I love Little Free Libraries. Fate takes a hand in the books one encounters and therefore reads.
I have come to believe that Alice Waters is a genius. Here is a sentence from her cookbook written in 1984."If you plant a garden, it can change your whole style of cooking. Even a tiny plot with just a few herbs, some salad greens, garlic, leeks and beans can have a dramatic effect....a small-scale garden can open a new world of grateful subservience to the seasons. Gardening can become your primary source of culinary inspiration: to be able to go to your back yard, pick something and make a wonderful, simple, impromptu dish of pasta with it is immensely gratifying." I love that phrase "grateful subservience to the seasons".
In reading the story of Alice and Chez Panisse, so many things surprised me.
No one who was at Chez Panisse on opening night had ever worked in a restaurant, including Alice. That night was pretty much a disaster.
A student at Berkely, a trip to France was Alice's inspiration. But the French approach to food fell on very fertile ground. At the end of the book, one of the author's strongest remarks was that no one every questioned Alice's palette. She was has an incredible sensory intelligence. Not only in taste, but also in feel and beauty. This is perhaps a kind of brilliance that we are willing to pay for in buying luxuries but hardly every recognize when tabulating talent.
Restaurant life was incredibly demanding- and even more so the Chez Panisse way. Only one choice is offered every night, and that meal is made from the local pickings in Berkeley that day. The restaurant was open 7 days a week. and after everyone had left for the evening and the kitchen had been cleaned, the staff danced and partied together, fueled on a mixtures of cocaine, love affairs, wine and marijauna.
At first the restaurant was very French, recipes were built on butter, wine, rich sauces, exotic sea food, but gradually exposures to Italian influences simplified the menu. Alice came to be influenced by Italian home cooks, who find just a few perfect ingredients in their gardens and from that build a dish which highlights an exquisite piece of fruit, or a perfect fresh fish, or perfect vegetable. Alice is said to be behind, despite Julia Child's skepticism, the California Cuisine and the slow food movement.
Alice made Chez Panisse a family. So many brilliant people believed in it. Her standards were always only for perfection, and her vision is what everyone bought into. Her zest was contagious.
It is very hard to have an institution, especially a restaurant, maintain a vision from 1971 to 2017, and live beyond the founder. Yet Alice has done it. She birthed a restaurant that changed the way that Americans ate and lived. The restaurant demanded the whole lives of its crew, but it also gave back in all ways that a family can. Alice could do this because the table and good food and good talk is so central to well lived lives.