It's no wonder so much excellent writing comes from the culinary world. Those who take up a career cooking for others care deeply about their art, and it makes sense that their passion, dedication, and attention to detail and truth telling would translate into their writing. Read just a few pages of the introduction to The Next Supper and you'll know without a doubt that Corey Mintz is a writer and foodie who has a direct line to the food world and much to say on a topic of more import than the average reader would guess. Simply put, if you eat, this book is for you.
With the COVID-19 pandemic still raging throughout the world, the myriad issues related to food--food insecurity, grocers and their employees, the viability of every sort of restaurant, and the ways and means food is sourced--animate cultural, political, and economic discussions. We all gotta eat, and whether we fill our bellies with nourishing homecooked meals, order out from our favorite restaurant, grab a cheat meal from a fast food restaurant, or splurge on a night out with friends at a posh upscale establishment, Mintz reminds us again and again that we need to care about the people who serve and prepare our food as much as the food itself.
The Next Supper is an exploration into the various ways the pandemic has and will alter the way we eat. The command, ease, and fluidity of Mintz's writing gives me the impression that this book was building within him for a long time, simmering like a hearty stew. Only the history-quaking event of COVID-19, which brought on long months of quarantine, the closure of many restaurants, a renewed interest in scratch homecooking, and a recognition that grocery store workers--along with doctors and nurses--were the true heroes of the pandemic, made it boil out of him. The best writers make their work seems effortless, and while Mintz acknowledges the many editors that helped him bring this book into the world, it was his reporter's mind and cook's flair for creativity and invention that lends the book its heart and soul.
The Next Supper takes readers on a tour through just about every aspect of food service. As someone who balances homecooking with dining out and ordering food from my favorite restaurants, I was surprised to learn about the ways staff are routinely subjected to verbal and physical abuse and wage theft. Of course, intuitively I was aware of this. Anyone who's read Kitchen Confidential knows that restaurants can be evil to their workers. But Mintz delves so deep into the level of abuses and exploitation--even slavery among workers who harvest shrimp and other seafood--his reporting can make readers feel guilty about ever dining out. He even uncovers the ways third-party delivery apps like Grubhub (my go-to) cheat drivers and restaurants.
Mintz is a staunch champion of oppressed workers and lobbies hard for diversity, equity, and inclusion within the industry. You can tell this is a man whose passion for food has opened his eyes to many injustices across the globe, and really that's the best thing food can do for us all. He leaves no sector of the industry unreported, and though it may seem that he's virtue signaling or shaming us all, that just isn't the case. Mintz loves all food, from spicy kottu roti to Big Macs, and he values it all. His goal is to encourage those within the industry and outside to use this critical moment in history to make changes for the good of the industry, the planet, and our health.
It's hard not to read a book like The Next Supper and be transformed by it. The stories Mintz relates can make readers feel that no matter what changes they make in their dining, ordering, shopping and cooking practices (not gonna lie, giving up GrubHub will be hard as hell for me), but even small changes, like tipping a dollar or two extra, gently inquiring where our meat and fish are sourced, and supporting small restaurants, immigrant restaurants, and ghost kitchens, can make a difference. A man who loves food as much as Mintz--he and his wife got married in a grocery store, for crying out loud--certainly wants us all to get and much pleasure from food as he does. The Next Supper merely informs and instructs us how to do it better.