The Piglet2015 / Semifinal Round, 2015

Smashing Plates vs. My Paris Kitchen

Smashing Plates

Maria Elia

Get the Book

My Paris Kitchen

David Lebovitz

Get the Book

Judged by: Kate Christensen

Kate Christensen is the author, most recently, of Blue Plate Special: An Autobiography of My Appetites, as well as six previous novels, including The Epicure’s Lament and The Great Man, which won the 2008 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. She has written essays and reviews for numerous publications, most recently the New York Times Book Review, Bookforum, Cherry Bombe, Vogue, Food & Wine, and the Wall Street Journal, as well as many anthologies. She lives in Portland, Maine and the White Mountains and blogs about food and life in New England at katechristensen.wordpress.com. Her second nonfiction book, How to Cook a Moose, will be published by Islandport Press in September 2015. 

The Judgment

When I received my copies of Maria Elia's Greek-inspired cookbook, Smashing Plates, and David Lebovitz's largely French cookbook, My Paris Kitchen, they both looked so intriguing, I had no idea which one to start with. Luckily, Brendan, my willing accomplice and sous-chef in this project, and I had just been given a frozen leg of lamb by a neighbor, so we let the lamb decide. 

The lamb chose Greek: It wanted, in fact, to be slathered in fresh herbs and spices, lemon, and olive oil, wrapped in parchment paper, and slow-roasted for four hours until it melted tenderly off the bone. I know I would have felt exactly the same way if I were a leg of lamb. So I started with Smashing Plates.  

Not literally, of course. The plates stayed in the cupboard. But oddly, the title is referred to only obliquely in the introduction. Evidently, Maria -- I found myself referring to the cookbook authors as Maria and David as I cooked my way through their books, because they both started to feel like friends -- assumed that it’s common knowledge that this is a feature of traditional Greek weddings. Am I the only one who didn’t know that?  

The book’s title also refers to the fact that the recipes are Maria’s modern twists on classic Greek recipes. She reminisces in the introduction about two dishes -- one with pork, one with peas -- her father, a Greek chef, used to make when she was little. I instantly decided to make both, but it’s just a tease -- she doesn’t give us the recipes. The book was compiled during the course of a summer when she went to her father’s village in Cyprus, watched people cook, and then put her own spin on the food she’d found; she doesn’t speak Greek, so she learned by watching and doing. 

Smashing Plates is a modern, easy-to-use cookbook. The little anecdotes alongside the recipes are energetic and breezy, full of suggestions for variations of ingredients. However, they’re disconcertingly peppered with exclamation points, and they also occasionally become repetitive as she reintroduces people we’ve already met in the recipe prior. Overall, the book feels a bit rushed, and I found myself wishing that Maria had taken more care and time with it, slowed down a little. 

But these are quibbles. This is a cookbook that you can easily live with for a week, as I did, combining and recombining dishes, using up all the bunches of fresh mint, oregano, parsley, and thyme you bought with the Greek yogurt, tahini, and feta. I made Sardine Keftedes, which were delicious and very light, almost like falafel, with rich, luscious pea hummus (substituted for fava beans, as Maria suggested; shopping at the local Hannaford in the wilds of New Hampshire in the dead of winter was a challenge) and perfect tzatziki. The next night, I made the gigantes plaki. I had to use cheap canned butter beans, rinsed and drained, instead of dried authentic Greek plaki, but no matter: This recipe for a simple bean stew is nothing short of sublime. I added the vinegar, as Maria suggested (when she suggests vinegar, use it). The next morning, going to the next recipe, we ate the leftovers on toast with feta, mint, and cherry tomatoes. I pawed through the cookbook as I ate this amazing breakfast: What next? 

Next up was that leg of lamb, which had finally thawed in the refrigerator. Slow-roasted in parchment paper, subtly infused with cinnamon, cumin, dill, lemon, and oregano, it was luscious. We feasted on it for two nights with pea hummus, tzatziki, and tahini sauce. Maria suggests serving it with roast potatoes with lemon, but, as with her father’s tantalizing dishes, provides no recipe, so we improvised our own. They were perfect with the lamb, but a recipe would have been nice. 

