Let's get this out of the way: I don't particularly care for steak.
I'm a pretty picky eater. I hate onions. Lettuce. Tomato. As you can imagine, the sandwich can be my worst nightmare. I'm also lactose intolerant, and I have a stomach condition that makes eating hellish sometimes.
But beyond this pickiness, I am sort of a foodie. I've eaten sweetbreads, wild boar, quail, jellyfish, squid ink, and enjoyed it all. I read blogs like Serious Eats and The Girl Who Ate Everything on a daily basis, and collect cookbooks. One of my favorite neighborhoods in the city is the East Village, because I love the food in that area.
And the one food that I love above all is meat. I'm a carnivore. Pork, chicken, seafood. Lamb is meh, but beyond that, I'm game. I could never be a vegetarian. I'd subsist on cupcakes all day.
I signed up for the giveaway of this book actually for my boyfriend, who does enjoy the occasional slab of beefy goodness in his diet. I didn't expect I'd enjoy this one as much as I did.
I can actually remember the best piece of steak I've ever eaten. It was at Megu in Tribeca, a place that I took Jon for our first anniversary. The steak in question was a strip of wagyu beef, perfectly caramelized and with a rikyu glaze - black sesame and soy. That piece of meat was the silkiest piece of beef that I had ever tasted. It literally melted in my mouth. I couldn't get enough of it. The texture was superb. I've never had anything like it since. If steak always tasted that good, then maybe I'd like it more.
Schatzker not only tells of his globe-trotting voyage to acquire good beef, he explains why humans find steak so appealing. The chemicals and chemistry behind it. The trials and tribulations of grass-fed beef. The feedlots and the way they've diluted the taste of true steak. It's an absolutely fascinating story of the lengths that one man will go to find out what makes steak taste so good. The book is divided by region, as Schatzker stalks the globe, eating his way from France to Japan, Argentina to Texas.
This book succeeds because by the last pages, I was craving steak. Great steak, the type that Schatzker describes as an A+ experience. I don't know if I'll ever find that steak, but this book sure makes me want it.