Hey, I'm Bruce Weinstein, and this is the podcast cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:And I'm Mark Scarborough.
Speaker:And together with Bruce, we have written three dozen cookbooks, including our
Speaker:latest, The Look and Cook Air Fryer Bible.
Speaker:You probably know about it if you've listened to this podcast.
Speaker:Over 700 photos.
Speaker:Every step of every recipe is photographed.
Speaker:You can't go wrong with your air fryer with this cookbook.
Speaker:We're not talking about air frying in this.
Speaker:Episode of the podcast cooking with bruce and mark instead we've got a
Speaker:one minute cooking tip about serving food to company We're going to talk
Speaker:about fixing other people's cookbooks something we've done over the course
Speaker:of our career And we'll tell you what's making us happy in food this week.
Speaker:So let's get started
Speaker:If you're having company for dinner, and you don't have
Speaker:time to make everything Don't.
Speaker:You know, it's perfectly okay to serve a bakery dessert, or
Speaker:get this, a restaurant soup.
Speaker:Yeah, in fact, I think sometimes, when I go to people's houses, a bakery
Speaker:dessert is more oud and odd over.
Speaker:I know people spend a lot of time making dessert, and I don't want
Speaker:to diss that, and you do too.
Speaker:Bruce makes crazy French patisserie desserts.
Speaker:But at the same time, when I'm at other people's houses, I sometimes
Speaker:see a, I don't know, a tart come out that's come from a bakery and there's
Speaker:so many oohs and ahs around the table.
Speaker:Mm-Hmm.
Speaker:. There's something so romantic about a dessert from a bakery.
Speaker:It is.
Speaker:And it doesn't have to just be dessert.
Speaker:If you have a restaurant near you that makes a soup, you like, right.
Speaker:Think about going in ordering, you know, eight servings.
Speaker:That would be like a quarter two of the soup.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And serve that as your first course.
Speaker:It will taste like it's homemade.
Speaker:No one has to know.
Speaker:And do you have to tell them?
Speaker:Nope.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Uh, we have a business near us here in rural New England that makes a
Speaker:lot of soup in the freezer, and I've often thought about going and stocking
Speaker:up, but of course I can't because Bruce has got our freezers so full.
Speaker:It's ridiculous.
Speaker:But I've thought about stocking up with several soups just for me when he's
Speaker:away and having them in the fridge.
Speaker:And you know what?
Speaker:It would be.
Speaker:great also to have those at a dinner party, right?
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:No reason not to do that.
Speaker:It is better to serve your friends some delicious food, even if you
Speaker:didn't make it, then to make yourself crazy, trying to make everything.
Speaker:That's a crazy tip from two cookbook writers, but there you go.
Speaker:It kind of invalidates our entire career, but okay.
Speaker:Anyway, we're going to go on with it.
Speaker:Friends say what we will before we get to that next part of our
Speaker:podcast, which is a large oh personal reflection from us, I wanna tell
Speaker:you that we do have a newsletter.
Speaker:You can find it on our website, Bruce and mark.com, or cooking
Speaker:with Bruce and mark.com.
Speaker:You can sign up for it.
Speaker:There it comes out, oh, I don't know, about once a month.
Speaker:I just, I don't know.
Speaker:It's when I get to it and my life is kind of crazy with my own Dante podcast
Speaker:and with teaching, and we're writing a new book and yada, yada, yada.
Speaker:So it comes out to once, twice a month, but you can sign up there and we'd be
Speaker:delighted for you to have part of our journey with a newsletter, which is not
Speaker:necessarily connected to this podcast.
Speaker:Check it out and you can always unsubscribe at any time.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:On to the next segment of our podcast, which is what
Speaker:we're going to talk about how we have been hired to fix other people's cookbooks.
Speaker:Oh, this is something that.
Speaker:Uh, happened more back in the day.
Speaker:Um, I think that, let me just say, that the business has changed a lot,
Speaker:the cookbook business, the publishing business has changed a lot, and cookbooks
Speaker:don't come in quite like this anymore.
