fbpx
The Very First Fine-Dining Cookbook
I know a Good Story / November 21, 2016

Every Thanksgiving a fair proportion of the American populace tries to transform themselves into chefs.  Although we spend more money eating out than on groceries these days and not cooking 40 percent of the suppers we serve, Thanksgiving is the day when we take to our kitchens and attempt to cook “traditional” dinners.  Add that to this decade’s obsession with fine dining and there’ll be a lot of untrained cooks in the kitchen this week trying to pretend they’re Escoffier.  If you’re looking for a cookbook rich in tradition that will make your Thanksgiving feast the talk of the town, have I got one for you! How to Cook a Peacock a/k/a Le Viandier is so much more than an eye-catching cookbook, it’s a journey into medieval France.  These are the recipes of Gillioume Tirel, chef to Philip IV, Charles V, and Charles VI of France.  So when you serve dishes that come from this book, your guests can claim they feasted like kings. But I should say this is no ordinary cookbook. See, the 14th century wasn’t as obsessed as we are with precision.  There’s not a word about cooking temps or time in the book.  Nor are there any of…