Restaurant Review Journal
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Author | : Amy Newton |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 90 |
Release | : 2020-09-02 |
Genre | : Travel |
ISBN | : 9781649442352 |
This Restaurant Journal is perfect to record your experiences at restaurants, whether you are a food critic or just enjoy dining out. This journal/diary will help you keep track of your experiences at restaurants, which you like and don't like. Each page contains prompts that include: Restaurant Name- Restaurant Name, Date of Visit, Time of Reservation, Server Name, Manager on Duty. Party Members - Names, Meals Ordered, Quality, Price. Service - Warm Welcome?, Attentiveness & Pace of Service, Gave Good Recommendations?, Accuracy of Service. Beverage Service - Good Recommendations?, Experience Details?. Cleanliness - Restaurant Cleanliness, Restroom Cleanliness. Overall Review & Impressions - Would You Recommend?, Opportunities for Improvement. Mileage, Compensation, Received - Blank Lined to Write Your Number. Can also make a great gift for that special person. Perfect gifts for your family and friends. You will be able to keep all your information about the restaurants for writing your reviews all in one place and record your favorite, comes in handy. Size is 6x9 inches, 88 pages, white paper, soft matte finish cover, paperback. Easy to use daily. Get one now
Author | : Dennis Getto |
Publisher | : Trails Books |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : Restaurants |
ISBN | : 9780915024605 |
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's restaurant critic Dennis Ghetto presents 101 Wisconsin restaurants where you'll be sure to find excellent cuisine plus a whole lot more.
Author | : Joe Bastianich |
Publisher | : Penguin |
Total Pages | : 342 |
Release | : 2012-05-01 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1101583541 |
The New York Times Bestselling Book--Great gift for Foodies “The best, funniest, most revealing inside look at the restaurant biz since Anthony Bourdain’s Kitchen Confidential.” —Jay McInerney With a foreword by Mario Batali Joe Bastianich is unquestionably one of the most successful restaurateurs in America—if not the world. So how did a nice Italian boy from Queens turn his passion for food and wine into an empire? In Restaurant Man, Joe charts a remarkable journey that first began in his parents’ neighborhood eatery. Along the way, he shares fascinating stories about his establishments and his superstar chef partners—his mother, Lidia Bastianich, and Mario Batali. Ever since Anthony Bourdain whet literary palates with Kitchen Confidential, restaurant memoirs have been mainstays of the bestseller lists. Serving up equal parts rock ’n’ roll and hard-ass business reality, Restaurant Man is a compelling ragu-to-riches chronicle that foodies and aspiring restauranteurs alike will be hankering to read.
Author | : Tara Dairman |
Publisher | : Penguin |
Total Pages | : 305 |
Release | : 2015-04-07 |
Genre | : Juvenile Fiction |
ISBN | : 0142426369 |
“A scrumptious gem of a story!”—Jennifer A. Nielsen, New York Times bestselling author of The False Prince Meet Gladys Gatsby: New York’s toughest restaurant critic. (Just don’t tell anyone that she’s in sixth grade.) Gladys Gatsby has been cooking gourmet dishes since the age of seven, only her fast-food-loving parents have no idea! Now she’s eleven, and after a crème brûlée accident (just a small fire), Gladys is cut off from the kitchen (and her allowance). She’s devastated but soon finds just the right opportunity to pay her parents back when she’s mistakenly contacted to write a restaurant review for one of the largest newspapers in the world. But in order to meet her deadline and keep her dream job, Gladys must cook her way into the heart of her sixth-grade archenemy and sneak into New York City—all while keeping her identity a secret! Easy as pie, right?
Author | : Alison Pearlman |
Publisher | : Agate Publishing |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 2018-10-16 |
Genre | : Design |
ISBN | : 1572848227 |
An art expert takes a critical look at restaurant menus—from style and layout to content, pricing and more—to reveal the hidden influence of menu design. We’ve all ordered from a restaurant menu. But have you ever wondered to what extent the menu is ordering you? In May We Suggest, art historian and gastronome Alison Pearlman focuses her discerning eye on the humble menu to reveal a captivating tale of persuasion and profit. Studying restaurant menus through the lenses of art history, experience design and behavioral economics, Pearlman reveals how they are intended to influence our dining experiences and choices. Then she goes on a mission to find out if, when, and how a menu might sway her decisions at more than sixty restaurants across the greater Los Angeles area. What emerges is a captivating, thought-provoking study of one of the most often read but rarely analyzed narrative works around.
