An Interview with Clifford A. Wright
February 24, 2013 by LindsayWe recently had a chance to chat with Clifford A. Wright. Clifford, a specialist in Mediterranean cuisines, was a winner of the James Beard Cookbook of the Year and Beard Award for the Best Writing on Food for his 2000 cookbook, A Mediterranean Feast. He just published a new cookbook, One-Pot Wonders, which Susie reviewed in her Cookbook roundup, stating “What Clifford Wright doesn’t know about stew and soups from all over the world isn’t worth knowing.”
We posed three questions:
What do you most enjoy about writing a cookbook? And what don’t you like?
My favorite part of writing a cookbook is, I guess, eating. I love the food I test. Seriously though I think it’s twofold: the research, because I mostly write about culinary cultures and traditional home cooking, and the literal cooking, hot pans and sharp knives. What I don’t care to do so much is the shopping for food that often involves multiple stops and the frustrating wait on check-out lines.
What were some key influences on you when you started cooking?
I began to cook when I was 15-years-old, because my first job was working as a busboy in a very high end restaurant and I was enormously influenced by what I saw there. I remember using the Betty Crocker cookbook to make crepes suzettes.
Within a year, though, I had my favorite cookbook, and to this day it’s one of the best cookbooks ever and a book that should be in everyone’s library, especially if you like Italian food, and that is Ada Boni’s Italian Regional Cooking. This was the book that opened my eyes. Every kid who grows up in New York thinks they know Italian food. What Boni showed me is that I knew nothing. It was a magical book for me, as exciting, revealing, and as portentous as if I was reading a Harry Potter book. I don’t know if it was the first cookbook I ever owned but it sure is up there as one of the first.
What’s your best recipe?
I’m not sure what recipe would be associated with me as my “best” but I have some go-to recipes I do for very special guests when I’m not recipe testing (which a cookbook author does all the time) and those would be, in no particular order, ossobuco, bouillabaisse, timballo di maccherone (macaroni pie), the elaborate Moroccan pigeon pie known as bastila, cannoli for a sweet and, surprisingly, my hummus which people tell me is the best they ever had.
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