The next night, and again the next, I used the leftover meat in her equally excellent recipe for pulled lamb burgers with slow-roasted onions and more herbs and spices (and vinegar). All was not so delightful, however, with the two side dishes I made to go alongside: The Celeriac Purée was disappointingly bland and insipid, and the Lemon Parsley Salad that was “inspired by a cooking show I once watched on television in Tuscany” was weird and nearly inedible. 

However, on the whole, I loved cooking from Smashing Plates. By the end of the week, the frigid White Mountains were balmy with Aegean breezes. The inside of my mouth felt alive and awake with piquant herbs and fresh ingredients, and my stomach was happy with all of this light, satisfying food that never made me feel overfull. (I had lost a few pounds, too, proving, perhaps, that the Mediterranean diet really does work, even when you’re not trying to lose weight.) Fresh oregano was a revelation: It’s nothing like dried. The food’s textures and tastes were varied, subtle, and cohesive, not forced, but respectful of a millennia-long marriage of these combinations. It’s a great cookbook for a multi-day house party, because everything’s meant to be eaten with everything else, and shared.  

And then I took my stomach north and inland to join David Lebovitz in his kitchen in Paris, where he’s been living and cooking for a decade. (Maybe now is the time to confess that I am evidently the only home cook who had never heard of David Lebovitz; everyone else is apparently already his fan. But now I’ve come out from the rock I’ve been living under and joined the rest of the world.) 

Like Smashing Plates, My Paris Kitchen is a cookbook to settle into and live with for days on end; again, I found myself with bunches of fresh herbs to use up, and again, I found myself pawing through the cookbook as I ate one meal, already planning the next. I also found myself reading the lovely, well-written introduction and essays at leisure, as all good food writing should be read. David hasn’t just written a cookbook; he’s created a world and invited us in to experience it as he does. 

Unlike Greek food, French food is not light. Brendan and I dove, with resolute and willing decadence, into a rich bath of butter, eggs, cheese, and mayonnaise. David’s recipe for oven-fried frites replicates the ones served at our corner bistro, only they’re better because they’re homemade. I made the Salted Olive Crisps with Artichoke Tapenade with Rosemary Oil and was transformed instantly into an expert hors d’oeuvriste, a term I invented on the spot for how I felt. And oh, the buttery, savory, expertly French-tasting Baked Eggs with Kale and Smoked Salmon. I made them two mornings in a row, and I would make them every day for the rest of my life, if I were willing to gain ten pounds a month.

I kept going, and each successive recipe was as swoon- and drool-worthy as the last: Mustard chicken. Crab, fennel, and blood orange salad. Lentil salad with goat cheese and walnuts. Herb omelet. Raw vegetable slaw. (However, the recipe calls for two tablespoons of minced garlic: I love garlic, but maybe he meant teaspoons.) His celeriac purée kicked the ass of Maria’s; he advocates cooking the celeriac with a bay leaf in milk and chicken stock instead of plain water, and that makes all the difference. The leftover broth makes a wonderful soup, too.   

Under David’s tutelage, I made my first mayonnaise. I made my first-ever pissaladière, that delectable French pizza of sweet caramelized onion and salty olives and anchovies on a crisp, thin crust. I couldn’t stop: I made the buckwheat crêpes slathered with seaweed butter and rolled up and fried in more butter, and they were so fantastically good we ate the entire batch in ten minutes and wanted more, our chins dripping with butter. But we moved happily on to Leeks with Mustard-Bacon Vinaigrette…

Then came the disappointment. The caramel pork ribs came out coated in a sticky sauce so sweet they were like candy, with tough, almost-burned meat. This caused me to reread David’s mini-essay about the French attitude toward cooking au pif, or by the nose: “Recipes are guidelines, starting points for cooks to diverge from. Take them in your own personal direction.” And so we did: The next night, we stuck the leftover ribs back into the oven for another hour at a lower temperature, and when they came out, we slathered them with Sriracha -- they were more tender and spicy on the second go-round. 

