Gaucho and El Gaucho Seattle also deduct $5 from the dinner bill if guests crossed the 520 bridge, and the company has a similar offer for the Tacoma Narrows Bridge for diners at its Tacoma location. Such promos usually aren’t the domain of higher-end restaurants, but serve as a reminder of tolling’s ripple effect, as well as some of the challenges facing establishments committed to staying in downtown and Belltown.

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Tags: Deals, Bisato, El Gaucho

The Top 10 New Dishes of 2010

The #1 New Dish of 2010: Orange Confit with Chocolate Caramel Mousse at Bisato

Okay, so the dish isn’t really new. But the experience of eating it is. Startingly so.

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The orange confit with chocolate caramel mousse at Bisato.

Photo courtesy Scott Eklund

What does it say about This Moment in Food that our dish of the year is a six-bite experience priced at $6.50, likely less than you paid to park?

Okay, it’s on the dessert menu. But still. I think it says that small plates, once blithely dismissed as “that tapas trend,” are pretty much here to stay. Small plates are the culinary equivalent of cargo pants—just when you think they’re about to go away forever, they come back in the biggest way. And at this point, we’re as comfortable with the noncommittal joys of a wee composed dish as we are with pockets billowing out from our thighs. Chefs, too, seem to have embraced the opportunity to send out their little works of much-worried-over art.

The orange confit with chocolate caramel mousse at Belltown’s Bisato is not, in fact, a new dish. Chef Scott Carsberg served it at Lampreia, the formal fine-dining restaurant he closed in early 2010, reopening in March with a new menu featuring “Venetian-style light fare.” Here’s what our own Kathryn Robinson had to say about his new place: “In spite of this restaurant’s more casual tone Carsberg still cooks in his arrogant classicist’s style—I say this with all admiration—even pulling the same arch tricks as at Lampreia, only now even trickier.”

The austere minimalism and pure flavors startle as they did at Lampreia, only all the more so since they’re experienced barside, whilst having cocktails with your pals and very likely wearing a pair of comfy cargo khakis.

But about that dish. It’s a two-part plate made up of A. a slice of orange cooked in sugar syrup, its form retained, and B. a quennelle of mousse made from sugar, butter, heavy cream, and chocolate. That’s six ingredients—for those of you counting—plus a whole lot of technique. The confit is sweet and a little sour (you eat the rind); the mousse is gooey goodness. They’re so simply glamorous together, it’s like Brad and Angelina on a dessert plate. And it kind of boggles the mind that you could have one, say, while meeting your girlfriend for a quick glass of wine after work. Or you might pop in hours after dinner, just because you happen to be in the neighborhood. That we get such food as this without committing to a white tablecloth and all the rest—it still makes me a little giddy to think about.

The dish may not be new, but the experience of eating it—an experience that speaks volumes about this particular epoch of the history of Seattle dining—most certainly is.

It’s the most memorable thing we ate in 2010.

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Tags: Belltown, Top 10 Dishes of 2010, 2010 in Food, Bisato

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