UPDATED ON 4/27/2015- SEE LAST PARAGRAPH
This article was written for suite101.com and appeared on 8/15/11. This content is not current.
Now in its seventh season on the Travel Channel, No Reservations, like a good wine, continues to improve with age. The photography, editing, locations and adventures are more entertaining than ever. The title of the show is a play on words: chef and author Anthony Bourdain travels the entire world eight months out of the year looking for the perfect meal, whether it be in a remote jungle, a floating market in
Anthony Bourdain began his career as a dishwasher, graduated
from the Culinary Institute of Arts in New
York , worked himself up to professional chef and
became a household word when a book he wrote about the realities of working in
the culinary world, Kitchen Confidential became a bestseller. Part memoir, part magnifying glass into the
world behind the restaurant dining room wall previously inaccessible to the
average diner, Bourdain admits that he wrote the book not for general public
consumption, but rather for the brotherhood of professional chefs
everywhere. The success and notoriety
that resulted from this book, and others that followed, led Anthony Bourdain
from the kitchen burners of Les Halles in New York to the world of reality
television. Whatever you do, do not call him a celebrity
chef.
Over the years, Bourdain has ruminated over his disdain for
the Food Network Channel and what he considers an absurd public fascination
with the “celebrity chef”, a concept he feels is detached from the reality of being
a professional chef. In his book The
Nasty Bits, Bourdain takes no prisoners as he opines about chefs Bobby Flay,
Rocco Di Spirito and Emeril Lagasse, catchwords (ie, BAM!), corporate
evildoers, the raw food movement, vegetarians, etc. But throughout the many television episodes and
the multitude of books authored, this has become part of his allure and charm. Bourdain truly has the gift of the written
word. His thirty years of experience in
the culinary industry, and knowledge of food translates into fascinating
reading. The style and voice of his
writing is uniquely his own, and at many times, the brutal honesty and
unabashed nature of his words can send you into gut-wrenching, hysterical
laughter. His passion for food, people
and culture and the incredible journeys he takes has made him an ambassador
into a world that many of us will only dream of. In his book, A Chef’s Tour,
we even get a heart-touching glimpse into a softer side of Bourdain, to his
youth, as he reconnects with his younger brother on a visit to their childhood
vacation home in France .
Follow Tony's Blog or learn
more information at the Travel
Channel.
UPDATE 2015!!!!!
The Layover only aired 20 episodes. Anthony Bourdain can now be seen in Parts Unknown on CNN. Parts Unknown is now in its 5th season, and airs on Sundays at 9pm ET/PT.
Follow Anthony at these current sites:
http://anthonybourdain.tumblr.com/rss
http://www.cnn.com/shows/anthony-bourdain-parts-unknown
UPDATE 2015!!!!!
The Layover only aired 20 episodes. Anthony Bourdain can now be seen in Parts Unknown on CNN. Parts Unknown is now in its 5th season, and airs on Sundays at 9pm ET/PT.
Follow Anthony at these current sites:
http://anthonybourdain.tumblr.com/rss
http://www.cnn.com/shows/anthony-bourdain-parts-unknown
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