Posts Tagged ‘The Amateur Gourmet’

Cooking by Comic

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Out of all the available types of how-to manuals, cookbooks are probably the ones that people have the most experience with, but the majority of cookbooks published in the past do not offer step-by-step instructions with photographic accompaniment; instead they are merely pages of recipes with the occasional enticing photo.

As few as photographic cookbooks might be, there are even fewer actual cookbook comics, but a number of people have stepped up to the challenge regardless. Now you can try your hand at a number of recipes, lovingly rendered or photographed to guide the reader through every step of the process.

Lucy Knisley is currently working on Relish, a collection of “stories, histories and recipes of food, all inspired by growing up with a chef for a mom,” due out from First Second in “a couple years.” Until then, you can enjoy her recipes for summer pickles and chai tea syrup.

Other recipe comics include:

And though it’s not a webcomic nor a specific cooking comic, let’s not forget that in volume 2 of Scott Pilgrim by Brian Lee O’Malley, Stephen Stills shows us how to make vegan shepherd’s pie. Daisy Edwards followed this advice, posting the scanned pages from the comic along with her own photos of the process. I once did something similar, using the description posted in volume 14 of xxxHoLiC by CLAMP to make potato-nishigori (read right-to-left):

Finally there’s Cheap Thrills Cuisine, a weekly syndicated strip by Thach Bui and Bill Lombardo. Running since 1993, the strip illustrates recipes as diverse as Cajun roast chicken and Tuscan bean salad, and the archive can be viewed on Comics.com as far back as January 2000.

Meals You Can Not Possibly Comprehend

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

The tricky part about food blogging is that they’re writing about a subject whose two primary sensory experiences—taste and smell—can’t be replicated on the web. They can do sight, though, so if they really want to try and convey as much of the experience as possible, it’s up to food writers to take pictures of their food. Lots and lots of pictures.

Adam Roberts of The Amateur Gourmet has gone a bit further than that at times, not only taking photos and video, but organizing them into humorous comics. They appear to be assembled using the Comic Book Creator program, consisting of photos he’s taken, captions and dialog bubbles, as well as the occasional YouTube video interlude.

He’s done about five of these, and I have to say my favorite is the Alain Ducasse one, for its humor and panel layout, but also because I believe it possesses the strongest narrative arc. Though if you’re interested in food photography your best bet is his account of eating at El Bulli, the best restaurant in the world, because he took the time to photograph and describe all thirty courses.

The full menu: