Savor A chef's hunger for more

Fatima Ali, -2019

Book - 2022

"An aspiring young chef explores food and adventure, illness and mortality, coming of age and coming out in an inspiring memoir and family story that sweeps from Pakistan to New York City and beyond. Fatima Ali won the hearts of viewers as the season fifteen "Fan Favorite" of Bravo's Top Chef. After the taping wrapped and before the shows aired, Fati was diagnosed with a rare form of bone cancer, which eventually became terminal. Not one to ever slow down or admit defeat, she vowed to spend her final year traveling the world, eating delicious food, and making memories with her loved ones. But when her condition abruptly worsened, her plans were sidelined. She pivoted, determined to make her final days count as she worked... to tell the story of a queer brown girl chef who set out to make a name for herself, her food, and her culture. The result is this stunning and lyrical ode to the food, family, and countries Fatima loved so much. Written both during Fati's last weeks and posthumously, this deftly woven memoir integrates the perspectives of Fatima at its core, with supporting chapters from her mother Farazeh's perspective. Flashing between past and present, readers will be transported back to Fatima's childhood, unfurling alongside that of her mother, as both were deeply affected by the cultural barriers they faced, shaping the course of their lives. At the same time, food plays an important role throughout, from the rustic stalls of the outdoor markets of Lahore to the kitchen and dining room of Meadowood, the acclaimed 3-Michelin-Star restaurant where Fatima apprenticed. Fati reflects on her life and her identity--as a chef, a daughter, a queer woman--exploring and defining her sexuality, oftentimes butting up against the more conservative and traditional views of those in her native Pakistan. This triumphant memoir is at once an exploration into the sense of wonder that made Fatima so special, and a shining testament to the resilience of the human spirit. It is, at its core, an exploration into what it means to truly live, a profound and exquisite portrait of a life that will resonate for many years to come"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Fatima Ali, -2019 (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxiii, 354 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593355190
  • About this Book
  • Foreword
  • Part I.
  • 1. Itwaar Bazaar
  • 2. Days That Shone Like Polished Stone
  • 3. A Convincing Feast
  • 4. A Foreign Home
  • 5. The Very First Taste
  • 6. Shedding Skin
  • 7. First Recipes and Lunchables
  • 8. Tutoring and Temptation
  • 9. Tepid Milk and Silken Salmon
  • 10. Hunger at the Market
  • 11. The Chorus
  • 12. A Promise of Ice Cream
  • 13. The Fire Inside
  • 14. My A Student
  • 15. And Then I Could See It
  • 16. My Mother's Blessing
  • Part II.
  • 17. A Taste of Freedom
  • 18. The Beginning of the Rest of My Life
  • 19. Black Rice, Spanish Moon
  • 20. A Perfectly Ripe Plum
  • 21. Yes, Chef
  • 22. The Unpalatable Truth
  • 23. The Woman I Made
  • 24. Chicken Intestines and Proclamations
  • 25. The Pecking Order
  • 26. Chef Life
  • 27. Guilty Goose (Must Spread Her Wings)
  • 28. Introducing My Craft to My Culture
  • 29. Patta Tikka
  • 30. An Interview with Fate
  • 31. The NoCal Dream
  • 32. The Contest in Colorado
  • 33. The Life I Always Wanted
  • Part III.
  • 34. The Health Department
  • 35. Fallen Palms
  • 36. The Dinner Rush
  • 37. 86
  • 38. Kidney Pain and Such
  • 39. Falling Through the Cracks
  • 40. A Book by Many
  • 41. Order Fire
  • 42. Pickled Onions and Peach Fuzz
  • 43. Hot Coals on Small Lips
  • 44. A Flock of Wild Peacocks
  • 45. My Dream, Abbreviated
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

James Beard Award--winning chef Ali delivers a powerful ode to family and food in her posthumous memoir. Ali recalls her childhood interest in cooking as she battled cultural traditions: "Instinctually I always knew that I wanted something different from the life waiting for me in Pakistan." In high school, Ali's teachers encouraged her to apply to an Ivy League college, but her mother, Farezeh Durrani, insisted that cooking was her daughter's calling. Their relationship temporarily broke down when Ali came out as queer, but Durrani and Ali's brother supported Ali as she went to culinary school, became the first Pakistani woman to win the cooking competition show Chopped, became a fan favorite on Top Chef, and launched pop-up restaurants in Lahore and New York City. Her plans to open her own restaurant were derailed by a cancer diagnosis of Ewing's sarcoma in 2017. After undergoing chemotherapy and surgery, Ali went into remission, but in the fall of 2018, her cancer returned. Doctors told 29-year-old Ali she had a year left to live, but she died four months later. Ali writes with an irresistible passion for food, friendship, and community, and contributions by Durrani beautifully complement Ali's account. This portrait of a remarkable talent whose life was cut short is a tough one to forget. Agent: Jay Mandel, WME. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