Speaker:I think a lot of influencers, and a lot of chefs, and etc.,
Speaker:you know, people like that who write cookbooks and get published, they're
Speaker:expected to turn in a clean manuscript.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And they're expected to be pre edited.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Book doctoring happens all the time.
Speaker:And that's kind of what it's called in the industries.
Speaker:Like in terms of novels and fiction, if somebody turns in a book and
Speaker:the publisher's not crazy about it, then they'll hire someone to work
Speaker:with the writer to fix it, to fix the plot, to fix the narrative.
Speaker:I mean, that, that happened with my memoir bookmarked that
Speaker:my agent hired a freelance.
Speaker:editor to work with me on that memoir to get it somewhere where
Speaker:she thought she could sell it.
Speaker:But what I meant is, and just to say, I don't mean to push my point, but what I
Speaker:mean to say is now cookbook editing and fixing does happen, but it happens because
Speaker:the writer has paid for it on their end and they have sorted it out themselves.
Speaker:In the days when we did it, the publishers We're seeking out
Speaker:writers, ghost writers, people behind the scenes to create the books.
Speaker:It's a little different now.
Speaker:It now falls really
Speaker:hard on the writer.
Speaker:Yeah, it does.
Speaker:The writer has to do it.
Speaker:In fact, one of the ones we did, the writer actually did contact us.
Speaker:Because her publisher told her to publish is like, okay, this book is a mess.
Speaker:She turned it was a Simon and Schuster book.
Speaker:It wasn't a nothing.
Speaker:No, this author was doing this sort of healthy book.
Speaker:She was sort of this healthy guru.
Speaker:It was a little bit before influencers were the rage, but she would have been
Speaker:considered an influencer in her day.
Speaker:We didn't use those terms then, but she had a huge, Oh,
Speaker:now we're going to go back.
Speaker:She had a huge Facebook and YouTube following.
Speaker:Now we're going really back, um, to tell you everything.
Speaker:And, uh, you know, that following, we didn't say it was, she was an
Speaker:influencer, but that's what she was.
Speaker:She was a fitness guru.
Speaker:And all of her recipes, the whole book was full of smoothies and health.
Speaker:Full drinks and the publisher
Speaker:Didn't she live off the grid or something.
Speaker:I think so.
Speaker:I think she lived in Montana, Idaho, somewhere like off the grid.
Speaker:I remember it was difficult for me to, this is how old it
Speaker:is for me to Skype with her.
Speaker:It took some doing for her to get to a Skype
Speaker:and she was very.
Speaker:Fragile.
Speaker:And every Skype meeting was more of a therapy session.
Speaker:She cried.
Speaker:She cried in every single Skype meeting.
Speaker:Anytime you told her she had to change something in a recipe,
Speaker:she'd cry and tell you what.
Speaker:So my favorite one from this whole book, so it was a breakfast smoothie,
Speaker:and it was filled with kale, and oranges, and all those wonderful things.
Speaker:And a piece of raw chicken liver.
Speaker:Yes,
Speaker:it was true.
Speaker:There was raw chicken liver in a smoothie this wasn't the only problem.
Speaker:She had a lot of things like this.
Speaker:And I think this came from living off the grid.
Speaker:And I said to her, You cannot write a recipe with raw liver in it.
Speaker:And she, you know, batted back at me and said, Well, I, I have it most mornings.
Speaker:And, you know, and she talked about raising her own chickens and organic
Speaker:feed and all this kind of stuff.
Speaker:And I said, That's great.
Speaker:Okay, if you want to put a raw chicken liver in your smoothie and drink it
Speaker:in the morning, That's your chickens.
Speaker:Those are your choices.
Speaker:Good for you.
Speaker:But you cannot ask the reader of your book to go out and buy supermarket
Speaker:chicken livers and drop them in a blender.
Speaker:Supermarket chicken livers that may be full of all kinds of bad toxins.
Speaker:Livers are the filter of your body.