Author | : Vanina Leschziner |
Publisher | : Stanford University Press |
Total Pages | : 273 |
Release | : 2015-06-03 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 0804795495 |
This book is about the creative work of chefs at top restaurants in New York and San Francisco. Based on interviews with chefs and observation in restaurant kitchens, the book explores the question of how and why chefs make choices about the dishes they put on their menus. It answers this question by examining a whole range of areas, including chefs' careers, restaurant ratings and reviews, social networks, how chefs think about food and go about creating new dishes, and how status influences their work and careers. Chefs at top restaurants face competing pressures to deliver complex and creative dishes, and navigate market forces to run a profitable business in an industry with exceptionally high costs and low profit margins. Creating a distinctive and original culinary style allows them to stand out in the market, but making the familiar food that many customers want ensures that they can stay in business. Chefs must make choices between these competing pressures. In explaining how they do so, this book uses the case study of high cuisine to analyze, more generally, how people in creative occupations navigate a context that is rife with uncertainty, high pressures, and contradicting forces.
Author | : Gabriel Rucker |
Publisher | : Ten Speed Press |
Total Pages | : 354 |
Release | : 2013-09-17 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 1607744457 |
This debut cookbook from James Beard Rising Star Chef Gabriel Rucker features a serious yet playful collection of 150 recipes from his phenomenally popular Portland restaurant. In the five years since Gabriel Rucker took the helm at Le Pigeon, he has catapulted from culinary school dropout to award-winning chef. Le Pigeon is offal-centric and meat-heavy, but by no means dogmatic, offering adventures into delicacies unknown along with the chance to order a vegetarian mustard greens quiche and a Miller High Life if that's what you're craving. In their first cookbook, Rucker and general manager/sommelier Andrew Fortgang celebrate high-low extremes in cooking, combining the wild and the refined in a unique and progressive style. Featuring wine recommendations from sommelier Andrew Fortgang, stand-out desserts from pastry chef Lauren Fortgang, and stories about the restaurant’s raucous, seat-of-the-pants history by writer Meredith Erickson, Le Pigeon combines the wild and the refined in a unique, progressive, and delicious style.
Author | : Sara Roahen |
Publisher | : W. W. Norton & Company |
Total Pages | : 305 |
Release | : 2009-04-20 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 0393072061 |
“Makes you want to spend a week—immediately—in New Orleans.” —Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg, Wall Street Journal A cocktail is more than a segue to dinner when it’s a Sazerac, an anise-laced drink of rye whiskey and bitters indigenous to New Orleans. For Wisconsin native Sara Roahen, a Sazerac is also a fine accompaniment to raw oysters, a looking glass into the cocktail culture of her own family—and one more way to gain a foothold in her beloved adopted city. Roahen’s stories of personal discovery introduce readers to New Orleans’ well-known signatures—gumbo, po-boys, red beans and rice—and its lesser-known gems: the pho of its Vietnamese immigrants, the braciolone of its Sicilians, and the ya-ka-mein of its street culture. By eating and cooking her way through a place as unique and unexpected as its infamous turducken, Roahen finds a home. And then Katrina. With humor, poignancy, and hope, she conjures up a city that reveled in its food traditions before the storm—and in many ways has been saved by them since.
Author | : Gabrielle Hamilton |
Publisher | : Random House Incorporated |
Total Pages | : 306 |
Release | : 2011 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 140006872X |
The chef of New York's East Village Prune restaurant presents an unflinching account of her search for meaning and purpose in the food-central rural New Jersey home of her youth, marked by a first chicken kill, an international backpacking tour and the opening of a first restaurant. 50,000 first printing.
Author | : Edward Lee |
Publisher | : Artisan Books |
Total Pages | : 321 |
Release | : 2018-04-17 |
Genre | : Cooking |
ISBN | : 1579657389 |
Finalist, 2018 Goodreads Choice Awards “Thoughtful, well researched, and truly moving. Shines a light on what it means to cook and eat American food, in all its infinitely nuanced and ever-evolving glory.” —Anthony Bourdain American food is the story of mash-ups. Immigrants arrive, cultures collide, and out of the push-pull come exciting new dishes and flavors. But for Edward Lee, who, like Anthony Bourdain or Gabrielle Hamilton, is as much a writer as he is a chef, that first surprising bite is just the beginning. What about the people behind the food? What about the traditions, the innovations, the memories? A natural-born storyteller, Lee decided to hit the road and spent two years uncovering fascinating narratives from every corner of the country. There’s a Cambodian couple in Lowell, Massachusetts, and their efforts to re-create the flavors of their lost country. A Uyghur café in New York’s Brighton Beach serves a noodle soup that seems so very familiar and yet so very exotic—one unexpected ingredient opens a window onto an entirely unique culture. A beignet from Café du Monde in New Orleans, as potent as Proust’s madeleine, inspires a narrative that tunnels through time, back to the first Creole cooks, then forward to a Korean rice-flour hoedduck and a beignet dusted with matcha. Sixteen adventures, sixteen vibrant new chapters in the great evolving story of American cuisine. And forty recipes, created by Lee, that bring these new dishes into our own kitchens.