A fan favorite on Bravo's Top Chef, Pakistani American chef/restaurateur Ali discovered before the show aired that she had a rare form of bone cancer, which soon became terminal. She dedicated the last year of her life to traveling the world, eating amazing food, spending time with loved ones, and writing this meditation on being a chef, a daughter, and a queer woman.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A chef's memoir of a life lived with hard work and perseverance, tragically cut short by cancer. When Top Chef's "Fan Favorite" winner Ali was told her cancer had returned, she was given a year to live. Rather than giving up, she made a goal to travel around the world, eating at her fantasy restaurants and connecting with family and friends. This memoir was born from her dream to write about her adventures. Tragically, her year to live was reduced to four months, most of which were spent pain-ridden in hospital beds. Instead of traveling, she recounted from the hospital her memories of growing up in Pakistan, where she learned to cook with her Nano (grandmother), and subsequent years in culinary school in America, where she honed her craft, competed in national programs like Chopped and Top Chef, and dreamed of opening a restaurant to showcase her native country's cuisine. "I wanted a place where I could open people's minds about Pakistan through their taste buds--to serve the glorious, generous, hearty food of my youth, of my Nano, and interrupt Western assumptions of Pakistan being a place of bias, of oppression, of terror," she writes. This book shines with the author's irrepressible spirit, positivity, and tenacity. Told in her own words alongside chapters written by her mother, the narrative highlights Ali's ambitious and heartbreakingly short life. At 29, she was full of promise. Her love of food and people and belief in the future are evident throughout the text. Perhaps most striking are her determination and work ethic, as she recounts starting out as a chef working 16-hour days, seven days per week. In her battle with cancer, she displayed unwavering toughness and determination. Ali's adoration of the art of cooking is apparent, infectious, and often moving. Ali's irrepressible love of cooking will not just inspire a love of food, but a love of life. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 ITWAAR BAZAAR Fatima I grew up in Pakistan, playing cricket, basketball, oonch neech, and pithu gol garam with my brother, Mohammad. When it was rainy season or too hot to be outside, we canvassed our grandparents' basement for hints of a world that pre-­dated our small brown hands and hungry minds. I idolized my grandmother, my mother's mother, who I called Nano, a tenacious, fair-­skinned beauty whose shalwar kameez always carried with it the powdery rose elegance of Chanel No. 5. From when I was six and we lived with her, I often joined her on her weekly excursions to the Itwaar Bazaar, the Sunday market that unfolded like a circus on a plowed plot of dirt in a skeletal, undeveloped neighborhood in Karachi. At my grandmother's behest, we set out early, in order not to miss the best produce. While we guzzled water and used the toilet, Nano counted her cash and had Qadir, our family's cook who had been with us since my mom's youth, check the boot of the car to be sure it was empty and ready to be filled. Nano ruled the house, our small staff--a member of which delivered us to the market in our Honda Accord, bedazzled with its Italian Momo rainbow steering wheel cover--­and our days, particularly in those in-­between years when my mom was building her business. Nano was a second mother to me, and it was more than obvious that her prowess in the kitchen was connected to her confidence in the world. Before we made our way through the rows of stalls--­vegetables on one side, fruit on the other--­the mazdoors would line up, chests puffed out, shoulders back to imply strength and stamina. In Urdu, a mazdoor is a young boy--­probably homeless, possibly orphaned, certainly too poor to attend school--­who works as a porter and makes money carrying groceries for wealthier patrons at the market. Past the mazdoors, the farmers sold their produce: lauqat, jaman, lychee, cheekoo, small sweet green sultana grapes; yams, gourds, arvi, and ruby red carrots. The pungent fragrance--­a saccharine crushed guava underfoot, wilting greens, the rank damp shirts of farmers who awoke before dawn to haul their loads to town, potatoes with a film of dusty dried soil still clinging to them--­made for an intoxicating perfume at once bodily and of the earth. I was supposed to dread these market runs, as all children and most adults did, but secretly I loved them. I followed my grandmother, sometimes pressed right up against her damp silk-­draped frame--­her sweet signature scent still discernible amid the odiferous hubbub--­as she perused the bright stalls, surveying what she planned to purchase, sweat forming rivulets between her shoulder blades and at her temples, which, like all the other matrons, she dabbed with the corner of her dupatta. Who has the greenest beans? The snappiest okra? The onions have to be large but not too large, because those ones are the sweetest. Produce was selected not just for its ripeness in the moment, but for its future perfection. Nano taught me to feel melons near their stems, that they should be heavier than they appear; to press pears gently; to smell mangos for sweetness to determine their readiness. Then came her masterful bargaining: first mild interest, then an ambivalent