Speaker:They take out the drugs you take.
Speaker:They take out the Poisons they take out, so it's got to go somewhere
Speaker:and it stores in the liver.
Speaker:She didn't know what the liability issues would be if she told someone
Speaker:to eat a raw liver and they got sick.
Speaker:The publisher knew, which is why they asked us to jump in.
Speaker:Yeah, it was true.
Speaker:And a lot of her book was like this.
Speaker:Um, you know, this is the problem and I, I'm going to stop here
Speaker:and say that I follow a lot.
Speaker:of, uh, vegan chefs on TikTok.
Speaker:And, uh, you probably know this.
Speaker:If you follow our TikTok channel, cooking with Bruce and Mark, if you've
Speaker:seen us on social media, you know that I'm cooking more vegan and somehow I've
Speaker:been following a ton of vegan UK chefs.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Anyway, they're all 20 and, you know, and beautiful and all that stuff.
Speaker:Anyway, the, my whole point about this is that whenever I find a recipe that I like,
Speaker:I have to rewrite it, even from their written recipe at the bottom, because
Speaker:they don't know how to write a recipe.
Speaker:They don't know how to put ingredients in the order that they're using the recipe.
Speaker:They don't know the difference between volumes and weights.
Speaker:Some things are in volumes, some things in weights.
Speaker:They, they flip all around about this kind of stuff, and it's really We're told to
Speaker:have to rewrite the recipes and this is what we were doing for this book Yeah,
Speaker:she didn't know how to write a recipe which recipes to get really technical
Speaker:here recipes have to have a beginning a middle and an end Oh, we're at Aristotle.
Speaker:They're they're like a story they have to have a beginning a middle and an end and
Speaker:you have to bring a reader of a recipe to an Endpoint to a conclusion and a lot
Speaker:of people don't know this skill and this particular health guru certainly didn't.
Speaker:So her recipe ingredients were all out of order.
Speaker:And they, you know, some of them just, I'm sorry, you cannot cook raw wheat
Speaker:berries for 10 minutes and have it done.
Speaker:I mean, what, what I'm suggesting by that is that she just has a load of
Speaker:cooked wheat berries in her refrigerator.
Speaker:She's.
Speaker:Pouring them into smoothies and into salads and this kind of thing.
Speaker:I should have really think about how long it takes to cook them.
Speaker:Now, I want to go back to your thing about recipes as a story.
Speaker:Um, if you listen to a recent episode where I interviewed Kat Ashmore, who's
Speaker:a TikTok influencer, she actually got the idea of recipes as stories.
Speaker:And in our interview, she talked about how.
Speaker:Every ingredient in a recipe is a character.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:And I love that because some characters are funny, some are
Speaker:sad, some are depressive, and the same thing with ingredients.
Speaker:Some are sweet, some are bitter, some are sour.
Speaker:And they all add,
Speaker:like Mia Farrow in a Woody Allen movie,
Speaker:they all add.
Speaker:It's something to the dinner party, and I love that
Speaker:idea.
Speaker:Mia Farrow adds nothing, but that's a whole nother matter entirely.
Speaker:I love Mia Farrow.
Speaker:Don't write in.
Speaker:I love her.
Speaker:I mean, it's just that blank.
Speaker:Geraldine Page in interiors, filling her pockets with rocks
Speaker:and walking into the sea.
Speaker:Yes, but that's so Virginia Woolf.
Speaker:I don't care.
Speaker:It was cribbed out of Woolf.
Speaker:Come on.
Speaker:It was a fabulous movie.
Speaker:Um, maybe.
Speaker:Just don't crib Virginia like that.
Speaker:Um, anyway, uh, so we're way off the subject.
Speaker:So yes, we fixed that cookbook.
Speaker:Here's another example of a cookbook we were asked to fix, and actually
Speaker:this is kind of a brilliant idea.
Speaker:This was a restaurant.
Speaker:It may still exist in Staten Island.
Speaker:It was.
Speaker:And, uh, this guy had a really brilliant idea.
