| Ina
Garten |
| Interview
by Christopher Monte Smith |
For
more than 20 years, Ina
Garten has run The Barefoot Contessa specialty food shop in East Hampton,
New York. In 1999, her first book, The
Barefoot Contessa Cookbook, became a sleeper bestseller from
coast to coast. BookSense.com caught up with Ina while she was on tour for her
new follow-up title on home entertaining, Barefoot
Contessa Parties!
BookSense.com:
Ina, where are you from?
Ina Garten:
I grew up in Stamford, Connecticut.
When did you
first become interested in food, and how did you learn to cook?
I think I was always
interested in cooking but I never had an opportunity until I was married in
1968. I think the first meal I ever made I baked challah -- I love the challenge
of a difficult recipe. I really learned how to cook by working my way through
every recipe in both volumes of Julia Child's The
Art of French Cooking.
You worked at
the White House in the 1970s. During which administration? What was that like?
I
worked in the White House from 1974 to 1978 during the Ford and Carter administrations.
I worked in the Office of Management and Budget on nuclear energy issues. It
was very exciting for the first few years because your work was going directly
to the President. However, after four years, I realized that although I was
working on projects that were $20 billion in size, nothing had happened in four
years. I needed to run something that I owned and that I could make my own decisions
with. Plus, I needed immediate feedback. I've found in the food business that
I can decide at 8am if I want to see if people will buy sticky buns; we make
them, and by 5pm I know if it was a good idea.
How did you
get from the White House to the Barefoot Contessa?
In
1978, I came across an ad in The New York Times "Business Opportunities"
section for a specialty food store for sale in the Hamptons, so I decided to
investigate. It was love at first sight. I had no idea at the time how to run
a business or how to buy food wholesale, but I knew this was for me. I made
what I thought was a low offer -- I believed I'd have time to rethink while
we negotiated -- and we drove back to Washington. The owner called the next
day and accepted the offer!
What is the
Barefoot Contessa? Who works there? Who shops there?
Barefoot
Contessa is a specialty food store in East Hampton, New York. It's now about
3,000 square feet, including a kitchen where we make breads, pastries, salads,
dinners, and anything you would want for a wonderful meal. Plus, we carry all
kinds of cheeses, smoked fish, caviar, and specialty groceries.
Isn't "The Barefoot
Contessa" a movie?
Barefoot Contessa
is the name of a movie from the 50s with Ava Gardner and Humphrey Bogart. It's
about being elegant and earthy and I think that's what we are. The food is very
good and very simple, which I think is also very elegant.
How did you
come to write your first book, The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook? Was it
hard to do?
So
many people have asked for our recipes that I decided I had to write The
Barefoot Contessa Cookbook. I realized that I simplified cooking for the
store so we could make large quantities of delicious food very easily, and I
thought people would want to do that at home. Furthermore, I taught myself how
to not only make things in advance, but also to make things that actually taste
better if they're made in advance. So, the cookbook invites readers into the
store for our most popular dishes that can be made easily at home.
The book met
with enormous success, becoming a bestseller, and everybody is cooking from
it. Did the success surprise you? Why do you think it has received such a good
response?
I was shocked at
the success of The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook. I think in a world of
cookbooks that are designed for chefs to show off their special style, The
Barefoot Contessa Cookbook came across as accessible -- with food that everyone
really wants to eat. I think my experience with the store has taught me that,
while people like really interesting meals when they go to restaurants, they
really prefer very simple food at home.
Your newest
book, Barefoot Contessa Parties! is all about entertaining. Why parties?
I
wrote Barefoot Contessa Parties! because my 20 years' experience catering
parties in the Hamptons taught me that the best parties were the ones where
the host and
hostess were having fun. And that meant that the simpler the food, the more
relaxed the hosts are. My philosophy of simple food made in advance works very
well for entertaining as well as cooking for your family.
Is the menu
the most important element in a party? What has to be present
for a party to be a great party?
As I said, relaxed
hosts are the key to a good party. I think a thoughtful guest list including
people that you really want to see is next. Good music sets the tone. Surprises
are terrific -- a lunch on Sunday afternoon, a picnic at the beach -- all set
the scene. And the food is the last detail that's important, but certainly not
the most important.
Do you have
any perennial party tips? For instance, how loud should the music be? What mix
of guests should one invite?
I do everything
possible to make things easy. First, when people arrive there's a table set
up with fixings for drinks so people can help themselves. I serve very simple
nibbles like
roasted cashews and good olives -- nothing wrapped in phyllo. I never serve
a first course, just a delicious dinner and dessert. And finally, I try to assemble
as much of the meal
as possible -- maybe a peach, a sweet dessert wine, and a macaroon from a bakery
for dessert.