As I cooked, I felt that David was giving me the key to the mysteries of a certain kind of French home cooking. “There are many articles and books written about how French women cook,” he tells us in the story that precedes his partner’s father’s “winter salad” recipe, “but until this story that you’re now reading (and this book), there was very little mention of how men cook in France at home.” The recipe that follows, a breathtakingly simple endive and Roquefort salad, was so good I couldn’t stop eating it. Its magical alchemy tastes like an esoteric, gourmet delicacy whose recipe has been a family secret for 150 years.  

But this book is called “my” Paris kitchen, not “the” Paris kitchen, after all; rather than a general overview of male domestic French cuisine, this book is about how David Lebovitz cooks at home. And so we get recipes for quintessentially French food, but also wonderful varieties of hummus and tapenade, Indian cheese bread, shakshuka, and dukkah-roasted cauliflower. What knits all of these dishes together is the strong sense that they’re organically connected in David’s repertoire, and his stories and asides and anecdotes further this impression. These are lived-in recipes, developed and perfected over the years as he cooked at home for his partner and their friends. Like Maria’s cookbook, this one is filled with love: of a country and a culture and a people, a culinary history’s long-tried combination of ingredients and techniques.

After our week with David in his kitchen, I’d regained all the weight I’d lost in my time in Cyprus with Maria. Both cookbooks were spattered, dog-eared, creased, and covered in olive oil and smears of God knew what. Both cookbooks were placed at the forefront of the kitchen cookbook shelf for future, imminent use.

But I have to pick one. And so I choose the one that feels more substantial, more truly literary and classic, the one that welcomed me more thoroughly into its world, if only because the author has lived there for ten years rather than a summer with childhood memories. I choose the one that feels like a future long-treasured friend.

It’s My Paris Kitchen for the win, hands down. 

And the winner is…

My Paris Kitchen

My Paris Kitchen

Get the Book

Do you Agree?

64 Comments

Lisa W. March 11, 2015
Masterful writing! I wept a little feeling the romance Kate and Brendan had with these two wonderful books. Each time she "pawed" though the pages while eating luscious leftovers I wanted join HER.
 
kasia S. March 11, 2015
She has a wonderful blog, I read it but it makes my hungry hehe
 
chels March 10, 2015
This was the absolute best review. My mouth actually watered. So many great things cooked from both books!
 
cookinginvictoria March 10, 2015
FYI, David has responded to a reader query on his FB page and says that, yes, he did mean to use 2-3 tablespoons of garlic in his recipe for Raw Vegetable Slaw with Creamy Garlic Dressing:

"I did mean tablespoons. The word "garlic" is in the title of the recipe, and it makes 1 cup of dressing. Depending on your cloves, that's 2-3, which is how I like it : )"
 
Sandra March 10, 2015
Now this was a fair review. I appreciate the reviewer's commitment to cook from the books for a week, unlike some reviewers who apparently cooked one or maybe even no recipes from their books. I learned enough from this review to know i wantto try David's book - none of the other reviews had convinced me. Thanks for really putting these books through their pushups!
 
cookinginvictoria March 10, 2015
Such a well written, thoughtful and comprehensive review! Bravo to Kate Christensen for making so many dishes from each cookbook and writing so evocatively about her enjoyment of them.
Smashing Plates sounds like a great cookbook, but I have to admit that I have been secretly cheering for David's book all along. I received it for Christmas and I have been reading and cooking from it with a great deal of pleasure. That mustard chicken is one of the best dishes that I have made all year. The oven fried frites are addictive, as is the steak with mustard butter that the frites are paired with. We loved the dukkah roasted cauliflower and the croque monsieur sandwich. This is a cookbook not just to cook from but to read and reread and to lose yourself in. David's observations and head notes are wonderful. I especially loved his essay about how he found his oversized kitchen sink and why he feels that it's the most important thing in his kitchen. Looking forward to the finals!
 