Speaker:He had a standard North American Italian restaurant.
Speaker:You know, it had meatballs and spaghetti and ravioli and all
Speaker:the stuff you would expect in a North American Italian restaurant.
Speaker:A kind of Sicilian, Calabrian based, but tweaked to North America.
Speaker:So, you know, you do get crab ravioli and with cheese on top of it.
Speaker:But a lot of eggplant parmesan and salted bokeh.
Speaker:Okay, so, you know.
Speaker:This restaurant ran, and his idea was that there were all
Speaker:these old nanas in Staten Island.
Speaker:And every night, there were eight or nine of them, and every night one of the nanas
Speaker:came in, and, in the kitchen, and she made whatever she was famous for making.
Speaker:And that was the special of the night.
Speaker:Right, and that would be on the special, maybe she'd make one or two dishes, and
Speaker:that was the nana dish of the night, and You know, it's kind of a cool idea because
Speaker:a lot of these old Calabrian and Sicilian recipes are kind of being forgotten,
Speaker:even in Calabria and Sicily of today.
Speaker:So these old Nonna's were recreating these dishes, but the
Speaker:cookbook was a bit of a mess.
Speaker:And you want to tell about why it was a mess?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The publisher came to us and said.
Speaker:This is such a mess that we can't deal with it and their editor
Speaker:didn't want to deal with it.
Speaker:They knew we had the expertise in dealing with sensitive
Speaker:authors and sensitive people.
Speaker:And before this career, I was a creative director around the
Speaker:creative department and editing.
Speaker:So I was used to temperamental art directors and people who
Speaker:cried every time you correct them.
Speaker:did them.
Speaker:Sometimes Bruce will tell you about the art director who every day threatened
Speaker:to blow his brains out on the job.
Speaker:Every single day, really, you know, I don't know what, uh, go get some help.
Speaker:Go get therapy.
Speaker:Once again, I was more therapist than I was creative director, but okay.
Speaker:So we get the, this book, the manuscript is overnighted to us and we open up to
Speaker:the very first recipe and it says stuffed.
Speaker:Yeah, it did.
Speaker:And it was the opening recipe.
Speaker:And if you know anything about writing cookbooks and how cookbooks
Speaker:are crafted, you try to open with a really accessible recipe or a really
Speaker:inviting recipe because you can get to the crazy stuff down the line.
Speaker:Okay, so for example, we're writing a weird tweak on canning and
Speaker:preserving right now as a book.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:You know, we could start with celeriac marmalade, or we could, which is in the
Speaker:book, which is in the book, or we could start with fig cardamom jam, but that's
Speaker:not necessarily where you want to start.
Speaker:You want to start with Concord grape jelly or Concord grape jam.
Speaker:You want to start at a place that's like accessible and people know what
Speaker:you're talking about, so you can kind of get the wheels rolling before you
Speaker:get to kimchi jam, which is delicious, stuffed spleen, or stuffed slump.
Speaker:So if they started out that way, and then they, these nonas, they, first
Speaker:of all, they didn't speak hardly any English, so you can only imagine what
Speaker:the phone calls and the, the video conferences were like, because these
Speaker:women needed translators, they were all 70, 80, 90, I may also add that they all
Speaker:hated each other, they all believed that each of the others were terrible cook.
Speaker:This should have been the reality show.
Speaker:And why wasn't it?
Speaker:And they each had a pasta recipe for basic pasta.
Speaker:And each one, and it honestly, it was like the difference in half a tablespoon
Speaker:of water or not, or something like that.
Speaker:But each one thought the other's pasta recipe was crap and that
Speaker:that wasn't even worth publishing.
Speaker:So that was another thing.
Speaker:The book had.
Speaker:Eight basic pasta or nine basic pasta recipes in line.
Speaker:And we kept saying, No, you got to pick one.
Speaker:Really, honestly, the reader doesn't need this whole course.
Speaker:Unless you're going to go into, you know, Nonna Lydia hates this
Speaker:other Nonna because she does.