How much? No matter what price the vendor told her, it was always too much. Fifty rupees?! she scoffed with feigned horror. Your friend there just offered me the very same dates for forty rupees. I'll buy them from him. Then she turned gravely on her heel with dismissive finality, but every time, the vendor rushed to her, leaving his stall to block her path, a wagging head and smiling eyes offering her a nicer price. Wait, Baaji Malik, I'll match his price, but only for you, tell no one, and she'd give a barely perceptible nod to confirm her approval. At the market, my glamorous Nano was notorious and revered, and from her I learned how to shop--­to select, to haggle--­in that drenched tent, that humid carnival of perishables. After the produce, trailed by a mazdoor who carried our haul in jute and plastic bags that Nano brought from home, we made our way to the meat market, where we chose our chickens from the specialized stalls that sold only chickens, and from its owner my grandmother once again tried to get the best possible deal. Nano signaled to the butcher which of the birds she wanted from the piled-­up cages and he pulled each bird from its cage, rested its feathered neck on a wooden block held between his feet, and slit the chicken's throat. The blood--­thick, crimson and clotted as fresh cream--­gushed out into a waiting bucket, and then he tossed the bird, still pulsing, into a large industrial blue bin, lined with feathers and crusted gore of chickens that had come before, where it gave its final thrusts. Hidden behind the tall blue walls of the large drum, the bird became a shadow phantom that rumbled the bin from within. Once it was still, the butcher pulled the chicken's skin off in one fell swoop, like a mother undressing a sleeping child before bed, and gave us the still-­warm poultry to take home and turn into a karahi with a rich tomato base and a fragrant finish of green chili peppers, cilantro, and ginger. I loved the organized chaos of the market. I tried not to give much thought to where the mazdoors slept at night or what they ate for supper. I would figure out how to feed them someday, I told myself: When I am big, I'll know how. And I was not sentimental about the birds and beasts who died to become our suppers. It was simply the order of things: brutal but digestible. There I felt exhilarated and at ease. Back from the market at Nano's house, Qadir met us at the car to help us unload and carry our plunder to the kitchen. Bags of rice were deposited into the pantry and stored on the cool terrazzo floor. The raw chickens, still warm with life, went into the old 1970s icebox or directly into the sink for Qadir to clean and make into that evening's supper. Fruit was piled in wicker baskets, where it ripened and tempted us over the days to come, its scent evolving from bitter to honey-­sweet. The parlor and entrance of the grand Tanzeem house were intended as the house's center, but, as with any home, the kitchen was always its heart--­the nexus of the most action, aroma, and appetite--and where I needed to be. Kitchens were where the love began. That much was already clear to my seven-­year-­old mind. The Tanzeem house was a majestic three-­story home on Khayaban-­e-­Tanzeem, the first street of the Defense neighborhood's tony prized Phase V, which was developed in 1970 not far from Zamzama Park. My grandfather built it as his dream project, dignified but not ostentatious: the perfect place to coddle his wife, my Nano, raise his offspring, and care for his own father. "Your grandfather laid those stones with his own hands, Fatima," Nano told me exactly every time we walked through the foyer together. Nano never missed an opportunity to reference my deceased granddad: the koi pond he'd insisted upon beneath the skylight in the entrance; the long, graceful lines, devoid of gaudy motifs, that, at his direction, the architects realized throughout; the ten-­foot oak front door surrounded by light-giving glass windows, all these were relics of my grandfather's good taste and prescient vision, she explained. Nano was often my caregiver in those early years when my mother and brother and I returned from Texas to Pakistan and lived with her, first in Shamshir, the house my grandmother and Saby Khala--­my mother's eldest sister--­lived in together after my grandfather's death, and then in the stately Tanzeem house. I longed to know Nano's kitchen secrets: the graceful witchery of her ingredients; the mystical logic that fed us. The essential question was already nascent in me: What greater expertise could one possess than to feed those they loved? "Let me stir it, Nano," I begged. She discouraged me half-­heartedly, lest my small tender limbs be speckled by hot oil or lashed by vicious steam burns. But her concerns for my safety were no match for my conviction, so first Nano brought me a pot of hot water, into which I was allowed to drop cabbage leaves and carrots to make my first "soup." Upon tasting it and realizing it lacked any complexity (after all, it was only hot water, some salt, and wilted vegetables), Nano brought me a footstool from which I could see inside a pot of golden daal, the better vantage point from which to stir it. "Hold my hand while you stand on that, Fatima," Nano instructed me. "No, Nano. I can do it myself," I promised her, and true to my word, my brown arms--­darker than my pale mother's and grandmother's--­were never burned in her kitchen. Excerpted from Savor: A Chef's Hunger for More by Fatima Ali All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.