LeBec F. March 10, 2015
Kate, It looks like a slew of 52ers are applauding your doing such due diligence and being so thorough for your experience-based comparison!
I hope David appreciates the seriousness of purpose that went into his winning this near final round; he is one very funny guy but he also sure knows his stuff. Thanks so much for all your work and for inspiring me to get familiar with both books. I hope the 52 community will see a lot more of your reports.
 
kat I. March 10, 2015
I didn't think I needed another book on French cooking but this one's a keeper
 
anotherfoodieblogger March 10, 2015
I was toying with the idea of getting My Paris Kitchen. I hope it wins!
 
Jessica H. March 10, 2015
Yay!
 
Karen G. March 9, 2015
I agree . I've never met a Lebovitz recipe I didn't like.
 
pandapotamus March 9, 2015
YAYYYYY! I hope David makes it to the end!
 
hobbit2nd March 9, 2015
Kudos to the reviewer for trying out several recipes - best review so far. I was sad to see two of my Piglet favorites going head-to-head, but happy to see My Paris Kitchen move on.
 
LJ S. March 9, 2015
I have My Paris Kitchen and have cooked many recipes from it with great success. It's a joy to read and the photography is beautiful.
I feel I now need to get a copy of Smashing Plates so I can run my own Piglet competition!
 
LJ S. March 10, 2015
Follow up: Smashing Plates, because of the Piglet review, is on my wish list. Brooks Headley's Fancy Desserts, because of the Piglet review, is not on my wish list.
 
Megan March 9, 2015
Mustard chicken! Sounds amazing. Looking forward to testing it out myself.
 
Rene' March 9, 2015
As others have said, I too feel this is the best review by far. I appreciate that Kate cooked many recipes from both books. Though I too like "My Paris Kitchen," after reading Kate's review I am intrigued by "Smashing Plates."
 
klrcon March 9, 2015
This is a great review - I applaud you for doing so much cooking from both books. It gives a real sense of the strengths and weaknesses of both books and it made me want to read them both.
 
Julie W. March 9, 2015
Love the effort Kate put into cooking with both books for a week ! Fun job! I love David Leibowitz so am excited he won . But I think the Greek cookbook would be great for summer entertaining at the beach .
 
tradess2013 March 9, 2015
But Christine, you are missing something out of this world regarding the mustard chicken....
 
Christine C. March 9, 2015
I don't have the book but have made the recipe that's on the cover, which is amazing. Based on that mustard chicken alone the book is on my wishlist.
 
Rachael C. March 9, 2015
Wonderful review! Kudos to David. I have just purchased My Paris Kitchen and i just love it.
 
Jo B. March 9, 2015
The best thing about Piglet reviews is that I always want to buy both books. And so I will, Smashing Plates for my son's wonderful half Greek girlfriend and My Paris Kitchen for me. Likewise for other Piglet books. Bravi/e to Food52!
 
Bridget March 9, 2015
Great review and so glad Kate put the effort into making many recipes from each book. Although she indicates a clear winner, I still find myself intrigued enough to consider both.
 
Tippy C. March 9, 2015
I think that this is the best review so far this year. I appreciate the fact that you really used both of these cookbooks and cooked a number of dishes from each. Beautiful, thoughtful review.
 
Kyle G. March 9, 2015
I tend to lean towards literary inclined cookbooks as well. French cooking v Desserts for the championship!
 
SeeSee March 9, 2015
When I bought My Paris Kitchen, I was concerned that since I already have a full compliment of Jacques, Dorie and Julia, that it would be redundant. But, this book has so many wonderful stories and such a great variety of recipes that it's just hard to know where to start and how to stop. The cover dish, mustard chicken, is something I can hardly wait to make again. I served it with some Rancho Gordo beans that were fixed very simply and the sauce from the chicken mixed with the beans makes a really outstanding combination. So I'm glad Paris Kitchen goes to the final round.
 
AGIRLANDAPIG March 9, 2015
Go David Lebovitz!!
 
pretty_pathetic March 9, 2015
This is a wonderful review.
 