Speaker:Unless you're going to go into that, you can't do this.
Speaker:So our job was to come up with one pasta recipe that sort of
Speaker:incorporated all of their belief systems in how you make pasta.
Speaker:And while that's sounds really great.
Speaker:I was afraid of getting a horse head in my bed by the time we were done with that.
Speaker:They were very serious about their father.
Speaker:This is not going to happen.
Speaker:And then there's this wonderful rest in the book.
Speaker:Oh my goodness.
Speaker:I'm sorry that I never went down to Staten Island to eat it, but it was
Speaker:a pasta with sea urchin and I've made sea urchin on the past and I made it.
Speaker:It is delicious.
Speaker:It is beyond yum.
Speaker:If you know anything about the sea urchin, you know that what you
Speaker:eat is the roe or the egg sacs.
Speaker:And you buy it, you buy the roe.
Speaker:They are really delicious.
Speaker:But this recipe called for eight sea urchins cleaned, the roe sacs removed.
Speaker:And, you know, I was like, okay, come on.
Speaker:I was the writer.
Speaker:I was like, come on.
Speaker:What, what is this?
Speaker:So I.
Speaker:Wrote an entire long description of how to clean a sea urchin,
Speaker:you know, I thought well if we're gonna do this Let's do it, right
Speaker:We wanted to honor this woman rather than just say get 12 ounces
Speaker:of sea urchin roe Which you can go to a Japanese market and buy.
Speaker:We told how to do it.
Speaker:Okay, so I wrote this entire big discussion about using kitchen shears
Speaker:and making sure you don't get stabbed by the poisonous spines and how to deal with
Speaker:that and how to have the fishmonger take those spines off at first and then get
Speaker:it home and you clean, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker:So I read this whole thing and it took me, you know, a couple of hours to really
Speaker:condense it and figure out how to write it and then this Nana absolutely lost it.
Speaker:She got so mad at me that in a phone call through the translator, she
Speaker:was screaming at me that Everyone knows how to clean a sea urchin.
Speaker:And I was like, I don't think everyone knows how to I, you know, call me crazy,
Speaker:but, but I don't think it's a skill that most North Americans understand.
Speaker:No, but in her little Calabrian village, every old lady knows how to do it.
Speaker:So that's why she's like, but that's, who's going to cook.
Speaker:You know, this is a woman who's not necessarily thinking that millennials
Speaker:and that 20 year olds are going to be buying this and cooking.
Speaker:She imagines.
Speaker:in her own little mind that this book is going to be for people like her.
Speaker:Yes, and I think that this gets to the difference in cookbooks and
Speaker:in what she was doing, and even what TikTok influences her doing.
Speaker:And that is when I watch these UK vegan chefs, what they're trying to say to me
Speaker:is, look, not only look how cute I am, but also look at this beautiful food I make.
Speaker:And that's the end of it.
Speaker:I, I was on a phone call with my publisher, our publisher yesterday, and
Speaker:we were both laughing that, you know, they get like 50, 000 likes on TikTok, but I'm
Speaker:probably the only guy actually making the recipe, because I was telling him how I
Speaker:was having to rewrite these recipes from the online platforms and they weren't in
Speaker:any kind of order and blah, blah, blah.
Speaker:And he's like, you're probably the only guy making these because everybody
Speaker:else is just swiping and looking at it and liking it and swiping on and
Speaker:saying, Oh, that looks delicious.
Speaker:Here's the thing.
Speaker:And then, as he said, DoorDash for dinner.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:But if enough people like them, then they actually get to sell a book
Speaker:contract and publish a book with those recipes, which Hopefully they will hire
Speaker:someone like us to really make perfect for a book because they don't know
Speaker:how to write a recipe in the old days.
Speaker:Again, when we used to do this, we don't really do this anymore.
Speaker:When we used to do this, the publishers would hire us.
Speaker:But now, of course, as Bruce has pointed out, the authors would need iris.
Speaker:OK, so those are a couple of examples.