You say in Barefoot
Contessa Parties! that you often turn to books on entertaining for inspiration
when throwing your own parties. Which books do you find yourself turning to
most consistently, and how do they help?
The
books that inspire me most are the ones from other specialty food stores and
restaurants, because the recipes are tried and true. I love all the Loaves and
Fishes cookbooks. I use Cucina
Simpatica from Al Forno restaurant in Providence, Rhode Island. I like
the two books by Sarah
Chase who used to own Que Sera Sarah, a specialty food store in Nantucket,
Massachusetts. And I use Patricia
Wells' cookbooks about cooking in France.
Have you ever
experienced a real party disaster?
That's
easy -- it was 1969, and my husband and I were just married and living in North
Carolina. I threw a big Sunday brunch for a crowd of 20 that I hardly knew,
and determined to make a fresh omelet for each guest! I knew immediately what
I had done wrong. A party isn't about food, it's about people. I spent all my
time in the kitchen, and from the living room -- no talking, no laughter!
What was the
best party you have ever thrown or attended?
My best
party was one I planned in advance, so that I had absolutely nothing to do except
visit with my guests. It was a summer garden party to celebrate the publication
of my first book. I think it was a successful formula, so I wrote about it in
Barefoot Contessa Parties! The scene, the recipes, and tips are on page
197 of the book.
What is the
most interesting conversation you have ever had at a party?
I really have no
idea! I like small parties so I can really get to know people. Large parties
tend to be less satisfying to me unless it's an unusual occasion.
Is it more fun
to host a party or to be a guest at one? Be honest.
I much prefer
to host a party than be a guest. First of all, I love getting ready for a party.
And second of all, I get to choose the guests!
When you're
off duty and not at a party, what kind of meal do you enjoy, just to relax?
My
favorite meal is a simple roast chicken with vegetables in the roasting pan.
Do you have
a favorite restaurant at the moment? Do you like to go out?
I really don't
have a favorite restaurant for the moment. I always like Eli Zabar's restaurants,
E.A.T. and Eli's Manhattan, in New York City, because the food is amazingly
simple and delicious, and the atmosphere is very relaxed. I always have a great
time there.
The party is
over, the guests have gone home. Do you sit down with a good book? What books
are on your bedside now?
When
the party is over, I do the dishes and go to bed! Martha
Stewart is the only one I know who has the energy to read after giving a
party. Right now, however, I'm reading Adam Gopnik's new book Paris
to the Moon.
Do you have
a favorite bookstore?
I don't really
have a favorite bookstore, but as I travel around the country talking about
my new book, I've been to two that are extraordinary -- R.J.
Julia in Madison, Connecticut, and Rainy Day Books[1]
in Kansas City, Missouri. They are both independent bookstores that are true
intellectual meeting places for people interested in books.
What
books or authors, not specifically on food or entertaining, mean the most to
you?
I
really love biographies like No
Ordinary Time by Doris Kearns Goodwin, and Truman
by David McCullough.
You're definitely
a person who knows how to have fun and likes to laugh. What book or author always
makes you laugh?
My friends make
me laugh -- I can't say that I've found a book that makes me laugh as much.
Maybe Helen Fielding's Bridget
Jones's Diary.
When the game
is up, and you are at that Great Party in the Sky, what kind of party will it
be? Who will the other guests be?
When I arrive at
the pearly gates, I hope God says to me, "We've reserved the penthouse suite
for you and your friends are all waiting." I don't have much interest in meeting
famous people -- I just want to be surrounded by the smart, funny, people that
I love. But then, I wouldn't mind if James Ivory and Ishmael Merchant could
stop by.
Are you happy
at Barefoot Contessa and as the author of two great books? Could anything lure
you back to the White House?
Nothing
could get me back to the White House! I have been blessed with a life that
astonishes even me. I'm married to the most amazing man I've ever met, I love
the food business, I have wonderful friends, I live in East Hampton full-time,
and the surprise of my life has been the response to the two cookbooks. It just
doesn't get any better than this. And, although I wouldn't mind being 40 again,
I know that all of this comes from having had all the experiences I've had,
so even being in my 50s is okay with me.
What is next
for Ina Garten?
I'd say another
book is next for me, as well as continuing my column in Martha Stewart Living
magazine. And seeing where all that leads will be really interesting to me.
[1]
Rainy Day Books, Fairway
Shops - 2706 W. 53rd Street, Fairway, KS 66205-1705 (913) 384-3126
Barefoot
Contessa Parties!
Look
for Ina
Garten's books on BookSense.com
Author
photo by Tom Eckerle.
Further
Reading
Emerill
Lagasse
Mark
Bittman
Eric Schlosser
The Barefoot Contessa website
Browse
Archived Interviews Browse
Archived Excerpts
|