AntoniaJames March 9, 2015
Well written, thoughtful review. I have not seen the Lebovitz book, but I borrowed "Smashing Plates" from the library; it has only a few recipes that interested me much. (I would never buy it for that reason, as well as several others.) ;o)
 
Steve T. March 9, 2015
I'm newly acquainted with David Lebovitz too, but was also an instant convert. I read his blog and get his newsletter in my email. Now I want the book too.
 
Christa March 9, 2015
My mouth is watering... A compliment to the review writer and to the two cookbooks she had the pleasure of cooking from. Even though I've moved away from New Hampshire, I know a drop in temperatures and a good cookbook in hand are inspiring to delicious culinary discoveries!
 
Dawn D. March 9, 2015
Funny, that's my conclusion as well! Love this book and can't wait to do more with it. While I love Greek food, France is part owner of my heart - and my stomach! Since I'm not able to be there save for sporadic visits, It's wonderful to have David Leibovitz and MY PARIS KITCHEN here with me.
 
JadeTree March 9, 2015
I have great confidence in this review because she made so many dishes! It was a pleasure to hear about so many from each book and how they got along with each other. Also: while there has yet to be a Tad Friend-level review this year, "hors d’oeuvriste" is sublime :D Thank you!
 
Katie March 9, 2015
I want to come to your kitchen! What an experience to make so many recipes from both books. I'm hungry just thinking about it, and would still love to cook from either. Looking forward to the final round!
 
sexyLAMBCHOPx March 9, 2015
I'm so french heavy with cookbooks that I was hoping Smashing Plates would win.
 
tradess2013 March 9, 2015
For me, never considered the Greek one, but that's just my taste (NOT), again David is my main 'French' man.

 
heyjude March 9, 2015
Thanks for such an even-handed review. It led to the right choice, but I'll probably get both books.
 
Alexandra H. March 9, 2015
Fantastic review! I have both books, and agree that David is the winner "hands down"! (Hooray, David!!) If you read through David's blog, he is always pleasantly surprised that people feel like they know him, or that they feel as if they've been friends forever, even though they never met. I think that's the power of David's book and his writing: It's "cozy" (a perfect word another Food52er used to describe it) and his recipes and advise are phenomenal. And he has a pretty great sense of humor, too. Thanks for a great review!
 
Julia March 9, 2015
While I enjoy the reviews, I just want to mention how one experience can sour a cookbook author relationship. A friend and I went to a Lebovitz book-signing. We smiled and said our cooking club had selected his book for our next meeting. He barely looked at us and had a sour expression on his face. I don't know if he was embarrassed at running out of books or otherwise having a bad day or shallowly didn't like our plain suburban mom looks, but he just signed, while talking to someone else. Also, I've made four of his recipes and only one turned out well for me. (I'm an experienced cook who has had great results from Mediterranean recipes of Joanne Harris, Martha Rose Shulman, and many others.) Now I'm less of a fan. Being polite at book-signings is part of the job, I think.
 
zora March 9, 2015
Wow. Cut the guy a little slack. It might not be about you at all. After all, he isn't a robot who is programmable to be bubbly and charming for every single person he encounters at every book signing. Maybe he had a bad headache or was coming down with the flu the day you encountered him. He was very nice and chatted with me while he signed my book.
 
hardlikearmour March 9, 2015
Wow! I love how thoroughly each book was explored. It seems like both books are really great, and I trust that the better book made it to the next round.
 
Nicole B. March 9, 2015
Both books seem to be an intimate view into the mind and kitchen of its author - can't wait to read both of them!
 
Joan O. March 9, 2015
Loved the review. My favorite yet. I think you made the right choice and am happy you cooked several recipes from each. You made me also want to spend some time with both books.
 
erinmalone March 9, 2015
I agree with this review and I think Kate captures that while both cookbooks are better than most, Lebovitz edges out for the win. I checked both of these books out of my local library and even in the 2 weeks I've had with them and the cooking I've done from both, I came up with the same conclusion as this review. If you can afford to buy both books, they'll both be welcome additions to your shelf but if you can only afford to get one, "My Paris Kitchen" deserves the dollars.
 
kasia S. March 9, 2015
Such a pleasure to read my favorite author reviewing two stunning cookbooks... The Baked Eggs with Kale and Smoked Salmon sound incredible, I googled it and other cooks who made it said the same thing, that they could eat this dish every single day.