Speaker:But here's another example of food doctoring and food writing.
Speaker:And behind the scenes is we have.
Speaker:ghosted a couple, several cookbooks and some of them involve confidentiality
Speaker:agreements and some of them involve, um, missed confidentiality agreements.
Speaker:I'll tell you about that in a minute, but we have crafted entire books in the voice
Speaker:of someone else and these books have.
Speaker:All tended to be in the health and diet.
Speaker:This is because for years we were the longest serving
Speaker:columnist on WeightWatchers.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:And we wrote a book called Real Food Has Curves, which was our
Speaker:seven step plan to get all the processed food out of your life.
Speaker:And so we had this expertise and these TV diet gurus.
Speaker:Yeah, this is how old it is.
Speaker:They're not, uh, social media influencers.
Speaker:No, it's NBC and CBS.
Speaker:TV doctors, right.
Speaker:And they came to us and had them write their books.
Speaker:And it's fascinating because now we are creating 75 100 recipes for each of them
Speaker:that follow their diet plan, which doesn't necessarily fit into the way of cooking
Speaker:or thinking that Mark and I generally do.
Speaker:I have to tell you the story.
Speaker:So it was since the podcast is we're droning on about ourselves.
Speaker:I've seen the story.
Speaker:So
Speaker:we wrote what else is the podcast?
Speaker:I know we wrote this this cookbook for this one of these guys on one of these
Speaker:shows and he was called the doctors and I won't name him, but he was a health
Speaker:guru and maybe a gastroenterologist or something and he had a gut friendly
Speaker:supposedly gut friendly cookbook.
Speaker:Okay, fine, but we wrote that book for him, but we wrote The thing that killed
Speaker:me was cookbooks and books in general run on really razor thin margins.
Speaker:I mean, really, the profit margins on books are super slim and this
Speaker:is part of why the industry is always constantly in such trouble.
Speaker:But they knew because he was a TV doctor that they were going
Speaker:to sell millions of copies.
Speaker:So we actually not only wrote the book, but we produced all the
Speaker:photos and produced the whole shoot.
Speaker:And when it came time to producing the shoot, we Ask the publisher
Speaker:what the budget was and we were essentially told there isn't one.
Speaker:I mean, essentially we could spend as much money as we want.
Speaker:So we had this photo shoot in New York City.
Speaker:It involved boatloads of people, of prop stylists and assistants.
Speaker:We shot in a loft in Soho.
Speaker:We stayed at the Soho Grand.
Speaker:And not only that, we exp Expensed tickets for Broadway shows in the evening
Speaker:because there was no budget limit on this thing because they knew they were
Speaker:going to sell a billion copies of it.
Speaker:It was just so wild.
Speaker:Hey, Mike, our publisher, if you're listening to this, we'd
Speaker:like an unlimited budget on a photo shoot for the upcoming book.
Speaker:Can we have that please and go to the Broadway shows?
Speaker:Yeah, it was crazy.
Speaker:We actually, Bruce was so embarrassed about the Broadway
Speaker:show that he actually said to the publisher, Can we put in for this?
Speaker:And they not only let us put in for it, they let us put in for the cabs back
Speaker:and forth to Broadway from Seville.
Speaker:She said, whatever you spend when you're on this shoot, we pay for it.
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:it's so insane.
Speaker:Anyway, that's one of them.
Speaker:And then let me tell you another story.
Speaker:So while I'm sitting here and telling you, there is a really famous doctor
Speaker:who's probably still on TV, one of Oprah's protégés, but we shan't name him.
Speaker:And we, uh, wrote the recipes for one of his diet books.
Speaker:And he, uh, had a writer who was already working on the book,
Speaker:but we wrote the recipes and we did all this bit in 30 days.
Speaker:The diet was still being developed and they were, as the industry calls it,
Speaker:crashing the book, which means it has to be published right now, or they're
Speaker:going to miss the window of popularity.
Speaker:So we crashed this thing without even a full diet.
