Cooking as Fast as I Can
A Chef's Story of Family, Food, and Forgiveness
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
“Affecting…as warm and comforting as a home-cooked meal” (People), a no-holds-barred memoir on Southern life, Greek heritage, same sex marriage—and the meals that have shaped her memories—from the Food Network star and first female winner of Iron Chef, Cat Cora.
Before she became a renowned chef and Food Network star, Cat Cora was just a girl from Jackson, Mississippi, where days were slow and every meal was made from scratch. By the age of fifteen, Cora was writing the business plan for her first restaurant. Her love of cooking started in her Greek home, where fresh feta and home-cured olives graced the table. Cat spent her days internalizing the dishes that would form the cornerstone of her cooking philosophy—from crispy fried chicken and honey-drenched biscuits to spanakopita. But outside the kitchen, Cat’s life was volatile.
In Cooking as Fast as I Can, Cat Cora reveals the experiences that shaped her life—from early childhood sexual abuse to the realities of life as lesbian in the deep South. She chronicles how she found her passion in the kitchen and went on to attend the prestigious Culinary Institute of America and apprentice under Michelin star chefs in France. After her big break as a co-host with Rocco Di Spirito on the Food Network’s Melting Pot, Cat broke barriers by becoming the first-ever female contestant on Iron Chef.
By turns epic and intimate, Cat writes movingly about how she found courage and redemption in the dark truths of her past and about how she found solace in the kitchen and work, how her passion for cooking helped her to overcome hardships and ultimately find happiness at home and became a wife and a mother to four boys. Above all, this is “a disarmingly candid look at the highs, lows, and true grit of a culinary star” (Kirkus Reviews).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this witty and fast-paced memoir, Cora (Cat Cora's Classics with a Twist), the first female Iron Chef, recounts a lifetime's worth of difficulties and triumphs an abusive Mississippi childhood, first loves, coming out, and attending the Culinary Institute of America. Cora has led an exceptional life, but it is her absorbing voice and eye for sensory detail and description that make this memoir succeed. On getting a second-degree burn: "I had a bucket of ice water on the floor beside me, and every five minutes or so I would unwrap my arm and plunge it into the bucket to draw the heat off the burn... Only after service was over and the kitchen was spotless did I take myself to the emergency room." Thus she learns the extent of her dedication enough to carry her all the way to becoming a celebrity chef; while on a book tour for her first cookbook, she is approached by a Food Network producer and asked if she'd like to be an Iron Chef. After she agrees, he tells , "Great. Your first battle is in two weeks." Cora goes on to an astounding number of victories while outside of the kitchen, she juggles marriage with her wife, Jennifer, and their journey as the mothers of four boys. Whether cooking at the White House or getting a DUI, Cora spares no detail, no matter how unflattering, and she reveals herself as endearingly fallible and human.