I knew I wanted David's book on my shelf for a while now but I've never been so hungry for it before. Thank you for such thorough and scrumptious review!
 
SweetM March 9, 2015
What an excellent review, and so suspenseful...both cookbooks produced so many delicious dishes I had no idea who the reviewer was going to pick as the winner until the bitter end. Now I'm cheering David on to win the big prize - he is such an inspiring cook and writer!
 
Megan March 9, 2015
Both of these books sound fantastic. So nice to read about so many different recipes from each! Thanks for a great review.
 
eliza_z March 9, 2015
agree, great to see that so many recipes were tested from each book. I'm firmly rooting for My Paris Kitchen to win the whole thing, but am about to buy Smashing Plates as all the reviews have been so overwhelmingly positive.
 
love2cook March 9, 2015
What a lovely thoughtful review of both books! I especially appreciated the lengthy descriptions/critiques of each of the dishes she tried cooking.
 
Debbie T. March 9, 2015
I love Davids book also! I had to wait for quite awhile and it was well worth the wait. It isn't just a go to cook book, it has become a "coffee table" book. My friends love to flip the pages and take notes too!!!
 
creamtea March 9, 2015
Very thorough review, and so many recipes tested.
 
Ileana M. March 9, 2015
Excellent and thorough review! Loved hearing about all the recipes you tried from each book. I have My Paris Kitchen in my cookbook collection, and clearly I need to live with this book for a week. :)
 
Sara S. March 9, 2015
I appreciate that the author cooked from both books. However, I have a problem with the assessment "more truly literary and classic." First, why is that the measure of the competition? That should have been established earlier in the review, as the criteria the reviewer was applying to both books. Second, the French cookbook is the "more truly literary and classic"? Shocking...
 
Margit V. March 9, 2015
What a wonderful experience, reading along as Kate Christensen immerses herself in really cooking from each book, bringing to life the very essence of each kitchen. I luxuriated in the promise that I, too, could re-create this cooking/eating life by buying both books, and getting right to work, making it happen! I'm not familiar with Maria Elia's work, but I've enjoyed so much reading David Lebovitz's blog ever since I discovered it a couple years ago. His writing, his humor, his recipes, his travels, his photography---they all add to making the tapestry of my daily life richer and more adventurous. I plan to add Maria Elia's work to my continuing exploration of living. Thank you, Kate Christensen, for this review!
 
JK March 9, 2015
It's great to read about someone actually willing to cook from the books. Well done, Kate.
 
Naomi M. March 9, 2015
Thanks for the thoughtful review! Sounds like it must have been challenging to cook so much when you had never before used fresh oregano! Both books sound wonderful, but for health purposes I think I will stick to Greek! But David's book sounds like a winner!
 
alison March 9, 2015
This has been enjoyable to read. I feel I know both chefs and I want both books. I love the spices of the Middle East and the lamb recipe, alone, is making my mouth water.
I have heard of David Lebovitz, but never used any of his recipes. This review has changed that, despite the gained pounds. I like the idea of essays to read, in addition to recipes. This is going on my birthday wish list, even if I have to gift myself.
 
Victoria C. March 9, 2015
Wow. Great review. I was on the edge of my seat. I already have David's book, and I'm still going to buy Maria's!
 
Katie S. March 9, 2015
Yes, yes, yes! I'm rooting for My Paris Kitchen all the way.
 
ChefJune March 9, 2015
What an absolutely delicious review. Kate made me want to own and cook from both these books. But I am a fan of David's writing and recipes, so an extra YAY for his win.
 
MRinSF March 9, 2015
Kate Christensen is a great pick to be a judge and she does both books justice. So nice to read about all the recipes she cooked and the joy with which she ate -- this is an excellent review!
 
Maia March 9, 2015
It is an absolutely wonderful book.
 
Maia March 9, 2015
*Lebovitz, that is. I love his work, especially his pastry, and how absolutely versatile he is in all other aspects of his cooking. Yay for him winning!