Speaker:We had to come up with all the recipes in 30 days.
Speaker:As the diet was being created around us, it was really insane.
Speaker:And at the end of it all, I mean, we killed ourselves.
Speaker:We still lived in New York City at the time and killed
Speaker:ourselves and got the recipes in.
Speaker:Got them in, you know, decent formatting.
Speaker:Sent them in.
Speaker:Got paid.
Speaker:Cashed the check.
Speaker:Cashed the check.
Speaker:Came to our agent.
Speaker:We got our bit from our agent.
Speaker:She cashed the check.
Speaker:She sent our 85%.
Speaker:You know, the whole bit went down.
Speaker:And then a couple weeks later, what happened?
Speaker:Well, we got a call from our agent, and she was both laughing and not laughing.
Speaker:And she said, Okay, so we have an issue from this doctor's lawyers, and they have
Speaker:sent us some paperwork that they forgot to send us two months ago when we started
Speaker:this project, and it was a confidentiality agreement, basically saying that we're
Speaker:not allowed to say that we did this for.
Speaker:Dr.
Speaker:Phil.
Speaker:So you said it.
Speaker:And we said, wow, that's really interesting that they want us to
Speaker:sign a non disclosure thing after we've turned it in and gotten paid.
Speaker:And she said, well, will you do it?
Speaker:And we said, for a fee, of course they could buy our silence.
Speaker:And we didn't ask for a huge amount.
Speaker:It was a small percentage of what we had been paid to do the whole thing.
Speaker:And they were like, no.
Speaker:So we're like, well, then they know we could talk about
Speaker:this and they didn't care.
Speaker:So we just said, no way.
Speaker:And that was the end of it.
Speaker:But so that's why we're allowed to say who we did it for.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:I always am careful because I am too afraid of a defamation suit
Speaker:or a liability suit in some way.
Speaker:So I won't do it.
Speaker:But Bruce, I guess he's just jumped out and said who it was.
Speaker:But it was really funny.
Speaker:It was a fun book, actually.
Speaker:And it was.
Speaker:It was so wild that they missed.
Speaker:They were trying to crash it so hard and so fast that they missed the
Speaker:confidentiality agreements to keep the writers silent that, in fact,
Speaker:they were working behind the scenes to create this product that Dr.
Speaker:Phil was going to put his name on.
Speaker:Okay, but who doesn't know that these things happen behind the scenes?
Speaker:Well, I don't know.
Speaker:A lot of people.
Speaker:I think a lot of people don't know that Patti LaBelle doesn't
Speaker:write Patti LaBelle's cookbooks.
Speaker:People don't know these things.
Speaker:I think Patti LaBelle is one of the ones who was more involved,
Speaker:as I recall, in her cookbook.
Speaker:We know the person who wrote them and she worked with him very closely.
Speaker:I think so.
Speaker:But others like the doctor on the show, the doctors who we were going for, he
Speaker:was completely removed from the process.
Speaker:He had no say in that cookbook.
Speaker:It didn't, it didn't even connect to him.
Speaker:But it was funny because when they.
Speaker:Premiered that book on his show.
Speaker:He was going to make a recipe and because he didn't really know, they
Speaker:had us come into New York and sort of help him at the beginning of the show.
Speaker:We were backstage.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We were talking to him.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:And telling him what to do and how to do it.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:And he was very thankful and glad that we did this for him.
Speaker:He was, he, he wasn't a jerk at all.
Speaker:Oh, not at all.
Speaker:But it was a product that had his name and his big face on the
Speaker:cover and big body on the cover.
Speaker:And you know, I mean.
Speaker:It was, it was something that he was putting out and he was, he wasn't a, he
Speaker:was very nice guy actually backstage, but we were kind of walking him through it.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So we've banged on for forever about this.
Speaker:So let's, let's call it quits for the moment, but this is kind of part
Speaker:of the behind the scenes work that we've done on cookbooks over our
Speaker:30 year career across 36 cookbooks.
Speaker:It's kind of an astounding thing to think about how cookbooks actually
Speaker:make it into print and the modern world is very different and someday let's.
Speaker:Let's talk about that.
Speaker:Let's talk about what happens in modern cookbook publishing, which is so different
Speaker:than when we started out 30 years ago.
Speaker:And if you invite us to a dinner party, we will entertain you with
Speaker:these stories for hours on end.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:What's up next?
Speaker:What's making us happy in food this week?
Speaker:For me, it's food.
Speaker:It's a Torone, a nougat that we brought back from our trip
Speaker:to Spain in this last December.
Speaker:It's still around.
Speaker:We still have Torone around from that.
Speaker:I bought like 12 pounds of it, but there was one that I had never tried.
Speaker:And it looks like Halva.
Speaker:It doesn't even look like Halva for those not in the know.
Speaker:Halva is a sesame seed paste candy.
Speaker:It's a sweet sesame candy.
Speaker:And when I opened this package, I swear it tasted like almond halva, and it was
Speaker:a little crispy, it was made with these fried rice crispy bits in it and I had
Speaker:never tasted a torrone that tasted like almond halva, and it was made by a company
Speaker:called Vincennes, V I C E N N S, they're in Spain, they have multiple stores in
Speaker:Madrid and I brought home tons of it.
Speaker:They are, they are super aggressive out on the sidewalk to get you inside their
Speaker:stores, but the Toronto is delicious.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:What's making me happy in food this week is a dish Bruce may
Speaker:just recently, and that is goat meatballs and they were so delicious.
Speaker:And let me tell you about this.
Speaker:So we had all this goat in the freezer.
Speaker:If you don't know, we wrote the first.
Speaker:ever cookbook for goat, meat, milk, and cheese.
Speaker:And we had a bunch of goat in the freezer from a local farmer.
Speaker:Bruce ground some of the goat himself and then turned it into
Speaker:meatballs with artichokes and tomato sauce and onions and beans
Speaker:and fennel.
Speaker:It was.
Speaker:Yeah, lots of fennel and artichokes.
Speaker:And cinnamon and dill.
Speaker:It was so good that I have not been going back for seconds, but I went
Speaker:back for seconds of this because it just was absolutely irresistible.
Speaker:I mostly, as I call it in total culinary lingo, I mostly
Speaker:wanted the goop, as I call it.
Speaker:There's my culinary term for you.
Speaker:And that is all the artichoke, fennel, tomato stuff around the meatballs.
Speaker:That's really what I went back for is to drag bread through the goop
Speaker:because it was just So delicious.
Speaker:Uh, I couldn't believe it.
Speaker:Well, tonight you're getting more goat.
Speaker:You're getting, you're going to have your choice.
Speaker:You can either have goat curry or you can have goat mole.
Speaker:So I'll get an
Speaker:answer.
Speaker:I'll think about that.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So that's the podcast for this week.
Speaker:Thanks so much for joining us.
Speaker:By the way, if you don't know, we would love it.
Speaker:If you could subscribe to this podcast, if you could rate it and if
Speaker:you could write a review, somebody just wrote a really nice, sweet.
Speaker:Quiet review.
Speaker:My name was five stars.
Speaker:It was nice, but it was just, you know, listen to it every week and learn
Speaker:something new when I'm in the kitchen.
Speaker:And it really, that's, that's the nicest thing I could ever imagine.
Speaker:Thank you for doing that for the podcast.
Speaker:I really appreciate your support because we were otherwise unsupported.
Speaker:So that is the way you can support us is to give us a rating and
Speaker:give us a comment and then we can stay current in the analytics.
Speaker:I know that's not your problem, but it is a way to help support what we're doing.
Speaker:Also every week.
Speaker:We tell you what's making us happy in food.
Speaker:Please go to our Facebook group Cooking with Bruce and Mark and tell us what's
Speaker:making you happy in food this week.
Speaker:And if it's really fun and interesting, we'll probably talk about it here
Speaker:on Cooking with Bruce and Mark.